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Thames Water CEO to forgo annual bonus and LTIP payments

The CEO of Thames Water, Sarah Bentley, has made the decision to forgo any bonus or long-term incentive plan (LTIP) payments for the financial year 2022-2023, the Reading-based company has announced.

CFO, Alastair Cochran, will also decline all performance-related pay.

Thames Water, which serves 15 million customers in Swindon & Wiltshire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire, and in London, is in the second year of an eight-year turnaround plan to address ageing and deteriorating infrastructure – a legacy of under-investment and poor performance.

“We are a relatively new team executing an eight-year turnaround plan to transform Thames Water and we have taken some important steps forward this year,” said Sarah.

“I am proud of the work my team is doing in starting to address the poor state of our asset base and unacceptable standards of service for our customers.

“Nevertheless, the turnaround plan is not yet where I want it to be primarily due to significant headwinds from extraordinary energy costs, coupled with two severe weather events.

“These have hit our customer and environmental performance. Against this backdrop it simply doesn’t feel right to take my bonus this year.”

The firm says that in the last 12 months there has been significant progress in laying the foundations for improved performance.

Highlights include the launch of a £1.6 billion programme to modernise sewage infrastructure and improve river health; relocating the customer call centre, bringing it back from South Africa to Swindon creating 200 jobs; and expanding the leaks repair team to more than 1000 engineers, enabling them to fix a leak every 7.5 minutes.

The CEO and CFO’s decisions come at a time when Thames Water’s Remuneration Committee is working on a new performance-related pay structure.

It will be published later this year and will better align executive compensation with the priorities of customers and regulators by giving a greater weighting to customer service and environmental performance than financial results.

“At a time when customers and regulators are properly focused on the environmental and service performance of water companies, it is right that England’s biggest water company leads the way in setting a remuneration structure which focuses management on tackling the most pressing challenges: improving customer service, reducing leaks and focusing on the health of our rivers,” said the CEO.

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