What exactly is the point in fining a monopoly utility provider? They don’t lose business and they don’t lose revenues, it just becomes a cost to be recouped at next year’s increase on their captive market. If anything it means it might hit their operating budgets, which means more issues.
The only way fines make sense in this context is if they are in the form of asset seizures. Ie. Taking capital assets and giving them to another utility to operate (hopefully better). That directly hits the water companies’ revenues.
shredditorburnit on
The only thing that will make them behave is if we start sending the people at the top to jail.
TheShakyHandsMan on
Nationalise the lot.
If I could vote with my wallet and choose a different supplier I would but I’m left with no choice but to contribute to the profits of one of these badly run and corrupt companies.
DangerShart on
Cool. I’ll look forward to paying those fines through increased bills.
luvinlifetoo on
Thatcher sold them off cheap. Virtually no country doesn’t own its water companies. These companies have benefited from profits personally without reinvesting in infrastructure.
jtthom on
There should be a law whereby the King can order industries of critical national importance to be nationalised without compensation to shareholders.
The Tories have looted this country on behalf of the rich.
tony23delta on
Gutted for them.
I hope they still find a way to increase our bills.
Be an absolute shame if they don’t award themselves some cheeky bonuses too.
kahnindustries on
It’s not enough, it will barely dent their profits, their dividends to shareholders will be the same
jmc291 on
Yeah because a fine is going to scare them. They will just put that fine back on the customer with increased pricing.
Jail the executives for corruption. Do it to a few, the rest will buck up very quickly
Common-Ad6470 on
Let’s hope they also aren’t allowed to add these fines to customer bills, but take from bonuses and dividends.
yubnubster on
Start fining shareholders with assets of a certain value, ie the huge investment companies that load the water companies with debt.
11 Comments
What exactly is the point in fining a monopoly utility provider? They don’t lose business and they don’t lose revenues, it just becomes a cost to be recouped at next year’s increase on their captive market. If anything it means it might hit their operating budgets, which means more issues.
The only way fines make sense in this context is if they are in the form of asset seizures. Ie. Taking capital assets and giving them to another utility to operate (hopefully better). That directly hits the water companies’ revenues.
The only thing that will make them behave is if we start sending the people at the top to jail.
Nationalise the lot.
If I could vote with my wallet and choose a different supplier I would but I’m left with no choice but to contribute to the profits of one of these badly run and corrupt companies.
Cool. I’ll look forward to paying those fines through increased bills.
Thatcher sold them off cheap. Virtually no country doesn’t own its water companies. These companies have benefited from profits personally without reinvesting in infrastructure.
There should be a law whereby the King can order industries of critical national importance to be nationalised without compensation to shareholders.
The Tories have looted this country on behalf of the rich.
Gutted for them.
I hope they still find a way to increase our bills.
Be an absolute shame if they don’t award themselves some cheeky bonuses too.
It’s not enough, it will barely dent their profits, their dividends to shareholders will be the same
Yeah because a fine is going to scare them. They will just put that fine back on the customer with increased pricing.
Jail the executives for corruption. Do it to a few, the rest will buck up very quickly
Let’s hope they also aren’t allowed to add these fines to customer bills, but take from bonuses and dividends.
Start fining shareholders with assets of a certain value, ie the huge investment companies that load the water companies with debt.