Britain makes major strides in protecting its waterways as the Environment Agency unveils a significantly strengthened enforcement workforce focused on tackling pollution across East Anglia. This marks a major step forward in safeguarding rivers, streams, lakes and coastal waters for communities and wildlife.
At the heart of the initiative is the creation of five new regulatory teams across the Anglian region, part of the largest ever expansion of water enforcement capability by the Environment Agency (EA). The regulator has increased its water enforcement staff nearly fivefold since 2023, with roles growing from 41 to 195 and further increases planned this year. This dramatic scaling up reflects the government’s commitment to cleaning up water pollution and holding water companies accountable.
These new teams are already active on the ground, conducting thousands of compliance inspections at wastewater sites, far exceeding the number undertaken in the previous six years combined. Their work includes checking permits, inspecting infrastructure, sampling water quality and building legal cases where necessary to enforce environmental law.
The results so far have been promising. With 8,000 of 10,000 planned inspections completed in the current financial year, the EA has identified more than 4,700 improvement actions, including repairing sewage works and upgrading outdated facilities. Enforcement activity has also helped reduce permit breaches by around four per cent, demonstrating that tougher oversight can lead to real improvements.
Water Minister Emma Hardy highlighted the importance of these efforts, saying the extra officers and inspectors are already helping to protect rivers, lakes and seas and restore public confidence in the system. The expanded workforce will be central to implementing stronger enforcement powers, including tougher automatic penalties under the new Water (Special Measures) Act 2025.
This initiative not only strengthens Britain’s regulatory response to pollution but also reinforces a broader commitment to environmental protection and community wellbeing. With enhanced enforcement and greater transparency, the future looks brighter for Britain’s treasured waterways.



