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Testing the waters: Huw Irranca-Davies announces a new regulator

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Welsh Government announces clean water plan

ON TUESDAY, February 3, the Welsh Government published its plans to create a new water regulator for Wales.

The proposals respond to the findings of the Independent Water Commission, established jointly by the Welsh Government and UK Government and published in July 2025.

The proposals include creating a new, dedicated Welsh economic regulator for water, supported by new legislation and a new regulatory framework.  

Speaking at a Dŵr Cymru site at Lisvane and Llanishen reservoirs to launch the Green Paper, the Deputy First Minister, Huw Irranca-Davies, said:  “Our ambition is clear and bold: clean and thriving rivers, safe and high-quality drinking water, fair and affordable services, and modern infrastructure ready for the future.”

“We will strengthen accountability, rebuild trust and create a system that is simpler, stronger and more transparent.”

On the same day, a Labour Party press release claimed the new regulator would tackle water pollution in Pembrokeshire and drew attention to the First Minister’s support for it. However, the new regulator will have no investigatory powers of its own. Instead, it will depend on Natural Resources Wales to provide it with evidence that would enable it to pursue water companies.

At the same time, the Labour Party press release said that Labour would introduce a Clean Water Bill following May’s election.

The announcement raises several questions about the announcement’s timing.

Baroness Morgan and her predecessors have been at pains to defend NRW over questions about its capacity to investigate and prosecute those who pollute Wales’s coastal waters and inland waterways. In response to repeated questioning from Conservative and Plaid Cymru Senedd Members over recent years, Labour ministers have repeatedly claimed they have confidence in NRW and that the body has sufficient money and resources to carry out its role.

The announcement that the Welsh Government intends to create a new body from scratch, with its own staff, statutory obligations, and enforcement powers, inevitably suggests that Labour ministers and First Ministers were not as confident in NRW as they claimed when asked about it. In addition, the announcement of plans for a new regulator does not disclose whether its creation will lead to a cut in NRW’s already overstretched budget or where the money to fund it will come from.

There is little doubt that regulation of the water industry is outdated and overly complex. However, adding another layer of bureaucracy could diminish whatever benefits streamlining the legal framework governing it might deliver.

In the Senedd on Wednesday, Conservative Shadow Minister Janet Finch-Saunders asked Huw Irranca-Davies about the timing of the Welsh Government’s announcement about a new regulator.

He ducked the question but went on to issue a statement suggesting that whatever a new regulator did, much of it was already underway.

The Deputy First Minister said: “We don’t need to wait for the outcomes of the Green Paper, or new legislation, to get on with fixing the problems with the infrastructure, the levels of customer satisfaction, the leakage, and so on.

“The pressure is on both of our water companies to perform for the customers who have seen over the last year and now are going to see those bigger bills landing. Now, that does deliver £6 billion investment, so we absolutely need to see that being delivered—not waiting, but, in this price period, actually investing in the priorities that will stop those combined sewer overflows polluting the river, stop the sewage outfalls, and right across the piece as well.”

The Conservative position has previously been clear: NRW isn’t working and needs to be broken up and replaced. In particular, the Conservatives have focused on the need for a separate and independent water regulator with both investigative and enforcement powers, and the resources to fulfil those responsibilities. Whatever the next Welsh Government decides to do with the proposals, Tuesday’s announcement does not meet that aim.

 

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Welsh Labour promises right to read and play for every child in Wales

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New fund would expand toy libraries and automatically register babies for library cards

EVERY child in Wales will have an equal right to read and play, regardless of their background, under plans announced by Welsh Labour today.

The party says that if it is re-elected in the next Senedd term, it will introduce a new programme aimed at improving access to books and toys for families across the country.

The proposals include automatic registration for a library card for every child in Wales when a baby’s birth is registered, the creation of a nationwide network of 100 toy libraries, and a new Children’s Reading and Play Fund. The fund would help pay for toys and increase the number of children’s books available in both public and school libraries.

Welsh Labour says the measures are designed to ensure that children from all backgrounds have access to resources that support learning, creativity and early development.

