Independent Water Commission Findings Amid UK Sewage Crisis

WINDERMERE, ENGLAND - AUGUST 11: Fish feed from sediment from a combined sewer overflow (CSO) pipe as it discharges into the River Brathay which feeds into Lake Windermere on August 11, 2025 in Windermere, England. Local campaigners have reported that up to 1.1 million litres a day of treated and untreated sewage, during storms, is permitted to be released from the CSO sewer pipe. The Independent Water Commission report published on July 21 handed down 88 recommendations on how the government should address the issues facing the embattled, privatized water industry in England and Wales. Following the report's findings, the government said it would abolish the water industry regulatory body, Ofwat, after years of sewage spill scandals, lack of investment in infrastructure, and financial mismanagement by water companies. The report also recommended raising consumers' water bills to offset investment, as well as making smart meters compulsory. Critics of the report say it failed to address structural reform of the water industry, allowing water companies to continue prioritizing shareholders over the public.  (Footage by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
WINDERMERE, ENGLAND - AUGUST 11: Fish feed from sediment from a combined sewer overflow (CSO) pipe as it discharges into the River Brathay which feeds into Lake Windermere on August 11, 2025 in Windermere, England. Local campaigners have reported that up to 1.1 million litres a day of treated and untreated sewage, during storms, is permitted to be released from the CSO sewer pipe. The Independent Water Commission report published on July 21 handed down 88 recommendations on how the government should address the issues facing the embattled, privatized water industry in England and Wales. Following the report's findings, the government said it would abolish the water industry regulatory body, Ofwat, after years of sewage spill scandals, lack of investment in infrastructure, and financial mismanagement by water companies. The report also recommended raising consumers' water bills to offset investment, as well as making smart meters compulsory. Critics of the report say it failed to address structural reform of the water industry, allowing water companies to continue prioritizing shareholders over the public.  (Footage by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
EINE LIZENZ KAUFEN

Individuelle Preisgestaltung: Sagen Sie uns einfach, wann, wo und wie Sie diese Datei nutzen möchten.

DETAILS

Bildnachweis:
Redaktionell #:
2229695995
Kollektion:
Getty Images News Video
Erstellt am:
11. August 2025
Hochgeladen am:
Lizenztyp:
Rights-ready
Releaseangaben:
Kein Release verfügbar. Weitere Informationen
Cliplänge:
00:00:09:09
Ort:
Windermere, England, United Kingdom
Gemastert mit:
MPEG-4 HEVC 4K 3840x2160 25p
Quelle:
Getty Images News Video
Objektname:
xsewer1