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The Water Services Regulation Authority, or Ofwat, is the body responsible for economic regulation of the privatised water and sewerage industry in England and Wales.Ofwat's main statutory duties include protecting the interests of consumers, securing the long-term resilience of water supply and wastewater systems, and ensuring that companies carry out their functions and are able to finance them.
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Sir Ian Charles Rayner Byatt (born 11 March 1932) is a British economist who was the Director General of the economic regulator of the water industry in England and Wales, Ofwat, from its creation at the time of the privatization of the water industry in 1989 until 2000.
The i focuses on water regulator Ofwat which it says is facing the axe in government plans to clean up the country’s rivers. Wednesday's front page: Sewage action at last: ...
From 1968 to 1995, he was a career civil servant, mainly working in the Department of the Environment and rising to the rank of deputy secretary.He served as the final Receiver of the Metropolitan Police (1996 to 2000); and then led Ofwat as its Director General (1 August 2000 to 31 March 2006) and as Chairman (1 April 2006 to 2012).
Ofwat – the Water Services Regulation Authority, economic regulation of the water and wastewater industries in England and Wales; The Utility Regulator – economic regulation of the electricity, gas, water and wastewater industries in Northern Ireland [8]
PR-24 and PR24 may refer to: Side-handle baton , a baton with a short side handle at a right angle to the shaft, about six inches from one end Puerto Rico Highway 24 , a road connecting the city of Cataño to Guaynabo
Water companies sharply increased bills, [22] with several proposed increases being rejected by Ofwat despite claims that they were necessary to keep companies solvent. [23] In response, academics have criticised the privatisation of water for allowing too much debt to be taken on by companies that have significant amounts of private equity ...