Utility Week

UW June 2023 hr single pages

Utility Week - authoritative, impartial and essential reading for senior people within utilities, regulators and government

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UTILITY WEEK | JUNE 2023 | 9 Interview W hen Sarah Bentley took the helm at the country's largest water company – mired in problems around the environment, customer care, service delivery and infrastructure – she created an eight-year plan to turn it around. Two years in, she tells Utility Week it's going to take "every single day" of those eight years to bring Thames Water up to scratch. "Aiming for mediocrity, or being average, is not something I've aspired to do ever in my career," says Bentley. "But right now, from being an outlier and lag- gard in the sector, being average would be pretty amaz- ing actually." Bentley has made clear her ambition to get Thames back in the pack performance-wise and recognises that no-one will be cheering from the sidelines for average. "People want to see us being a leading water company and I would love that for Thames, but I'm also realistic." In recent years, Thames has persistently ranked bottom of league tables for customer service and complaints. Leakage rates last year were double the sector average and the company has £14 billion of debt. In 2019, with the departure of previous chief executive Steve Robertson, the company was deep in crisis and in need of fresh blood. Bentley, who joined Thames a year later from Severn Trent, bluntly summarises the state of the company when she arrived: "It had been hollowed out through continued overleaf

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