Ofwat names innovation competition winners

The 11 winners of the first round Ofwat’s Innovation in Water Challenge have been announced including a Centre of Excellence for the whole water sector.

Up to £250,000 will be awarded to the bids to develop solutions to major common challenges faced by the industry.

Projects ranged from planting and restoring seagrass meadows, a scheme to turn ammonia in wastewater into green hydrogen gas to software that can monitor the degradation of wildlife habitats. Other ideas focused on preventing leaks using AI, CCTV, and unexploited optical fibre strands in telecoms networks.

“We’ve seen a really strong round of bids for the initial funds and we were significantly over subscribed – by more than five times the amount of money that was on the table for this round,” John Russell, senior director at Ofwat, told Utility Week.

There were 61 bids for the inaugural competition, which Russell said indicated the level of enthusiasm ignited by the fund.

“That spark is not just in the breadth of the projects from technology, engineering and customer behaviour projects, but also shows the spirit of collaboration we wanted to see between companies and other partners.”

In addition to the 17 English and Welsh companies, partners came from academia, not-for-profit and environmental groups, supply chain partners and the water companies in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Ireland

A Water Centre of Excellence supported by all companies was included in the list, which Russell said demonstrated the whole sector’s commitment to take the innovation story to the next chapter.

“It shows the architecture of innovation coming to life,” he said. “Given the challenges the sector faces on leakage, climate change and ambition in PR19 – we’ve always said: ‘don’t try to solve these problems 17 different ways’. This is a tangible example of the sector recognising that and of its own volition moving forward to solve some of these existential challenges.”

And the winners are:

Russell said the judging panel had to be of an incredibly high calibre to thoroughly stress test the bids. Any unsuccessful entrants will receive feedback and the opportunity to resubmit.

The panel was chaired by Rachel Skinner, president of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE), who said: “The shortlisted entries provided a clear snapshot of the industry and its current challenges but also multiple opportunities for widespread transformation in diverse areas ranging from the urgent need for accelerated action on climate mitigation and resilience, to new ways to build value for customers as the social and economic impacts of Covid-19 play out.  They also highlighted huge potential for onward cross-sector learning and collaboration that will now be explored in detail.”

The next round will kick off in the autumn and Russell said he wanted to encourage the collaboration to mature further and would welcome more entries related to customer facing projects. “There are big issues to do with demand management and getting customers to think about what they put into the water environment as well as what they take out so it would be good to see more on that.”

The main innovation competition opens in May with entries invited until June.