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Ofwat to be scrapped in biggest water industry overhaul in a generation

The government has announced the abolition of Ofwat as part of a major shake-up of the water industry as it also vowed to "end the short-termism and broken business models" of water companies

Labour ministers will also collaborate with the Welsh government to devolve water regulation

Ofwat is poised to be scrapped and substituted with a "single, powerful regulator" designed to tackle water pollution and shield households from escalating bills, the government has announced.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has revealed that Ofwat's English operations will be consolidated with the Environment Agency, Natural England and the Drinking Water Inspectorate, bundling water regulation under one authority, as reported by .

Labour ministers will also collaborate with the Welsh government to devolve water regulation.

Environment secretary Steve Reed declared the reforms as urgent, branding the water industry as "broken."

"In the biggest overhaul of water regulation in a generation, we will bring water functions from four different regulators into one," Reed said.

"A single, powerful regulator responsible for the entire water sector will stand firmly on the side of customers, investors and the environment and prevent the abuses of the past."

"It will provide the clarity and direction required for a strong partnership between the government, the sector and investors to attract billions of pounds of new investment."

The government stated that injecting £104bn into upgrading infrastructure and constructing sewage treatment facilities whilst customer bills have been protected for investment in schemes. Additional initiatives, including prohibiting wet wipes containing plastic and threatening law-breaking bosses with imprisonment, have been highlighted as steps designed to improve rivers and lakes across England.