Reed: Government to cut sewage pollution in half by 2030

20 Jul 2025 10:07 PM

Sewage pollution from water companies will be cut in half by the end of the decade, the Environment Secretary Steve Reed yesterday (Sunday 20 July) pledged. 

Our rivers, lakes and seas will be the cleanest since records began, meaning millions of families will benefit from cleaner beaches and rivers.  

For the first time the Government has made a pledge to cut sewage pollution with a clear target which they will be held accountable to.  

The Government, in partnership with investors, has secured funding to rebuild the entire water network to clean up our rivers. 

In one of the largest infrastructure projects in this country’s history, a record £104 billion is being invested to upgrade crumbling pipes and build new sewage treatment works cutting sewage pollution into rivers.  

Over the past year, the Government has introduced a package of measures to slash pollution levels. Bills are now ringfenced to force companies to invest in upgrades and over £100 million of water fines are being spent on local clean-up projects.  

The commitment comes as the Government vows “root and branch reform” to usher in a revolution in the water industry, ahead of the Independent Water Commission’s final report. 

Environment Secretary Steve Reed yesterday aid:

Families have watched their local rivers, coastlines and lakes suffer from record levels of pollution.  

My pledge to you: the Government will halve sewage pollution from water companies by the end of the decade.

One of the largest infrastructure projects in England’s history will clean up our rivers, lakes and seas for good.” 

 The Government has already taken decisive action to clean up England’s waterways.

This package of measures will slash storm overflow spills by 50% by 2030 and halve phosphorus from treated wastewater by 2028. 

Both contaminants choke our rivers, suffocate wildlife and destroy ecosystems. In 2024, sewage spilled into waterways for a record 3,614,428 hours.  

Pollution levels were a decisive factor in the Government launching the Independent Water Commission last October – the largest review of the sector since privatisation.     

Led by Sir Jon Cunliffe, the Commission’s final report will be published today with recommendations on regulation, strategic frameworks and support for consumers. The Government will respond to the recommendations in Parliament today.  

FURTHER INFORMATION

PLEDGE:

Environment Secretary Steve Reed’s pledge is based on:

STORM OVERFLOWS:

PHOSPHORUS:

SUSTAINABLE DRAINAGE SYSTEMS (SuDS):

NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS (NbS):

DATA: