The UK’s biggest water provider has delayed its request for even higher customer bills.
Thames Water has deferred its appeal to the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), the regulator tasked with deciding if the company can raise bills by even more than initially allowed.
In December, water regulator Ofwat determined that bills could rise 35% to about £588 annually per household by 2030.
This was challenged by the firm serving 16 million people as being insufficient. It wanted a 53% rise.
The deferment comes as Thames Water said it received six offers of new investment and announced it would finalise a bidder by June and close the fundraising process by September.
This postponement will last 18 weeks and has been approved by Ofwat.
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Thames Water boss can ‘save’ company
Additional investment could result in a “market-led” solution to refinancing the company, Thames Water said.
It means its financial woes could be improved by investors rather than billpayers being charged more.