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UK minister rejects Thames Water rescue, nationalisation more likely

UK minister rejects Thames Water rescue, nationalisation more likely
UK minister rejects Thames Water rescue, nationalisation more likely

The British government rejected a PS10billion ($13billion) rescue plan for Thames Water. This increases the likelihood that the country's biggest water provider will be nationalised.

Emma Reynolds, the Environment Minister said that she was "early in her assessment" of the proposals from creditors. She added that Ofwat would have the final word. The ruling should be made this summer before Thames runs out cash in the second half of this year.

This is the only proposal on the table. The utility has been fighting off financial collapse for years, battling with PS20 billion in debt, heavy fines due to sewage pollution, and an aging infrastructure.

BackLash Sewage

Reynolds, a member of the House of Representatives, said that the plan would unfairly shift costs to consumers and delay environmental improvements. Reynolds was responding to public anger caused by years' worth sewage spills as well as rising bills.

"We'll be ready for any eventuality, including SAR," said she, referring the special administration regime of the government, which is a temporary form of public ownership.

The group of creditors, which included Invesco, Elliott Management, and Silver Point Capital?, said it didn't recognise Reynolds' characterisation.

The spokesperson warned that SAR will require government support in the billions.

SAR will keep the water flowing for Thames Water's 16,000,000 customers in London and Southern England. However, it could add to the public debt and discourage foreign investors from investing if there are large write-downs.

Reynolds said that SAR can be triggered by either insolvency, or serious violations of license conditions including environmental standards.

SYMBOLS OF FAILURE

Thames Water is now a symbol of the failures in Britain's privatised sector for water. It has been blamed by some for the pollution of rivers, while its previous owners piled it up with debts and paid dividends.

The government has declared the sector to be broken and is working towards a?overhaul, including plans for an alternative regulator that will replace Ofwat.

Ofwat weighs the creditor plan, and balances record fines, including PS123 million in last year, against warnings of investment drying up without regulatory leniency.

Last year, the U.S. Private Equity firm KKR walked out of a takeover offer amid uncertainty?over possible fines.

Reynolds said that she is not convinced either by the creditors' demand to lower performance standards.

The creditors plan would inject PS3,35 billion into Thames Water alongside a new PS6.55billion debt facility. PS9.4billion of debt will be written off.

The plan, if approved by Ofwat, would need to be signed off by the High Court, and any changes in licences would have to go through a public consultation.

Ofwat has not responded to the request for comment immediately. Thames Water stated that a market-led approach was the best solution to achieve its turnaround.

(source: Reuters)