Utility Week

UTILITYWEEK 9th February 2018

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

Issue link: https://fhpublishing.uberflip.com/i/937710

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 2 of 31

UTILITY WEEK | 9TH - 15TH FEBRUARY 2018 | 3 This week 4 | Seven days 7 Policy & Regulation 7 | News Call for post-Brexit rules to be close to EU's 8 | Analysis A tough road for Bristol Water 11 | Analysis Can council-backed energy suppliers solve fuel poverty? 12 | Market view How recent announcements will affect energy policy 13 Finance & Investment 13 | News Network firms join Nissan in V2G trial 14 | Analysis Financing will decide how nuclear new-build numbers stack up 17 | Analysis What does Carillion's collapse presage for infrastructure spending? 19 | Analysis A tough PR19 could spell the beginning of the end for WOCs 20 Operations & Assets 20 | High viz Eggborough to close down 22 | Market view The new energy ecosystem 23 Customers 23 | News Iresa under fire for abrupt price hikes 24 | Analysis Green Star picks up the pieces of Future Energy's collapse 26 | Event The Energy Customer Conference 28 | Market view Energy market predictions 30 Community 31 | Disconnector GAS 7 | News Call for post-Brexit rules to be close to EU's WATER 8 | Analysis A tough road for Bristol Water 19 | Analysis A tough PR19 could spell the beginning of the end for WOCs ELECTRICITY 13 | News Network firms join Nissan in V2G trial 14 | Analysis Financing will decide how nuclear new-build numbers stack up 20 | High viz Eggborough to close down ENERGY 11 | Analysis Can council-backed energy suppliers solve fuel poverty? 12 | Market view How recent announcements will affect energy policy 17 | Analysis What does Carillion's collapse presage for infrastructure spending? 22 | Market view The new energy ecosystem 23 | News Iresa under fire for abrupt price hikes 24 | Analysis Green Star picks up the pieces of Future Energy's collapse 28 | Market view Energy predictions Pitney Bowes: Make self service smarter and more engaging http://bit.ly/2nAa2rC CGI: Demand side flexibility in UK utilities http://bit.ly/2hrMapA Knowledge worth Keeping Visit the DownloaDs section of Utility week's website http://www.utilityweek.co.uk/ downloads Leader Ellen Bennett Utility-bashing is cheap politics V alentine's Day is coming, but the UK's politicians are showing little love for the utilities that keep the lights on, the taps running and the gas flowing. Environment secretary Michael Gove has marked water companies' cards with a high-profile inter- vention, telling The Sunday Times he expects a "crackdown on fat cat water company bosses using offshore tax havens while cashing in on their monopoly position" – to borrow that newspaper's words. Is this really fair? The most recent figures from Water UK show the latest set of bill rises will be below inflation – so effectively, bill cuts – and customer satisfaction scores are high and rising. That's not to say there aren't problems. Indeed, Ofwat, under chairman Jonson Cox's leadership, has been banging the drum on opaque financial structures, offshore tax havens and corporate gov- ernance for some years. He took to these very pages last year with an unprecedented public call for reform at Thames Water – a call the company has heeded. Likewise, Yorkshire Water has announced plans to shut its controversial Cayman Islands operations, alongside an ambitious bid to boost itself into a top quartile performer before this AMP is out. Meanwhile, all water companies are getting to grips with the historically low cost of capital threatened for PR19. Gove has come late to this party. Companies such as Thames and Yorkshire, which have heeded the regulator's call to action, could be forgiven for wondering what else they are now expected to do. Cynical observers could be forgiven for thinking Gove's headline- grabbing comments are motivated mostly by politics. There's a similar tale to be told in energy, where Conservative MP John Penrose, fresh from the fight over the price cap, has turned his ire on networks. He told parliament the companies are "fat and lazy" – comments which energy secretary Greg Clark lauded as "absolutely right". This relentless bashing of companies for making profits agreed with the regulator through a rigorous and transparent process, enjoying the benefits of an upside just as they would have taken the pain of a downside, wilfully ignores the nature of the regu- latory structures and the deal made with private capital. Again, the irony is that Ofgem has already indicated swingeing cuts to the cost of capital in the next price review. There's nothing wrong with debate about acceptable levels of profit for monopoly companies. But the services they provide are too critical to be used as a political football: let's at least get the facts right, and acknowledge the reforms that are already underway, before point scoring and jumping on political bandwagons. Ellen Bennett, Editor, ellenbennett@fav-house.com

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Utility Week - UTILITYWEEK 9th February 2018