Essay by Eric Worrall
Spending tax money on reservoirs instead of renewables might have been more effective.
Press release
National Drought Group meets to address “nationally significant” water shortfall
Five areas remain in drought with six more in prolonged dry weather
From: Environment Agency, Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs and Emma Hardy MP Published 12 August 2025
The National Drought Group met today (Monday 11 August) with the current water shortfall situation in England now defined as a “nationally significant incident.”
Five areas are officially in drought, with six more experiencing prolonged dry weather following the driest six months to July since 1976.
Despite the unsettled weather last month, many river flows and reservoir levels in England continued to recede compared to June.
Rainstorms and showers helped mask the fact that July was still the fifth warmest on record.
August has started to see a return of drier conditions and the fourth heatwave of the summer – putting more pressure on already struggling public water supplies and navigational waterways.
The National Drought Group – which includes the Met Office, government, regulators, water companies, the National Farmers’ Union, Canal & River Trust, anglers, and conservation experts – used the meeting to highlight the water-saving measures each sector is taking.
They also praised the public for reducing their own daily usage, with Yorkshire Water reporting a 10% reduction in domestic demand following their hosepipe ban. This equates to saving up to 80 million litres per day – equivalent to 32 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
The less water that is used, the less needs to be abstracted from local rivers – therefore protecting the health of our waterways and wildlife.
The Environment Agency’s Director of Water and NDG chair, Helen Wakeham said:
The current situation is nationally significant, and we are calling on everyone to play their part and help reduce the pressure on our water environment.
Water companies must continue to quickly fix leaks and lead the way in saving water. We know the challenges farmers are facing and will continue to work with them, other land users, and businesses to ensure everyone acts sustainably.
We are grateful to the public for following the restrictions, where in place, to conserve water in these dry conditions. Simple, everyday choices – such as turning off a tap or deleting old emails – also really helps the collective effort to reduce demand and help preserve the health of our rivers and wildlife.
The recent rainfall has been welcomed by growers, although the impacts from the dry weather remain as farmers continue their harvest.
The National Farmers Union noted how water shortages have impacted the growing season this year.
NFU Vice-President, Rachel Hallos said:
British farmers and growers continue to face extremely dry conditions, with harvest underway and crop yields proving mixed across the country. Some farms are reporting a significant drop in yields, which is financially devasting for the farm business and could have impacts for the UK’s overall harvest.
Farming is a long-term industry and there is growing concern about the months ahead. Minimal grass growth means many livestock farmers are already tapping into winter feed stocks, raising the risk of higher production costs later in the year.
Access to clean, reliable water is essential for food production. What’s worked well during this drought has been early, coordinated communication with stakeholders around licence restrictions and drought permits and orders and it’s crucial this continues.
To avoid the swing between extreme drought and flooding and to secure water supplies for food production, we urgently need investment in water infrastructure and a more effective planning system.
Periods of dry weather and low rivers reduce oxygen levels in water that can lead to fish kills and more algal blooms. Lower river flows also prevent wildlife from moving up or downstream.
Drying out wetlands can be devastating for species that depend on those habits while England has seen an increase in wildfires, devastating vulnerable areas of heathland and moorland.
The Met Office updated the group on the future weather outlook, noting drier weather has returned.
Chief Meteorologist at the Met Office, Dr Will Lang said:
This week is starting off warmer than of late across England and Wales with temperatures getting towards the mid-30s Celsius for some in the south.
While conditions remain mostly settled across the south, the picture is more unsettled further northwest, with rain or showers at times.
As we move into the second half of August, there are indications of high pressure building and therefore largely settled conditions overall. Although dry weather is more likely, rain, showers or thunderstorms cannot be ruled out.
The heat and climate change also impact human health, through issues such as heatstroke, dehydration, and respiratory problems.
Steve Reed, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, and Philip Duffy, Chief Executive of the Environment Agency, have also briefed Pat McFadden, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, about the situation.
Speaking after attending the meeting, Water Minister Emma Hardy said:
Working with the National Drought Group, the Government is urgently stepping up its response to ensure we are successfully managing the impacts of ongoing dry weather.
Water companies must now take action to follow their drought plans – I will hold them to account if they delay.
We face a growing water shortage in the next decade. That’s why we are pushing ahead with root and branch reform under our Plan for Change, which includes £104 billion of private investment to build nine reservoirs and new pipes to cut leaks.
CURRENT SITUATION
- Drought has been declared in: Yorkshire, Cumbria and Lancashire, Greater Manchester Merseyside and Cheshire, East Midlands, and the West Midlands.
