Can Britain Fix Its Broken Water System? episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 12, 2026 · 41 MIN

Can Britain Fix Its Broken Water System?

from Future For Water · host Dave Wallace

Britain’s rivers are in crisis. Sewage pollution, failing infrastructure, rising bills and growing public anger have pushed water firmly into the national spotlight.But how did we get here? And, more importantly, how do we fix it?In this powerful and frank conversation, Dave Wallace and Claire Zambuni sit down with Ash Smith — one of the UK’s most influential grassroots campaigners fighting for cleaner rivers and accountability in the water industry.Ash shares the story behind the campaign group Windrush Against Sewage Pollution (WASP), reflects on the impact of Channel 4’s explosive drama-documentary Dirty Business, and explains why he believes the UK water system is fundamentally broken.The discussion explores everything from privatisation and regulation to political inertia, the economics of debt-laden water companies, and why grassroots citizen action may be the country’s best hope for change.At the heart of the conversation is a growing national movement asking a difficult question: Should water return to public ownership?Ash also explains WASP’s rapidly growing petition calling for a public referendum on water ownership — and why he believes the public deserves a direct say in the future of one of the country’s most essential services.This is an urgent, passionate and surprisingly hopeful conversation about accountability, activism and the power of ordinary people to drive change.In this episode we discuss:The origins of Windrush Against Sewage Pollution and why citizen science mattersThe real impact of Channel 4’s Dirty Business documentaryWhy public anger over sewage pollution continues to growThe hidden economics of privatised water companiesHow customer bills are being used to service debtWhy regulation has repeatedly failed to protect riversClaims of illegal pollution and underinvestment across the industryThe growing movement for public ownership of waterWhy grassroots river groups are succeeding where institutions struggleHow people can get involved and make a difference locallyFixing Britain’s water crisis will require more than outrage. It will take evidence, public pressure and communities willing to organise around something they care deeply about.As Ash puts it: Play to your strengths, stick to the truth and get involved.Resources & LinksWatch Dirty Business on Channel 4Learn more about WASP and their workSign the petition calling for a referendum on water ownership (link in show notes)Listen & SubscribeIf you enjoyed this episode, please follow, rate and share the podcast to help grow the conversation around the future of Britain’s rivers and water system.#FutureForWater #RiverPollution #WaterCrisis #SewageScandal #DirtyBusiness #RiverHealth #CitizenScience #Environment #WaterIndustry #ThamesWater #CleanWater #PublicHealth #WASP

Britain’s rivers are in crisis. Sewage pollution, failing infrastructure, rising bills and growing public anger have pushed water firmly into the national spotlight.But how did we get here? And, more importantly, how do we fix it?In this powerful and frank conversation, Dave Wallace and Claire Zambuni sit down with Ash Smith — one of the UK’s most influential grassroots campaigners fighting for cleaner rivers and accountability in the water industry.Ash shares the story behind the campaign group Windrush Against Sewage Pollution (WASP), reflects on the impact of Channel 4’s explosive drama-documentary Dirty Business, and explains why he believes the UK water system is fundamentally broken.The discussion explores everything from privatisation and regulation to political inertia, the economics of debt-laden water companies, and why grassroots citizen action may be the country’s best hope for change.At the heart of the conversation is a growing national movement asking a difficult question: Should water return to public ownership?Ash also explains WASP’s rapidly growing petition calling for a public referendum on water ownership — and why he believes the public deserves a direct say in the future of one of the country’s most essential services.This is an urgent, passionate and surprisingly hopeful conversation about accountability, activism and the power of ordinary people to drive change.In this episode we discuss:The origins of Windrush Against Sewage Pollution and why citizen science mattersThe real impact of Channel 4’s Dirty Business documentaryWhy public anger over sewage pollution continues to growThe hidden economics of privatised water companiesHow customer bills are being used to service debtWhy regulation has repeatedly failed to protect riversClaims of illegal pollution and underinvestment across the industryThe growing movement for public ownership of waterWhy grassroots river groups are succeeding where institutions struggleHow people can get involved and make a difference locallyFixing Britain’s water crisis will require more than outrage. It will take evidence, public pressure and communities willing to organise around something they care deeply about.As Ash puts it: Play to your strengths, stick to the truth and get involved.Resources & LinksWatch Dirty Business on Channel 4Learn more about WASP and their workSign the petition calling for a referendum on water ownership (link in show notes)Listen & SubscribeIf you enjoyed this episode, please follow, rate and share the podcast to help grow the conversation around the future of Britain’s rivers and water system.#FutureForWater #RiverPollution #WaterCrisis #SewageScandal #DirtyBusiness #RiverHealth #CitizenScience #Environment #WaterIndustry #ThamesWater #CleanWater #PublicHealth #WASP

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Can Britain Fix Its Broken Water System?

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This episode is 41 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 12, 2026.

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Britain’s rivers are in crisis. Sewage pollution, failing infrastructure, rising bills and growing public anger have pushed water firmly into the national spotlight.But how did we get here? And, more importantly, how do we fix it?In this powerful...

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