Try GOLD - Free
Outages prompt calls for reform of water companies
The Independent
|January 18, 2026
Dependable water systems are one of the core foundations upon which societies are built.
From immense Roman aqueducts to grand Victorian sewers, plumbing has underpinned public health, enabled cities to grow, and pushed once-deadly diseases like cholera and typhoid to the margins. Yet in the UK today, this foundation is cracking – with widespread outages, sewage-choked rivers, and water companies struggling to deliver the very basics they were created to guarantee.
Nearly 2,000 years after Pliny the Elder wrote of the Roman plumbing system that “there has never been anything more remarkable in the whole world”, people in Britain would be hard-pressed to agree. In recent weeks, tens of thousands of people living in the southeast of England have seen first hand what the breakdown of water provision looks like.
“We couldn’t wash or shower, we couldn’t flush the toilet for two days. It was full of excrement. I had to plunge it to clean it all up. It was disgusting really,” Tunbridge Wells resident David Ayre told The Independent, while queuing for bottled water at the town’s rugby club.
This week alone, South East Water outages meant 30,000 properties were without water in parts of Kent and East Sussex. This followed another major halt to the water supplies in the area, which began in November and lasted into December, affecting around 24,000 homes. Local MP Mike Martin, a Liberal Democrat, told The Independent the scale of the problem meant South East Water had “lost all credibility”. This story is from the January 18, 2026 edition of The Independent.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Independent
The Independent
Our fiends in the North
Whitby is home to some of Britain's strangest attractions. In search of the country's weirdest corners, Christopher Dorrell finds spectral apparitions and vengeful fairies at the seaside
4 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
ADVENTURE TIME
Appalachian mountains and stalactite-adorned caves make Kentucky a haven for explorers. Annabel Grossman finds the best spots to enjoy nature and get your adrenaline pumping
4 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
REBIRTH OF LE COOL
Richard Linklater, Zoey Deutch and Guillaume Marbeck talk to Patrick Smith about 'Nouvelle Vague', which reimagines the making of 1960 French New Wave classic 'Breathless'
9 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
Where's best for an autumn Mediterranean getaway?
Q I am turning 50 in late October and would like to take myself off for a solo trip somewhere lovely in the Mediterranean for a week or so, flying from Manchester.
1 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
Carrick brings noise and magic back to Old Trafford
Michael Carrick was mild-mannered to the last. His expression was sober, his immediate reaction to offer handshakes.
3 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
Renewed outbreak of cabinet infighting disastrous for PM
It takes a peculiar kind of genius to see your opponents in turmoil and think, “We could do with a bit of that.” Thus the response of not one but three cabinet ministers to Robert Jenrick’s defection to Reform was not to keep quiet and watch two opposition parties tear each other apart.
3 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
Falling temperatures set to bring chance of more snow
Colder temperatures could return again at the end of the month, the Met Office said, after Storm Goretti battered parts of the UK with wind, snow and heavy rain.
1 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
A volatile world makes even extreme tourists think twice
Venezuela? Iran? When the industry of human happiness turns sour, writes Simon Calder, Lupine Travel soldiers on
3 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
Blair honoured for seat on ‘Board of Peace’ for Gaza
Sir Tony Blair has said he is \"honoured\" to be part of Donald Trump's Gaza \"Board of Peace\", tasked with overseeing the rebuilding of the territory and the transition to a new administration.
2 mins
January 18, 2026
The Independent
‘The Korean film industry is in a state of great danger’
Acclaimed director Park Chan Wook tells Louis Chilton of the problems his country's filmmakers face, his one-time reputation for grotesquerie, and his latest 'moral dilemma'
6 mins
January 18, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