- Areas in prolonged dry weather (the phase before drought) are: Northeast, Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, East Anglia, Thames, Wessex, Solent and South Downs.
- The remaining areas are normal: Hertfordshire, London, Kent, Devon and Cornwall.
- Yorkshire Water has a Temporary Usage Ban (TUB aka hosepipe ban) in place for all its customers.
- Thames, South East Water, and Southern Water have postcode-specific bans.
- Reservoirs fell by 2% last week and are now 67.7% full on average across England. The average for the first week of August is 80.5%. Last month, the average was 75.6%
- The lowest reservoirs are Blithfield (49.1%), Derwent Valley (47.2%), Chew Valley Lake (48.3%), Blagdon (46.3%).
- Rainfall in July was 89% of long-term average for the month across England. This is the sixth consecutive month of below average rainfall.
- Across the country, 51% of river flows were normal with the rest below normal, notably low or exceptionally low.
- Two rivers – Wye and Ely Ouse – were the lowest on record for July
- There are currently navigation closures or restrictions across sections of the Leeds and Liverpool, Macclesfield, Trent and Mersey, Peak Forest, Rochdale, Oxford and Grand Union Canal.
- More information here Dry weather and drought in England: 25 to 31 July 2025 – GOV.UK
ACTIONS BY NATIONAL DROUGHT GROUP MEMBERS
- The UK Health Security Agency is working with the National Drought Group to update its public health impacts of drought guidance
- Water companies are communicating with customers about current risks and advising them how to use water wisely during this dry period.
- Water companies have stepped up action on leakage, with leaks down 41% compared to the level in 1989 when the industry was privatised.
- Over £700 million has been committed by water companies to tackle leaks over the next five years.
- Water companies have committed to reducing leakage by 50% from a 2017-18 baseline by 2050.
- Yorkshire Water reported that repairs of leaks identified by smart meters had saved 1.5 million litres per day.
- Yorkshire Water is fixing over 800 leaks per week.
- Dwr Cymru Welsh Water is fixing over 700 leaks per week.
- Over 500,000 customers with Anglian Water have had leaks identified via their smart meters. This helped the firm reduce leaks by a total of 187 million litres a day, equivalent to 75 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
- Anglian Water’s satellite technology has also helped prioritise leak detection, saving over 320,000 litres of water a day in rural areas, enough to supply 1,000 homes.
- Southern Water has 24,000 acoustic sensors attached to the 15,500km of their water network to help detect leaks.
- In the last 12 months, Southern Water have reduced leaks by almost 20%, saving 138.7 million litres per day.
- Severn Trent has handed out 700 x 1,100 litre bowsers to farmers and several to the West Midlands Safari Park so livestock and animals have water.
- Water-saving messaging has helped reduce demand in the Severn Trent area by 20%, compared to the peak on 11th July.
- United Utilities are repairing more than 800 leaks a week and have seen a 200% increase in reports of leaks from customers.
- United Utilities is offering free home water audits in some areas, with more than 3,700 booked in.
- Thames Water has installed over one million smart meters, which are critical in helping locate leaks.
- Since June, Thames Water has fixed over 1,000 leaks in the region impacted by the hosepipe ban.
DROUGHT AND THE ENVIRONMENT AGENCY
- The Environment Agency continues to work with Government, including Defra and the Cabinet Office, on the drought response.
- The Environment Agency has escalated its operational response and diverted resources to ensure a rapid and nationwide response.
- It is conducting more compliance checks on businesses who abstract water to ensure regulations are met.
- It is actively engaging with water companies on requests for drought permits and drought orders and ensuring they follow their drought plans.
- There is increased monitoring of river and groundwater level and more modelling of rainfall patterns to inform decisions, including additional restrictions.
- The Environment Agency is working closely with farmers in East Anglia, requesting voluntary reductions on surface water abstraction. This will help conserve and extend the total period when water is available for abstraction, protect the environment and delay the need for any formal restrictions.
- The regulator has sped up the process of alerting abstractors about restrictions. Manage your water abstraction licence online – GOV.UK.
- The EA is managing potential navigation issues caused by low flows on the Rivers Thames, Lark and Great Ouse.
HOW TO SAVE WATER AT HOME
Source: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/national-drought-group-meets-to-address-nationally-significant-water-shortfall
- Install a rain butt to collect rainwater to use in the garden.
- Fix a leaking toilet – leaky loos can waste 200-400 litres a day.