Cabinet Secretary for Education Lynne Neagle said the plans would help ensure no child misses out on opportunities because of their family’s financial circumstances.

“Every child in Wales should have access to books and toys, regardless of their background. No child should have to go without because their family can’t afford them,” she said.

“Books and toys are a vital part of growing up. The new Children’s Reading and Play Fund would ensure this is a right for every child in Wales and help reduce costs for families.”

Toy libraries operate in a similar way to traditional libraries, allowing families to borrow toys and return them after use. While some toy libraries already exist in parts of Wales, access is currently patchy.

Welsh Labour says its proposal would establish a national network of 100 toy libraries to ensure a more consistent offer across the country. Under the plan, the libraries would work together and receive national support and promotion.

The party argues that improving access to books and play materials can help support early literacy, learning and social development for young children while easing financial pressure on families.

Further details about the proposed Children’s Reading and Play Fund are expected to be set out as part of Welsh Labour’s programme for the next Senedd term.

 

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Community

Planed wins partnership award for Carmarthenshire wellbeing project

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Community hub supporting more than 700 people a month recognised at West Wales health and social care awards

PLANED has won the Working in Partnership Award at the West Wales Regional Health and Social Care Awards, held at Canolfan Pentre Awel.

The awards were hosted by the West Wales Regional Partnership Board and recognise projects that demonstrate strong collaboration across health, social care and community organisations.

The award celebrates the success of the Carmarthenshire Living Well Centre, a project led and managed by PLANED which has become a key hub for community support in the county.

The centre brings together a range of organisations and initiatives offering advice, wellbeing activities and support services free of charge to local residents.

PLANED said the success of the centre has been built on strong collaboration with the many projects and organisations based there, all working together to support communities across Carmarthenshire.

More than 700 people each month now access services at the centre, taking part in group sessions, receiving advice and support, and benefiting from a wide range of community-led activities.

The organisation said the award recognises not only PLANED’s leadership in developing and managing the centre, but also the collective effort of the partners delivering services from the facility.

PLANED added that it will continue seeking further funding to support the development of the centre so it can expand its work and help even more people in the future.

Representatives from the organisation said it was great to see so many partners and familiar faces at the awards ceremony, adding that the recognition belongs to everyone involved in delivering the project.

 

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Ministry of Defence

Tank fire echoes across county as live-fire exercises continue at Castlemartin

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RESIDENTS across parts of south Pembrokeshire have reported unusually loud explosions over the past week as military exercises take place at the Castlemartin Training Area.

The Ministry of Defence confirmed that live firing has been underway at the range between Monday (Mar 2) and Friday (Mar 6) as part of routine training for armoured units.

People living in Milford Haven, Neyland and surrounding communities said the blasts were noticeably louder than usual, with some reporting that the noise could be heard clearly indoors.

One resident in Milford Haven told The Herald that the sound carried across the Haven during the week.

“I’ve lived here for years and you always hear the range from time to time, but this week it seemed much louder than normal. You could hear it clearly inside the house.”

The Castlemartin Range Complex, located on the south Pembrokeshire coast between Bosherston and St Govan’s Head, is one of the UK’s main live-fire training areas for armoured units.

According to the official MOD firing notice for March, a range of weapons systems are being used during the exercises, including 120mm tank guns, mortars and heavy machine guns.

The 120mm main gun used by modern battle tanks produces extremely powerful shockwaves which can carry significant distances, particularly across water.

During some training periods the range operates during normal daytime hours, typically 7:30am to 4:45pm, but certain exercises include 24-hour firing sessions.

For safety reasons, several roads and footpaths in the Castlemartin area are closed during firing periods, including the road from Bosherston to St Govan’s Chapel and access to parts of the coastline.

A sea danger area is also enforced several miles offshore while the exercises are underway.

Castlemartin has been used by the military since the 1930s and is regularly used by armoured units training with Challenger tanks before deployment on operations or major exercises.

Live firing is scheduled to continue at intervals throughout March.

 

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