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The Financial Times reports that Britain's Ofwat plans to waive Thames Water penalties until 2030.

The Financial Times reported on Thursday that Thames Water was expected to reach an agreement with regulator Ofwat, which would allow 'Britain’s largest water provider' to avoid any new fines up until 2030.

According to the newspaper, the water regulator will accept "undertakings", instead of financial penalties, as part of the rescue agreement currently being discussed with the company and its senior creditors.

The performance targets for pollution, leakage, and other areas will be either suspended or substantially modified, the statement said.

The FT reported that Thames Water is still facing?Environment Agency?fines and legal actions, without specifying how much the fines are.

The newspaper stated that Ofwat should consult the public for three months before approving any agreement.

Could not verify the report immediately. Thames Water in Britain has not responded to a comment request.

Ofwat has not commented on the FT article, but says it is working with London & Valley Water to improve its operational performance and financial stability for customers and the environment.

Thames Water has had to fight off financial collapse for the past 20 years. It has debts of almost 20 billion pounds ($26.47billion) in a sector where price increases are limited.

A group of creditors of the company has offered up to 6,55 billion pounds in new debt and 3.35 billion pounds of equity as part of the current rescue plan.

Thames Water is likely to be placed under the special administration regime of the government, which is a temporary nationalisation.

(source: Reuters)