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Clean Water Bill

Lifecycle: Implementation Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs · Environment Agency · Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee · Natural England · OEP · Ofwat · Public Accounts Committee Last regenerated 2 hours ago

Summary

What this is

The Clean Water Bill, announced in the King's Speech 2026, is the Government's primary legislative vehicle for long-term water-sector reform following the Cunliffe Independent Water Commission report and building on the interim Water (Special Measures) Act 2025. It is expected to consolidate water regulation under a single regulator and strengthen enforcement against sewage pollution.

Why it matters

It will reset the regulatory architecture for a £104bn PR24 investment cycle, restructure or replace Ofwat, and provide the statutory tools needed to meet Environment Act 2021 targets to reduce phosphorus from sewage by 80% and nutrient pollution from agriculture by 40% by 2038.

Current status

Pre-legislative scrutiny stage: announced in the King's Speech 2026 (May 2026), preceded by extensive Defra correspondence with select committees (January 2026) and the Cunliffe final report (July 2025). No bill text has yet been introduced; a 'Water Reform Bill' and accompanying white paper are referenced in PQs and ministerial correspondence.

What changed recently

  • 13 May 2026 — King's Speech 2026 formally announces the Clean Water Bill for long-term water-sector reform.
  • 25 Mar 2026 — Public Accounts Committee report confirms Defra will introduce a single water regulator absorbing functions of Natural England, Environment Agency, Ofwat and DWI.
  • 2 Feb 2026 — Defra Permanent Secretary writes to EFRA Committee on water sector regulation, setting out implementation thinking.
  • 29 Jan 2026 — Secretary of State writes to committee on the Water Reform Bill and accompanying white paper.
  • 1 Dec 2025 — Environmental Improvement Plan 2025 published alongside Environment Act water target delivery plans for agriculture, wastewater, and abandoned metal mines.

Key documents

Framework

Statutory basis

  • Water (Special Measures) Act 2025

    Predecessor statute introducing remuneration/governance rules, pollution incident reduction plans, emergency overflow reporting, civil penalty modifications and automatic penalties — the platform on which the Clean Water Bill will build.

  • Environmental Targets (Water) (England) Regulations 2023

    Sets four long-term statutory water targets under Environment Act 2021 s.1: 40% nutrient reduction from agriculture, 80% phosphorus reduction from sewage, 50% reduction in waters polluted by abandoned metal mines, 20% reduction in per-capita potable water demand — all by 2038.

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Review

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs → src
    Sponsoring department; Permanent Secretary corresponded with EFRA Committee on water sector regulation in January 2026 and Defra is leading both the white paper and the Bill itself.

Sponsoring minister 4

  • Emma Reynolds → src
    Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs; signed the Environmental Improvement Plan 2025 written statement reference (HLWS1105) and is the responsible Cabinet minister for the Clean Water Bill.
  • Steve Reed → src
    Former Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs who made the Commons statement responding to the Cunliffe final report on 21 July 2025; the department is now led by Emma Reynolds.
  • Emma Hardy → src
    Then Minister for Water and Flooding who issued HCWS86 on the Government Response to the Office for Environmental Protection report on Water Framework Directive Regulations and River Basin Management Plans (Sep 2024); current status unknown.
  • Baroness Hayman of Ullock → src
    Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Lords spokesperson for Defra) who issued HLWS1105 laying the Environmental Improvement Plan 2025 and the parallel HLWS84 on the OEP / Water Framework Directive response; current status unknown — treat as historical.

Lead committee 2

  • Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee → src
    Lead departmental select committee; held formal oral-evidence sessions on Reforming the Water Sector in June and September 2025 and received Defra correspondence on the Water Reform Bill and white paper in January 2026.
  • Public Accounts Committee → src
    Cross-cutting financial scrutiny committee whose July 2025 report on water sector regulation set out evidence on customer trust collapse and enforcement gaps and confirmed Defra plans for a single water regulator absorbing Natural England, EA, Ofwat and DWI water functions.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 2

  • Sir Jon Cunliffe → src
    Chair of the Independent Water Commission whose July 2025 final report (464 pages, 88 recommendations) is the analytical basis for the Clean Water Bill.
  • Consumer Council for Water → src
    Statutory consumer body cited in the July 2025 PAC report on customer trust falling to its lowest level since monitoring began in 2011.

