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Ofwat launches urgent investigation after 25,000 homes left without water in Kent and Sussex

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Regulator Ofwat has launched an investigation into South East Water after outages have left thousands without drinking water supply across Kent and Sussex.

On Wednesday evening, the latest outage, around 10,000 were left without water supply throughout the night.


The news came after the government asked the watchdog to review the company’s licence.

Issues began on Saturday in the wake of Storm Goretti and a power cut at a pumping station.

South East Water have said that some customers may not see supplies return until Friday.

Ministers are set to hold an emergency meeting, with over 17,000 homes still remaining without water across Kent and Sussex.

Bottled water handed out in Kent

Regulator Ofwat has launched an investigation into South East Water after outages have left thousands without drinking water supply

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GETTY

Bottled water handed out in Kent

Residents were forced to visit designated ‘water collection points’ pick up bottled water amid the shortage

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GETTY

Ofwat said it was concerned on Tuesday that around 23,000 properties were affected, and it had been declared a major incident earlier in the week.

But while it was confirmed that water had been returned to 8,000 homes, thousands remained without meaning they have endured almost one week without running water.

South East Water’s incident manager Matthew Dean said: “Once again, we are very sorry to all our customers who have been affected.

“We know and understand how difficult going without water for such a long period of time is and how difficult it makes everyday life.”

Bottled water handed out in Kent

Thousands of bottles of water have been handed out

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GETTY

A similar incident occurred just last month, when 24,000 properties in and around Tunbridge Wells were left without drinking water for nearly two weeks.

On Wednesday, GB News spoke to residents who had been left seething by the outage. One resident told the People’s Channel that the utility provider is “rotten from top to bottom” and “not fit for purpose”.

“We had two weeks with no water at all couldn’t even flush the toilet or drink anything,” they said.

Another said: “The whole organisation is rotten from top to bottom. It’s not fit for purpose. I’d suggest the Government steps in and does something quickly.”

Lib Dem leader Ed Davey questioned Keir Starmer in Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, saying the water firm “keeps failing its customers over and over again” and asks if the government would “strip them of their licence”.

The Prime Minister condemned the situation as “clearly totally unacceptable”, adding that ministers have chaired daily emergency meetings during the crisis to “hold the company to account”.

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