Water Act 1945

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Water Act 1945
Act of Parliament
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (Variant 1, 2022).svg
Long title An Act to make provision for the conservation and use of water resources and for water supplies and for purposes connected therewith.
Citation 8 & 9 Geo. 6. c. 42
Territorial extent England and Wales
Dates
Royal assent 15 June 1945
Commencement 1 October 1945
Status: Repealed

The Water Act 1945 (8 & 9 Geo. 6. c. 42) [1] was an Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom, introduced by the coalition government and intended to expand and support the national water supply in England and Wales. It marked the beginning of a national water supply policy, required water suppliers to supply water to non-domestic customers for the first time, and introduced the concept of abstraction licensing.

Contents

Background

The supply of water for domestic users in England and Wales was originally part of a concern for public health. As urban populations grew in the early nineteenth century, water was provided either by local authorities or by private companies, each of which obtained its powers from Parliament by obtaining local acts. The scope of these acts varied considerably, and an attempt was made to provide some uniformity by the passing of the Waterworks Clauses Acts of 1847 and 1863. These provided general guidelines for new local acts, which were expected to be based upon the guidelines. Further legislation to define how domestic water supply undertakings should operate was enshrined in the Public Health Act 1875 and the Public Health Act 1936. [2]

As urban populations grew, so did the demands for water, and the statutory providers sought sources of water outside of their local area, often in more remote upland regions. Each such development required its own Act or Parliament, and the intentions of one statutory supplier often conflicted with local interests in the upland region, or with those of similar statutory suppliers also wanting to develop resources in the same region. Parliament considered each case in isolation, but there was no regional planning to consider the wider implications of any one scheme. There had been calls for a more structured approach to planning in 1869, when the Duke of Richmond had chaired the Royal Commission on Water Supply, and there were further calls in 1920, when the Board of Trade Water Power Resources Committee advocated a Water Commission for England and Wales, but nothing materialised. A little progress was made in 1924, when Regional Advisory Water Committees were set up, as a joint venture between the Ministry of Health and existing statutory suppliers. Their function was to co-ordinate schemes for water supply, which might involve more than one supplier. [3] Government involvement in water supply was, however, limited to the supply of water for domestic consumption only. [4]

Scope

The Act marked the beginning of a national water supply policy. It recognised the need for central government to supervise the statutory suppliers of water, and to be involved in the difficult issues of water supply. It also broke away from a concern purely for domestic water supply. For the first time, water suppliers were also required to supply water to non-domestic users. Although not fully defined in this act, it also marked the start of abstraction licensing, with powers to control new requests to abstract groundwater from aquifers in designated conservation areas. [3]

Consisting of 65 sections, the Act was organised into five parts, covering central and local planning, local organisation of water supplies, conservation and protection of water resources, powers and duties of local authorities and local undertakers, with the final part covering a number of general sections. This part also included five schedules, of which the fourth contained amendments to the Public Health Act 1936, and the fifth contained details of previous legislation which was repealed by the Act. [5]

It gave the Minister of Housing and Local Government the responsibility "to promote the conservation and proper use of water resources and the provision of water supplies in England and Wales and to secure the effective execution by water undertakers, under his control and direction, of a national policy relating to water." Thus the Minister had functions relating to the conservation of water for supply. This was to be achieved through abstraction licensing and ensuring that sources used for water supply did not become polluted. The other main ministerial function was the supervision of the companies providing a public water supply, and the rationalisation of the areas which they covered. Despite the mention of a national policy, the Act contained little to achieve one, although the amalgamation of water supply undertakers was one strategy that the Minister was given. [6]

One significant benefit of the Act was its impact on groundwater. The need to understand its behaviour had been outlined in a White Paper entitled "A National Water Policy" published in 1944, and the Act required anyone constructing a well to inform the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research of their drilling and testing operations. Those abstracting water were required to keep proper records of the volumes of water taken. [7]

In 1945, there were over 1,000 water suppliers in England and Wales, [8] with 26 supplying half the volume of water used. Another 97 supplied a further quarter, and the remainder was split between 900 small undertakings.[ citation needed ] The Act did not extend as far as allowing the nationalisation of these water suppliers, but it did give the Minister power to order individual suppliers to amalgamate.

Bibliography

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References

  1. "Water Act 1945 - Introduction". The National Archives. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  2. Porter 1978, pp. 23–24.
  3. 1 2 Porter 1978, p. 24.
  4. Porter 1978, p. 23.
  5. "Water Act 1945 - full text" (PDF). HMSO. 1945. pp. i–iii. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  6. Porter 1978, p. 29.
  7. Lees 1985, p. 39.
  8. Ofwat 2006, p. 1.