South East Water’s greatest failure was not contacting customers during winter outages, report finds
A report by the Consumer Council for Water (CCW) found that South East Water's greatest failure during winter water outages was inadequate customer communication. Fewer than 10% of affected customers in Kent and Sussex were satisfied with the company's handling of the crisis, which left tens of thousands without water in November/December and January.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA report by the Consumer Council for Water (CCW) found that South East Water's greatest failure during winter water outages was inadequate customer communication. Fewer than 10% of affected customers in Kent and Sussex were satisfied with the company's handling of the crisis, which left tens of thousands without water in November/December and January. The report highlighted that poor communication exacerbated the disruption, leading to a loss of confidence in water supply reliability. Vulnerable customers registered for priority services also reported not receiving expected support. This criticism comes as South East Water faces further scrutiny for recent outages and a potential £22 million fine from regulator Ofwat.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedAbout half of customers in vulnerable circumstances registered for priority services did not receive the support they expected.
About 69,000 properties were hit with water shortages and low pressure in January.
About 24,000 customers lost water supply or pressure in November/December due to a water quality failure at Pembury water treatment works.
Fewer than one in 10 SEW customers were satisfied with how the company handled the water supply crisis last winter.
South East Water failed to adequately communicate with customers during winter outages, a report by the Consumer Council for Water (CCW) concluded.