What's new on Dover Wealth Management?

This year investment insights

Thames Water drops bonuses due for bosses after government criticism

Thames Water has "withdrawn" plans to pay senior bosses bonuses linked to the company securing a £3bn emergency loan, the environment secretary has said. 21 May, 2025

Thames Water has "withdrawn" plans to pay senior bosses bonuses linked to the company securing a £3bn emergency loan, the environment secretary has said.

Steve Reed confirmed the proposals had been dropped during an Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Efra) committee session with MPs on Tuesday.

The so-called retention plan would have amounted to 50% of senior bosses' salaries - leading to them getting £1m on top of their annual salaries and regular bonuses.

The payments were linked to the struggling firm securing a rescue loan of up to £3bn to stave off collapse earlier this year.

The company's chairman had earlier in the day admitted to incorrectly stating the retention plan was "insisted upon" by lenders.

Thames Water had been "trying to circumvent" upcoming rules that can ban water companies from paying bonuses by "calling their bonuses something different", Mr Reed told MPs.

"It was the wrong thing to do," he said. "It offends against their own customers' sense of fair play."

I was worth my six-figure bonus, says under-fire Thames Water boss

Thames Water apologises to customers but defends bonuses

Thames Water delays request for even more expensive bills as six offers of new investment received

A spokesman for Thames said: "It has never been the Thames Water board's intention to be at odds with the government's ambition to reform the water industry."

The company's board "has decided to pause the retention scheme and await forthcoming guidance from the regulator" in relation to the new rules, he added.

In a letter to the committee, Thames Water's chairman Sir Adrian Montague said he may have "in the heat of the moment […] misspoken" when he was quizzed on the firm's turnaround at an Efra session last week.

Follow our channel and never miss an update

Thames Water is England's biggest water firm, supplying around 16 million households across London and the South East.

It has been at the centre of growing public outrage over the extent of pollution and rising bills - which have inched higher while executives have been paid huge bonuses.

Read more:
'I was worth my bonus,' says Thames Water boss
Olympian calls for river clean-ups

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Be the first to get Breaking News

Install the Sky News app for free

New rules from the Water Services Regulations Authority (Ofwat) mean bonus payments to bosses can be banned if companies fail to meet standards to protect the environment, consumers and company finances.

It could also block payments funded not just by customer money, but by lenders and shareholders.

Join Dover Wealth Management

Careers

Don’t just come to work.
Come to change.

Successful careers take collaboration. See who you’l work with, where you fit, what you’ll do and how you can reach your potential.

Careers