Utility Week

UW January 2022

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34 | JANUARY 2022 | UTILITY WEEK Water Conference report Digging in for the long term The fundamental need for longer-term thinking dominated discussions at the Utility Week 2021 Water Industry Asset Management Conference in Birmingham. Ruth Williams was there. A new regulatory period began in April 2020 that heralded the start of AMP7 but no sooner had business plans gone live than talk turned to what would come next. For PR24 Ofwat said the focus will be on longer-term planning and described each five-year business plan as a building block within 25-year strategies. Speaking at the Utility Week's 2021 Water Industry Asset Management Conference, senior director at Ofwat Aileen Armstrong kicked off discussions by underlining the need to set business plans within longer- term thinking. Armstrong said both Wastewater and Drainage Resource Management Plans, and Water Resource Management Plans (WDMP and WRMP) cover only parts of companies' overall businesses but Ofwat wants to see long-term strategies that cover the whole of their operations. This would, she said, bring far greater clarity to future price reviews as well as give confidence to customers and stakeholders about strategy, investment and how costs are spread between customers to ensure inter- generational fairness. However, the regulator believes a long- term strategy alone will not be the whole answer. Armstrong said plans that can be adapted are essential because none of us can predict the future, as a global pandemic brought into sharp focus. "For PR24 we want adaptive planning to be at the core of all parts of every company's business plan," Armstrong said, adding that planning as such would let companies carry out long-term strategies even if there were unexpected challenges – and plan for invest- ments at the most beneficial point. "We hear a lot about ageing assets but age isn't a reliable indicator of asset health," Armstrong said, before explaining that the key thing for Ofwat was to make sure money is spent wisely and asset health maintained, Photo: Southern Water

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