If water ever was seen like that then how the hell do you justify car washes? It should be for drinking, hygiene and irrigation only at that point.Already on 'surge priced tarriff', nothing wrong with it, much like leccy you pay more for peak use. Water, a finite resource, has been cheap for far too long and certainly hasn't risen in price with inflation over the previous 40/50 years. High time those with pools, jaccuzzis and hosepipes paid double / triple, sadly we're nowehre near achieving that.
As for people complaining about leaks, it's a rather moot point. A large proportion of that water goes back into the ground, one way or the other. Stuff that goes down the drain is recycled and re-used so leaked water is not 'lost'
If water ever was seen like that then how the hell do you justify car washes? It should be for drinking, hygiene and irrigation only at that point.
Yet car washes are always exempt from hose pipe bans. They're either essential or they aren't.Car washing is not essential. Once a month is more than enough, In the summer less, and even then a quick rinse down at the end is all that is needed.
I probably wash mine 3 times a year.
Already on 'surge priced tarriff', nothing wrong with it, much like leccy you pay more for peak use. Water, a finite resource, has been cheap for far too long and certainly hasn't risen in price with inflation over the previous 40/50 years. High time those with pools, jaccuzzis and hosepipes paid double / triple, sadly we're nowehre near achieving that.
As for people complaining about leaks, it's a rather moot point. A large proportion of that water goes back into the ground, one way or the other. Stuff that goes down the drain is recycled and re-used so leaked water is not 'lost'
High time those with pools, jaccuzzis and hosepipes paid double / triple, sadly we're nowehre near achieving that.
What?Yes actually
Same logic that already has us using storage heaters with cheap rate electricity.wtf kind of broken logic is that![]()
It used to be internal. Most of them are ex-water company employees, who earn more money working for the contractors.I'm not close enough to the repair work side but generally I think the opinion is that the outsourced companies just want to get the job over with quickly and get paid. Ideally the water companies would be employing more skilled people internally to do it.
Most leaks, once confirmed, will have a team on-site within hours. However, actual works are prohibited until the various NRSWA and local authority approvals are in place, which can take months if they want to be difficult about it.15% leakage for SE water there are streams running down streets from leaking mains that have been there an age and we're still restricted from using it ourselves.
Depends on the rain. Massive deluges do nothing to replenish supply routes, as it just saturates the surface ground and then runs off.Just an extra way for the water cartels to rip us off. I'm assuming it won't get cheaper when we have a lot of rain?
They're a livelihood for those workers, so considered exempt as bans could result in job losses.Yet car washes are always exempt from hose pipe bans. They're either essential or they aren't.
Tough, water is either so valuable you can or can't wash your car, shouldn't come down to who makes money from it.What?
So when you want a drink, it absolutely MUST be straight from the tap at the exact moment you have such thirst?
Well I suppose you need something to wash down all those Melton Mowbrays...
Same logic that already has us using storage heaters with cheap rate electricity.
It used to be internal. Most of them are ex-water company employees, who earn more money working for the contractors.
Most leaks, once confirmed, will have a team on-site within hours. However, actual works are prohibited until the various NRSWA and local authority approvals are in place, which can take months if they want to be difficult about it.
Depends on the rain. Massive deluges do nothing to replenish supply routes, as it just saturates the surface ground and then runs off.
You ideally want constant light-to-medium rainfall over a long period.
They're a livelihood for those workers, so considered exempt as bans could result in job losses.
Same logic that already has us using storage heaters with cheap rate electricity.
I see a water boss has received a very large bonus, apparently the more sewage you dump the more you get paid.
I need to start screwing up at work more to receive failure payments asap ! Or is that just a rich person perk?
Also all these bloody car washes on every steeat corner kind of need clamping down on with water shortages becoming the norm asap.
Hosepipe bans are a domestic restriction. Commercial users aren't affected by it.Tough, water is either so valuable you can or can't wash your car, shouldn't come down to who makes money from it.
They don't need economy tariffs to do that. If profit was the aim, they'd just put prices up outright.No dude. No. You know just as well as I and everyone else that it'll be abused for profit. That needs to be stamped out whilst it's still a little twinkly in someone's eye, and it needs to be stamped out with enough ferocity to shut the next 300 people up who come up with such a stupid idea. Water isn't a luxury, it's literally the foundation of the pyramid of needs.
Depends where you live and what you use the water for, of some conditions are met they can force you to have a meter.Why do people get to refuse water meters on their properties? I didn't think you could generally if a whole area was being done? I seem to recall on our old house that we didn't get a choice and we were told all houses in the street were being done. Surely the priority should be to make it a mandatory country wide rollout where possible, otherwise people can (and obviously do) take the biscuit with pools/spas etc. This would surely largely eradicate the need for ideas like peak pricing models.
Never going to happen these days but I shame they didn't link now reservoirs together. Are there any other examples like the Thirlmere aqueduct.93 out of 375 level monitoring stations in Scotland are showing "low" (all seem to be on the NE region).... The other 282 are normal as of today even after this heatwave
Can be viewed here https://waterlevels.sepa.org.uk/