
Yorkshire Water says it will invest £797m over the next 12 months in network improvements as it continues to enhance and upgrade its operations.
The company says the investment follows £530m in the 2022/23 financial year and more than £750m in 2023/24.
It says the investment will focus on
- "delivering secure, safe clean water supplies with improved resilience of Yorkshire Water’s network of pipes and a focus on future water resource needs.
- "supporting plans for a healthy, natural environment, with a focus on protecting and improving river and coastal water quality, to create a cleaner, safer water environment. "
Richard Stuart, director of asset delivery at Yorkshire Water, said:
“In Yorkshire, between 2015 and 2025, we’ll have invested over £4.7 billion into improving our infrastructure. In the next year, we’ll be spending almost £800m on our key environmental improvement plans for wastewater treatment works around the region and ensuring we provide clean, safe drinking water.
“This investment includes finishing a £180 million programme to reduce the use of storm overflows across the county, the start of a £60m investment at Ilkley wastewater treatment works to improve bathing water quality, significant investment at some of our larger water treatment works to increase resilience in the drinking water network and the continuation of our £500m programme to reduce Phosphorus entering watercourses from our treatment works throughout the region.”
The £797m spent in the next 12 months is in line with Yorkshire Water’s investment commitment during the final year of the five-year 2020-2025 business period.
The water company is already planning investment for the following five years (2025-2030) and submitted its plans to Ofwat in October, which outlined a £7.8bn investment in the region which it says will support employment for more than 10,000 people across Yorkshire.
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