Regulator / delivery programme 4

  • Environment Agency → src
    Environmental regulator delivering pollution-incident reduction plans, civil sanctions and the c.5x expanded water enforcement workforce announced March 2026; board terms extended to January 2028 to provide continuity through Bill passage.
  • Ofwat → src
    Economic regulator delivering the £104bn PR24 programme; expected to be restructured or replaced by a single water regulator under the Clean Water Bill.
  • Natural England → src
    Identified by PAC (July 2025) as having water-related regulatory functions that will transfer to the new single water regulator.
  • Office for Environmental Protection → src
    Statutory environmental governance body established by Environment Act 2021; published the Water Framework Directive implementation review to which Defra responded in September 2024.

Commentator 1

  • Baroness Bakewell of Hardington Mandeville → src
    Liberal Democrat peer who tabled HL6005 (March 2025) asking whether special administration measures could be used to address governance and environmental performance at water companies.

Political commitments

  • commitment King's Speech announcement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Clean Water Bill

    Clean Water Bill for long-term water-sector reform

    Why linked: King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes commit the Government to bringing forward a Clean Water Bill following the Cunliffe review and the Water (Special Measures) Act 2025.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Environment Secretary Steve Reed: Response to the Independent Water Commission'…

    Government accepts the direction of the Cunliffe Commission recommendations

    Why linked: Environment Secretary Steve Reed's House of Commons statement (21 July 2025) responding to the Independent Water Commission's final report set out the Government's commitment to legislative reform.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Government to invest over £100m in water company fines to local environmental p…

    £100m+ in water-company fines to be reinvested in local environmental projects

    Why linked: June 2025 Defra news announcement commits to channelling water-company fines into local water-quality improvement projects.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Environmental Improvement Plan 2025

    Environmental Improvement Plan 2025 commits to cleaner rivers and air

    Why linked: December 2025 Defra/Lords WMS laying the EIP 2025 commits Government to delivery of statutory water targets under the Environment Act 2021.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Publication of the Water Reform white paper referenced in the Secretary of State's January 2026 letter to committee.
  • Introduction of the Clean Water Bill to Parliament and selection of legislative vehicle / drafting model (Defra or joint with HMT for financial-resilience provisions).
  • Design of the single water regulator: scope of functions absorbed from EA, Ofwat, Natural England and DWI.
  • Whether the Bill includes statutory targets for ending sewage discharges from storm overflows beyond existing storm-overflow duties.
  • Treatment of public-health task force recommended by the Cunliffe review (asked in PQ 116849, March 2026).
  • Whether citizen science will be embedded in the Bill's monitoring architecture (PQ 117143, March 2026).
  • Whether operator self-monitoring of the water industry will be ended (PQ 116558, February 2026).

Beyond the corpus

  • FOUND King's Speech to build a stronger and fairer Britain · for gap: Draft Clean Water Bill or pre-legislative scrutiny text · 12 May 2026
  • FOUND Government’s Legislative Programme 2026 · for gap: Draft Clean Water Bill or pre-legislative scrutiny text · 14 May 2026
  • MISSING Government white paper on water reform — Referenced in the Secretary of State's January 2026 letter to committee but not yet published in the readable corpus.
  • MISSING Government response to the Cunliffe 88 recommendations on a per-recommendation basis — Initial response (July 2025 statement) was high-level; per-recommendation response not yet in the corpus.
  • MISSING List of working groups cited in 'A New Vision for Water (2026)' — Asked in PQ 123111 (March 2026); list not yet published.

Confidence gaps

  • Whether the Bill will be titled 'Clean Water Bill', 'Water Reform Bill' or both — corpus uses both names.
  • Precise scope of the single water regulator and which DWI / Natural England functions transfer.
  • Whether Welsh provisions will be included or handled by separate Senedd legislation.