South West Water confident there will be no hosepipe ban in 2024 after prolonged period of rainfall

South West Water is confident there will be no need for hosepipe bans in either Devon or Cornwall this year, even if we see prolonged periods of hot and dry weather.

In 2022, a hosepipe ban was put in place in Cornwall and parts of North Devon after the biggest drought in the region for over 130 years. This was extended to other parts of Devon in 2023.

Since then a combination of record-level investment, periods of heavy rainfall and customers doing more to save water, has seen a boost in reservoir levels across the South West.

To help maintain strong water resilience for now and the future, South West Water is investing over £125 million to increase resources in Devon by 30% and in Cornwall by 45%. All of the plans for Devon have now been completed and are in use, with 70% completed in Cornwall as the business works towards delivering desalination in Par and a new water treatment works in Porth.

David Harris, South West Water’s Drought and Resilience Director, said:

“While it may seem obvious that recent heavy rainfall has led to increased reservoir levels across the region, over one-third of the additional storage has come from our own supply interventions and customers reducing their own usage.

“As a direct result of our investments, interventions, the weather and our customers reducing their use of water, we are confident that we are in a strong position to navigate whatever weather we face this year without the need for water restrictions. This does not mean we will stop our efforts there, we will continue to invest and deliver clean water supplies across our region and prepare as much as we can for climate change and unpredictable weather patterns.”

NEWS CATEGORIES

LATEST NEWS

Mark Lloyd, Chief Executive of The Rivers Trust, says the future of our rivers is at stake in parliament today

Chief Executive of The Rivers Trust, Mark Lloyd, is urging all MPs to do their job as elected representatives in Parliament today, and support...

SEPA calls for input on major changes to Scotland’s environmental regulation framework

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) is seeking views from regulated businesses, organisations and individuals on the proposed changes to how environmental activities are...

ASTERRA launches transformative upgrade to its SaaS platform for water pipeline leak detection and infrastructure management

ASTERRA, provider of geospatial data-driven platform solutions for water utilities, is launching EO Discover 2.0, which it says is a transformative upgrade to its...

How water-saving homes of tomorrow could help save billions of litres

The UK’s water supply is under significant threat, with projections indicating that demand could meet available supply levels by 2032 and exceed supply by...