Skip main navigation | Jump to secondary navigation

Utility news

On this page you will find industry news about electricity, renewable energy, gas, water, fixed and mobile telecoms, and other stories. Our news is updated once per month. We cover items such as developing technologies, price changes in the utility markets, takeovers and company collapses, changes in tariffs, the results of investigations by the regulators and market trends.

Please take time also to visit our Business Cost Consultants news page, where we will keep you up to date with developments in Business Cost Consultants, and coverage we have had in news and trade press.

If you would like to be kept up-to-date with utility news, you can join our list of free monthly newsletter subscribers; just go to the Newsletter sign-up page. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Industry news

Recession hits Severn Trent sales

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Severn Trent has warned that its latest annual revenues will be up to £25m less than the year before, because of firms using less water in the recession.


The company supplies water across the Midlands and parts of Wales, a region that includes a number of Jaguar Land Rover plants that have cut production.

Severn Trent said the closure of High Street stores including Woolworths and MFI had also reduced water usage.

Severn Trent's financial year runs until the end of March.

The firm said it now expected reduced water consumption by firms across its region to cut its revenues by between £20m and £25m from the previous financial year.

Severn Trent had previously said it expected a drop of between £12m and £15m from a year earlier.

'Bad for sector'

"Overall we think the news is negative, not just for Severn Trent, but for sector sentiment," said broker Credit Suisse.

Shares in the firm were down 4% or 46 pence to 1141p in afternoon trading in London. Its decline also dragged down other water firms, such as United Utilities, Pennon and Northumbrian Water.

Electricity demand is also falling across the UK as a result of the recession, with firms either cutting back on their output and opening hours, or either shutting up shop for good.

The National Grid predicts that peak UK weekly electricity usage will fall by between 600 and 1,000 megawatts over the course of 2009. This is the equivalent output of one large power station.

This story was featured on the BBC website

Permanent link for this article