Thames Water announces hosepipe ban across south of England

Measure will come into force from 24 August, affecting 15m customers in Thames Valley and London

Thames Water has announced a hosepipe ban across the south of England, which will affect 15 million of its customers.

The ban will come into force from 24 August, affecting people in London and the Thames Valley area.

Using a hosepipe to water gardens or to clean cars will no longer be allowed, except by businesses and farmers.

The temporary ban comes after reports that the source of the Thames had dried up during the drought.

The measure follows a hosepipe ban announced for the first time in 26 years by South West Water, which covers Cornwall and parts of north Devon, and after extremely dry conditions across the UK, with drought having been declared across eight areas of England by the Environment Agency.

Interactive

Sarah Bentley, the chief executive of Thames Water, said the ban had been a “very difficult decision”, adding: “After months of below-average rainfall and the recent extreme temperatures in July and August, water resources in our region are depleted.

“Customer demand is at unprecedented levels and we now have to move into the next phase of our drought plan to conserve water, mitigate further risk and future-proof supplies.”

Thames Water’s decision to restrict the use of hosepipes follows other measures by the company to conserve its water supply, having said it would fix more than 1,000 leaks across its 20,000-mile network every week.

In a statement on its website, the company said: “After the driest July on record, and below-average rainfall in 10 of the last 12 months, water levels in our rivers and reservoirs are much lower than usual. We have more teams reducing leakage than ever before, working 24/7 to find and fix more than 1,100 leaks every week. The recent heatwaves mean that demand for water is also at record levels.

“We’ve been working around the clock to supply everyone, and customers have been brilliant at saving water where they can. But, with low rainfall forecast for the coming months, we now need to take the next step in our drought plan. Everything we do now will help protect supplies next summer and help the environment.

“We know these restrictions impact your day-to-day activities around your home and beyond, and we’re grateful for your support.”

The hosepipe bans come after the UK recorded its hottest temperature of all time, with the heat soaring above 40C on 19 July.

Contributor

Tobi Thomas

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Thames Water to introduce hosepipe ban ‘in coming weeks’
Ban will hit 15 million people in London and south-east England and could last until October

Helena Horton Environment reporter

09, Aug, 2022 @1:38 PM

Article image
Thames Water accused of ignoring warnings after hundreds in Surrey endure days without water
Lib Dem councillor calls for company to be fined over the incident

Matthew Weaver

14, Aug, 2022 @1:30 PM

Article image
Thames Water hopes to harness human 'poo power' to heat homes
Company says sewage plan would avoid 105,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions over 30 years

Jillian Ambrose

26, Feb, 2021 @12:01 AM

Article image
Water companies in England ‘will take 2,000 years to replace pipe network’
Leaked data shows water companies are replacing 0.05% of England’s crumbling pipe network a year

Helena Horton Environment reporter

23, Aug, 2022 @12:46 PM

Article image
MP urges water firm to put more profits into upgrades after Sheffield gas outage
Olivia Blake says not enough of Yorkshire Water’s £242m profits used for infrastructure after gas network flooded

Helen Pidd North of England editor

12, Dec, 2022 @4:03 PM

Article image
Thames Water ordered to fix leaks before pumping millions of litres from rivers
Environment Agency tells supplier to rethink plans to tackle droughts by pumping water from Thames and Severn

Sandra Laville Environment correspondent

28, Mar, 2023 @10:54 AM

Article image
Millions may face hosepipe ban after England’s driest July since 1911
More water companies considering move after Southern Water imposes first such ban for a decade

Helena Horton Environment reporter

29, Jul, 2022 @3:51 PM

Article image
Thames Water fined £2.3m for raw sewage pollution incident
Judge says firm’s breach of environmental standards in 2016 amounted to ‘high negligence’

Diane Taylor

26, Feb, 2021 @5:03 PM

Article image
Thames Water dumped raw sewage into rivers 5,028 times in 2021
Campaigners say utility firm’s investment plan to remedy situation is ‘completely inadequate’

Sandra Laville Environment correspondent

20, Apr, 2022 @1:52 PM

Article image
Burst water main in north London causes anger amid drought crisis
Roads closed in borough of Islington as video shows streets under more than a metre of water

Matthew Weaver

08, Aug, 2022 @3:03 PM