- Use water from the kitchen to water your plants.
- Avoid watering your lawn – brown grass will grow back healthy.
- Turn off the taps when brushing teeth or shaving.
- Take shorter showers.
- Delete old emails and pictures as data centres require vast amounts of water to cool their systems.
Water companies have long been accused of underinvestment, a charge water companies vigorously deny. From 2024;
Water investors have withdrawn billions, says research
21 May 2024ShareSave
Dearbail Jordan
Business reporter, BBC News
Shareholders in some of the UK’s largest water companies have taken out tens of billions of pounds but failed to invest, new research claims, with firms planning to raise household bills to fund future spending.
Investors have withdrawn £85.2bn from 10 water and sewage firms in England and Wales since the industry was privatised more than 30 years ago, analysis by the University of Greenwich suggests.
Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country’s infrastructure.
Ofwat, the industry regulator, said it “strongly refuted” the figures.
“While we agree wholeheartedly with demands for companies to change, the facts are there has been huge investment in the sector of over £200bn,” a spokesperson said.
Water UK, which represents the industry, said investment in the sector was “double the annual levels seen before privatisation”.
Water and sewage firms want to increase customers’ bills by an average 33% over the next five years to fund improvements in the services for households.
…
Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cw4478wnjdpo
If there is a tendency to milk water companies rather than treat them as worthwhile assets to be managed, this may be exacerbated by insecurity of tenure – the British government can seize control of a water company anytime it convinces the courts the water company is failing to provide an adequate service. Having said that there is no easy answer to how to regulate a water company, given water companies are a natural monopoly.
Clearly the UK attempt to singlehandedly change the global climate and stop weather extremes is failing to deliver.
Regardless of whether companies have been responsible custodians of Britain’s water assets, it seems clear some of the hundreds of billions of pounds which has been wasted on climate action should have been spent on water security.
Perhaps it is time for Britain to abandon Net Zero, and focus instead on sensible infrastructure investment, such as energy and water security.
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Disk drives use very little energy, especially when they are idle.
The big power consumer are the CPUs and associated hardware for when data calculations are occurring.
I would imagine that you will consume much more energy searching for old e-mails and pictures, then you can possibly save by deleting them.
Beyond that, the disk still exists, even after your old stuff has been removed. It will continue to draw power until enough stuff has been removed to make the drive empty, and then someone comes by and disconnects it.
Really old stuff is often moved to tape drives and as a result the power consumed by the storage tower is unaffected by whether the tapes in then are full, partially full, or completely empty. However the act of retrieving the tape, deleting your data from it, and returning the tape to storage will consume power.
Forget the disks, what needs deletion is the insane ridiculous Ministry of Drought Absurdity. And not mere deletion but Control-Alt-Deletion and a Swift Reboot in the Backside.
you will consume much more energy searching for old e-mails and pictures
Absolutely the case.
This reminds me of the Dilbert cartoon where he tells the boss that “You can save space by using a smaller font.”
I miss Dilbert.
Just FYI: He’s doing “Dilbert Reborn” now – subscription only (looks like $3/month?), info at Dilbert.com
And he’s no longer bound by any publisher rules, so apparently it’s totally uncensored
Thanks. I’ll check it out. Worth it! Now that the woke thing is in retreat, time for Dilbert to rise again.
“There’s only so many ones and zeros, and when they’re gone, they’re gone”
Nah, its like government money.. Just print some more. ! 😉
Cloud…
an aerosol consisting of a visible mass of miniature liquid droplets, ice crystals, or other particles, suspended in the atmosphere of a planetary body or similar space.
Ed Miliband.
Not fifteen miles from where I live is the location of a proposed reservoir…the plans were drawn up over five years ago…but the will to make a start literally evaporated and what could have been a doubly-valuable resource is still smudges on a map…Demoralising…
Who knew that Hillary and Mann and the other “Climategate” crowd weren’t trying to hide anything. They were trying trying to “Save the Planet”!
Somebody should make a movie about Climategate. Maybe with AI?
Place all the principals of the email strings in a meeting room and, instead of typing responses, have the entire thing played out as an Oral Meeting with conversations showing typed email content and responses
Yes! You know it’d go viral! Have them around a big round table- in a dark and gloomy castle in Scotland. 🙂
Coming soon to a device near you…
Climategate, the Musical
With such hits like
Hide the Decline
BBC already did:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trick_(film)
I’d like to watch it- but that site doesn’t offer a link. But I did find a preview of it. Now I’m not sure if it’s in defense of the climategators or a satire of it.
