Waters not cheap, especially when my annual water rate lands on my doormat!
least we might end up with fewer potholes...
maybe.
pigs might fly.
with the right amount of time and evolution they might?
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i know, if i said it out loud you would have realised![]()
Another stupid idea that needs stopping right now before the coalition think they've got a chance of ruining things even more than Labour managed./QUOTE]
Well Cameron is the one mooting it. That means they will try and forge it before 2015.
srichards said:Look how far the tolls have risen on the only toll road? Usage levels have dropped way back. What happens when those private companies go bust?
Only Toll road???
There are loads in the UK, including one in London that's been in existence since 1619.
Tolls are not new in this country, they've just dropped out of fashion here since the 1920s road acts.
Personally I don't see anything wrong with them, especially if they improve the road network. It's not as if you are forced to use them- there are always alternate routes.
Only Toll road???
There are loads in the UK, including one in London that's been in existence since 1619.
Tolls are not new in this country, they've just dropped out of fashion here since the 1920s road acts.
Personally I don't see anything wrong with them, especially if they improve the road network. It's not as if you are forced to use them- there are always alternate routes.
Mark,
The point is they will be making a profit out of your using the roads, plus the fact (which is the icing on the cake) they will be giving sweeteners to the companies from the road tax. So it's not just making money from the road tolls which i'm ok with.
It's happened with the water. You will be on standpipes mid summer. That stems from sweeteners to the companies. Are you happy with that?
There's no such thing as "road tax". Its called vehicle excise duty, its your vehicle that gets taxed and its based on things such as weight, emissions etc etc which is why the costing is different, and for some vehicles its free.
And the upcoming water shortage is simply due to the driest winter in years
Wrong.
The back-up reservoirs before privatisation were closed as a sweetener for the companies, so they didn't have to maintain them. We are now paying for that now.
Really? I don't think this is the case.
I've seen two reservoirs over the last month where the water is only half filling each one, its a simple fact that volume wise, there isn't enough usable water. Ergo - the main reservoirs arnt being filled, let alone any 'back up' reservoirs (not heard of the back up reservoir issue you've described though?).
Really? I don't think this is the case.
If they actually cared sufficiently to maintain their pipework then we wouldn't see billions of gallons of water wasted every year... But then they wouldn't be able to hike prices up as result of 'shortage' and impose fines for breaching hosepipe bans would they?!
"Ofwat figures show that in 2010-2011 Southern Water lost 96 million litres of water per day"
"Anglian Water missed its target on reducing leaks by eight per cent. The firm – whose slogan is “love every drop” – lost 230 million litres per day last year, just under 20 per cent of its total."
-Telegraph article.
"Every day more than 3.3 billion litres of treated water – 20 per cent of the nation's supply and 234 million litres a day more than a decade ago – are lost through leaking pipes in England and Wales. The water lost would meet the daily needs of 21.5 million people."
-Independent article.
And therein lies the problem with privatisation of essential services. They're motivated by profits and not by the quality/efficiency of the services they provide. You think potholes will reduce? Of course they won't, it'll be just the same except you'll have to pay additional fees for the privilege of driving over them!
We will have to agree to differ.![]()
I'm just curious where you came across this info, thats all
You cant argue with the physical facts that the water simply isnt in the reservoir was my point!
Didn't mean to take this off topic!

And therein lies the problem with privatisation of essential services. They're motivated by profits and not by the quality/efficiency of the services they provide. You think potholes will reduce? Of course they won't, it'll be just the same except you'll have to pay additional fees for the privilege of driving over them!

I agree. But if you look at the figures pre privatisation and post privatisation, you'll see a massive improvement.
"leakage has been reduced from 5,112 megaliters per day in 1994-95 to less than 3,281 megaliters per day in 2009-10 (the measuring method of two companies has changed over the period, so the actual reduction is even higher)" - from Wiki. These figures are both post privatisation (which was in 1989) but those figures are even higher!
Leakages are a constant anyway so they dont have anything to do with this particular shortage over and above what levels are normally expected this time of the year.
Didn't mean to take this off topic!
It's only new roads not existing roads.
Mark,
The point is they will be making a profit out of your using the roads, plus the fact (which is the icing on the cake) they will be giving sweeteners to the companies from the road tax. So it's not just making money from the road tolls which i'm ok with.
True, but if we make comparison to Scotland - who still have their water publicly managed by Scottish Water - they managed to reduce their water leaks by 40% in the last six years and it continues to be their priority. They've done this whilst providing the service at an average of £15 an annum less per household.
Just because leakages are constant until resolved doesn't mean it doesn't affect the shortage; if anything it makes them more relevant. That link I provided to the Independent said that daily leaks are equal to the daily consumption of 21.5 million homes. Fix those and then suddenly the demands on the reservoirs are reduced massively. Of course, if the excess consumption demands in times of shortage is greater than 21.5m homes then there's still a short fall but that has to ease a huge amount of burden on the system.
Unfortunately resolving that waste would increase supply whilst demands remain constant so logically price should fall and it also removes their ability to impose fines during hosepipe bans. All this whilst they have to spend money from their £354.5m profits (March 2011) to achieve the result.
It doesn't make sense for a profit driven private company to resolve these issues.
The case in favour of privatisation is that competition forces companies to maximise their efficiencies in order to remain competitive in the market but in instances such as water (and rail, and many more) it's just not feasible to expect many companies to develop the infrastructure to compete with each and so one company is allowed to continue on practising inefficiently without consequence because they are sole suppliers of a necessity so they're guaranteed profits regardless.
The case for the road network is exactly the same. We're not going to see several roads running side by side each owned by a different company with a different quality of surface and a price to match the quality they offer. It's going to be one road, one price, use it and deal with or drive a huge distance to circumvent the sensible route.
Bloody hell your'e good![]()
I just re-read what I typed and I'm surprised you made sense of half of it! Note to self: Must proof-read before hitting submit reply!