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Thursday 19 August 2021 3:48 pm  |  Updated:  Saturday 06 November 2021 7:33 pm

Thames Water coughs up £11m to compensate 13,8000 businesses for wrong bills

By: Michiel Willems

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Thames Water should be “ripped up” and no longer allowed to be for profit, after it emerged some 14bn litres of sewage were released in 2023.
Thames Water should be “ripped up” and no longer allowed to be for profit, after it emerged some 14bn litres of sewage were released in 2023.

Following an investigation by regulator Ofwat, Thames Water has agreed to pay more than £11 million to 13,800 businesses for billing them the wrong amounts.

The company said it would hand out the cash to non-household customers and water retailers for errors dating back to 2017 after the Ofwat probe.

Investigators found data used to calculate nearly 14,000 water supply points were wrong, leading to both overcharging and undercharging.

Ofwat said the errors could have had a negative impact on third-party water retailers who may have lost customers as a result of being incorrectly blamed for the problems.

Deal

As part of the deal, Thames Water has proposed a series of undertakings which includes strengthening its internal processes and controls relating to how it handles market data and complaints.

Issues arose when Thames Water transferred data to its IT systems in 2017, where some non-household customers saw discounts previously agreed removed. Others found unmetered bills were incorrectly calculated.

The regulator concluded Thames Water did not have in place adequate systems of planning and internal controls to identify and prevent the errors arising in the first place.

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It also found the company did not take appropriate and timely action to fully identify and correct the errors when they later started to be flagged through risk assessments or complaints.

Emma Kelso, senior director at Ofwat, said: “Our investigation uncovered a multitude of errors with the way in which Thames Water handled its data before and after market opening.

“It failed to act, even when it became apparent from its own risk assessments or from complaints it received that there were concerns over the accuracy of its data.

“It should have done more to investigate and correct any errors. It’s unfair that customers and others in the market have borne the negative impacts of that.”

Emma Clancy, chief executive of the Consumer Council for Water (CCW), which represents water company customers, said: “Running a business during Covid has been challenging enough and this error has placed extra strain on business customers, leaving many out of pocket for years.

“Billing and charging issues make up three quarters of business customer complaints to CCW, often caused by poor data.

“In light of this, CCW will not only be calling for reimbursement to be passed swiftly from retailers to customers, but for compensation to also be offered to the customers affected.”

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Mark Kleinman is Sky News' City Editor and writes a column for City PM

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