It’s an attempt to exonerate the ‘poor honest scientists’ who were only doing their best to warn the people. It’s really not worth watching.
Mr. Din: I’m delighted another commenter beat me to noting Mann’s leadership in the fight against CAGW! He was decades ahead in the deletion dep’t.
Hillary, on the other hand, was just perfecting her approach to gov’t transparency.
Since about 2009 I’ve had a strong suspicion that “dumbing-down” potions were being added to public potable water supplies.
My suspicion gets closer to becoming an allegation as more evidence of dumbness emerges as every week passes now.
Joe Cocker even warned about this when he sang “Don’t Drink The Water” –
Too funny.
Not all data centres are government data centres; they’re not all full of hot-running electromechanical disks. Private-sector data centres probably switched to SSD decades ago.
But the funniest bit is the implication that once you use that water, like natural gas or coal it’s gone for good.
Dear goodness, is there anything more endlessly recyclable than water?
Human stupidity would might be more endlessly recyclable?
Human Stupidity also doesn’t seem to follow the laws of entropy
Are you sure? From what I can see, human stupidity, like entropy, inevitably and constantly increases.
Perhaps they need us to remove our old emails and photos in order to free up space for the data-gathering obsession of many governments (especially in Oz) so that they can monitor, then take us to court for, our speech and thoughts.
Or is there anything more endlessly stupid than Government bureaucrats?
Some years ago, I worked with a couple of retired water authority employees. The revealed that as soon as they were privatised, there were mass redundancies, and work on keeping catchment gullies on the moors was stopped. So instead of rainwater being directed to the reservoirs, it ran off anywhere.
I was also told by someone else, that he’d learned that a water authority actually sold water to the middle east.
After the last drought of 95, the authority was supposed to have laid a large water pipe all the way from Kielder to insure against another. Seems like it hasn’t worked.
So if we delete our emails we’ll need less diskstorage, fewer disks will be spinning. Does that mean the earth’s rotation will speed up or slow down? Will that cause more hurricanes? I don’t think they’ve thought it through. Be afraid, be very afraid.
It’s OK, our Eastern brothers have us covered.
Delete Old E-mails and with them ANY potential proof of something someone said that might be proof of nefarious intentions… Can you say Climategate?
Ha, I wish I thought of that 🙂
Feel free to use it next time it’s relevant
Probably as effective at controlling the weather as windmills, solar panels and electric cars.
Deleting old emails, or at least exporting them to a local backup file, is simply good practise. Hackers getting into your emails will wreck your life. Same goes for photos. If they’re that special, get them printed. If they’re not, delete them.
Population increase leads to a greater need for potable water..
Only reliable sources in most areas are extra dams, and desalination.
Hunter Water didn’t build Tillegra Dam because of environmental twits making too much empty noise…
… so they are now building a desalination plant at Belmont (a bit to the south of Newcastle CBD)
“Spending tax money on reservoirs instead of renewables might have been more effective.”
I’d rather say:
Spending tax money on reservoirs instead of renewables would have been more effective.
Drought is something of a mystery to me. My hometown averages 14 inches of precipitation per year. We are reported to be in severe drought now. It would seem an inch or two less for us would be more concerning than an inch or two less for an area that averages twice as much say twenty eight or thirty inches.
HAHAHAHA
I needed a laugh this morning
Aha! So that explains this:
—Dr. Phil Jones, Director of the Climatic Research Unit, disclosed Climategate e-mail, May 29, 2008.
—Dr. Phil Jones, Director of the Climatic Research Unit, on avoiding Freedom of Information requirements, disclosed Climategate e-mail, May 12, 2009.
🤣
(cue the deniers with cries of “out of context!!!” lol)
They seem to think that water from the kitchen tap differs from water from the garden tap.
When I lived in Florida, they had two water systems. One for the house and one for the yard.
The one from the house was from the water treatment plant and was drawn directly from the river or wells. The one for the yard was from the water reclamation plant and hadn’t been cleaned to the same standards as the house water. I do remember that I had to clean the sprinkler heads more frequently than I had to do when living in other areas.
Could also have been the higher temperatures as well.
Decaying Western infrastructure?
Shocked! I am shocked that there is gambling going on in this establishment!
My take away from all this is the Drought Group ceases to exist if there is no drought, so not matter what weather does they are going to call it drought. Here is a hint, stop ripping OUT dams and reservoirs to save creatures that are not endangered in the first place, that would be a good second step. Good first step? Rip out the Drought Group by it’s roots.