Anglian Water Imposes First Hosepipe Ban in a Decade Amid Dry Conditions
L'essentiel
- Anglian Water has enacted its first hosepipe ban in 10 years due to persistent hot and dry weather in the East of England.
- The restrictions, starting Saturday, aim to conserve water supplies and protect the environment.
- Cambridge Water also introduced a ban, its first in 30 years.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Anglian Water has implemented its first hosepipe ban in a decade due to prolonged hot and dry weather, affecting the East of England. Cambridge Water also announced a ban, its first in 30 years, as the UK experiences its third heatwave of 2026.
Anglian Water has introduced its first hosepipe ban in a decade due to "unrelenting" hot and dry conditions across the East of England.
The restrictions officially begin at 01:00 BST on Saturday, but customers are being asked to limit their water use immediately to "help protect water supplies".
On Thursday, Cambridge Water also announced its first hosepipe ban for 30 years as the UK entered its third heatwave of 2026.
Anglian Water said it had been "a very difficult decision" to bring in the temporary ban, but that it was necessary to protect customer supplies as well as "our region's precious environment".
Officially called a "temporary use ban" - meaning it only applies to domestic use of hosepipes for actions like filling paddling pools and hot tubs, washing cars and windows, and watering the garden.
Anglian Water said people could still water fruit, vegetables and gardens using a watering can.
The company also urged non-domestic customers to "use water wisely" by not washing commercial vehicles.
The company supplies drinking and wastewater services to parts of Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Lincolnshire, and Northamptonshire.
East Anglia is the driest region in the country, and the East of England has seen the second driest spring on record, with only 39% of expected rainfall.
Anglian Water said the dry spring had combined with record-breaking temperatures to create "exceptionally high demand for water".
The company said many of the region's rivers were "at notably or exceptionally low levels" and its reservoirs were also less full than usual.
Its head of strategic asset planning, Dr Geoff Darch, said its teams were "working 24/7 to keep taps flowing".
"Understandably, customers have wanted to stay cool and have fun in the sun, but the unrelenting conditions are placing the environment and water supplies under increasing strain," he said.
"We are now at the point where we need to ask customers to help by hanging up the hosepipe, letting lawns go brown, cars go dirty and using water even more wisely," he added.
Anglian Water has joined other organisations in a campaign to promote water-saving ideas, external.
He said the company had prepared for periods of prolonged dry weather and invested hundreds of millions each year "to build our region's resilience".
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Further water restrictions may be implemented if dry conditions persist.
Probable · En quelques semaines
Questions ouvertes
- Will further restrictions be imposed?
- What is the long-term impact on water infrastructure?
- How will this affect agriculture in the region?






