Demand for drinking water has increased, according to South East Water (Picture: Getty Images)
If you’re still working from home following the Covid pandemic, then it’s your fault a hosepipe ban is coming into place – at least that’s what one water company says.
South East Water has laid blame at the door of those who aren’t going into an office for the first hosepipe ban of the summer that will be imposed on Monday.
The water company, which supplies more than two million homes and businesses, says it has been left with ‘no choice but to restrict the use of hosepipes and sprinklers until further notice’.
Households across Kent and Sussex will be affected by the ban and company chief executive David Hinton claimed people working from home was a ‘key factor’ because it has ‘increased drinking water demand’.
In a letter to customers, he wrote: ‘Over the past three years the way in which drinking water is being used across the south east has changed considerably.
‘The rise of working from home has increased drinking water demand in commuter towns by around 20% over a very short period, testing our existing infrastructure.’
Mr Hinton also blamed low rainfall since April, which he said had left water butts empty, as well as a recent spell of hot weather causing a spike in demand for drinking water.
Homeworkers have been blamed for… drinking water (Picture: Getty Images)
‘Our reservoir and aquifer stocks of raw water, essential to our water supply but not ready to be used, are in a good position,’ he said.
‘However, demand for treated mains water, which takes time to process and deliver, was greater than we could meet.
‘Over the past week we have needed to find water to supply the equivalent of an additional four towns the size of Maidstone or Eastbourne, every day.’
One South East Water customer accused Mr Hinton of ‘victim blaming’ and described his letter as ‘a deflection from the real issue’.
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Jutta Wrobel, 61, an artist in the village of Wadhurst, East Sussex, said: ‘It’s not a suitable response, neither is the paddling pool story or the idea they didn’t see summer coming – they’re all trivial sideshows.
‘This is a deflection from the real issue which is how to stop South East Water paying away all our money in dividends rather than reinvesting in our water infrastructure, which is a public utility and a human right.
‘We are supposed to be the Garden of England. We are not supposed to have hosepipe bans for two years running.’
Campaigner Jutta Wrobel says South East Water is ‘victim blaming (Picture: Getty Images/iStockphoto)
The married grandmother of four started an online petition demanding a change of ownership of South East Water after she was left without mains water for five days earlier this month.
She added: ‘The barrage of victim blaming by South East Water is what I think has riled people up.
‘I’m interested in what the regulator is doing about it and whether there will be meaningful sanctions imposed on South East Water.’
Greg Clark, the Conservative MP for Tunbridge Wells, told The Times: ‘Their only job is to deliver drinking water. But in my constituency, they have run out of water twice in six months – once just before Christmas when we had a cold snap, and now after a small and unexceptional heatwave.
‘What they’re describing in terms of people working for home is by no means specific to this area. There has been for some time a tendency for people to work more from home. A water company should be able to predict and accommodate for this.’
A spokeswoman for the water regulator Ofwat told The Times: ‘South East Water must do better to predict and manage operational issues, help customers, and engage with them on what is happening and why.
‘Customers will be asking why, for the second time in six months, their water company is being caught out by the weather.’
South East Water’s Head of Service Management, Steve Andrews, said: ‘We announced the Temporary Use Ban (TUB) on Friday 16 June.
‘Following a period of consultation, we will be able to take action against customers who contravene the hosepipe restrictions from Monday, 26 June.
‘The restrictions have been introduced to ensure that we can deliver drinking water to all our customers consistently.
‘Since the TUB was introduced, we have seen customer demand reduce, bringing down the high demand for tap water. We want to thank our customers for being mindful of their water use and remind them to continue to use water wisely over the coming weekend.’
A hospipe ban has also been introduced in the south-west of England this month.
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Those pesky homeworkers…