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See who triumphed at the Utility Week Awards 2019 in our dedicated winners' review.
6 years ago
This weekend’s papers have reported on Thames hiring restructuring experts to tackle its £12 billion debt pile, Boris Johnson’s plans to re-introduce the department for energy and climate change and the likelihood of multiple appeals to the CMA over Ofwat’s final determinations for PR19.
The Conservative landslide in the 2019 election has reshaped parliament and the party, with a new breed of Tory MPs inspired by the impact green policies can have on their constituencies. With Boris Johnson now empowered to set his own agenda, what role will the net zero journey play in the legacy he is hoping to create?
Utility Week magazine editor Suzanne Heneghan reflects on why the new Conservative government must deliver on its campaign pledges to the regions.
Shares in utility companies have soared as the threat of nationalisation disappeared and unexpected certainty was priced into the UK market. Leading analysts told Utility Week that the strength of the Conservative majority in yesterday’s general election removed several of the major threats for the sector but questions still remained.
Utility Week takes a look at some of the projects happening around the sector. The include network upgrades in England and a hydro electric plant in Scotland.
The huge parliamentary majority secured by the Conservative Party in the 2019 election sounds the death knell for the policy of renationalisation. But what else does it mean for utilities? Digital editor, James Wallin, discusses.
Cloud computing, analytics and ERP can be employed to give you a holistic view of your organisation’s security.
The CCC chief has said:“The next six months in this country are more important than any six months since we started focusing on climate change. I hope the next administration will have a set of policies that make sense: if they don’t, you will hear from us more and more."