Thames Water intentionally diverted millions of pounds pledged for environmental clean-ups towards other costs including bonuses and dividends, the Guardian can reveal.
The company, which serves more than 16 million customers, cut the funds after senior managers assessed the potential risks of such a move.
Discussions – held in secret – considered the risk of a public and regulatory backlash if it emerged that cash set aside for work such as cutting river pollution had been spent elsewhere.
Scottish water is owned by the Scottish Goverment. It provides additional funding to the Scottish Goverment, unlike the water companies in England that require subsidies. It does this while providing the highest quality water in the UK, at the cheapest price and with challenging geography. The Scottish Goverment aren’t doing anything special, they just understand monopoly services can be provided efficiently by the government. It’s complete feasible for the rest of the UK to do this.
Privatisation is not and has never been about efficiency. It’s about extracting the common wealth of the nation. Highly efficient business vertically integrate. Like Starbucks makes their own cups and this allows them to operate at a higher profit margin. Apple designs their own packaging, processor’s and software as this allows them to operate at a higher profit margin. The same would be true for governments.
The problem is we elect people that don’t believe Goverment can be run effectively and efficiently. We shouldn’t be suprised when these politicians don’t run the Goverment effectively and efficiently.
The cheapest electricity in North America comes from a crown corporation. Quebec’s government got a loan from the US, passed a law to buy all the stocks of energy companies for a set price and just started running the thing. Three years later the loan was repaid and profits started going to the government’s coffers instead of investors.
People believe that nationalisation means starting from scratch but nationalisation just means changing the investors for the government. Hell, the new crown corporation can even keep the same board if the board members are willing to work with the government’s internal regulations.
And in Quebec, I pay $0.06 (less than $0.05 US) per kilowatt hour for my electricity, which is generated by a dam just a few minutes away from me. In California, I believe that the rate is over $0.30/kWh.