Please see links below to the full Artesia report, templates and associated documents

An independent research report has concluded that there is a strong benefit case for water companies rolling out enhanced metering technology to non-household customers.

The report, by Artesia Consulting, recommends that water companies planning to roll out ‘smart’ meters for domestic customers should include non-household customers at the same time.

The report also concludes that companies without large-scale meter investment programmes would benefit from upgrading or replacing selected non-household customers’ meters, particularly the largest customers and/or where businesses are in close proximity.

Commissioned by MOSL on behalf of the Strategic Panel’s Metering Committee, the report comes at a critical time for the sector, as companies develop investment plans for the next Asset Management Period (2025-2030) and Water Resource Management Plans for 2025-2050.

Companies’ proposals will detail how they intend to meet the increasing demand for water when most regions of the country are now under “severe water stress” and the unusual weather events are becoming more severe and less predictable due to climate change.

Investing in metering will be at the heart of plans to meet these challenges. Timely, accurate and granular data from meters is vital not only to ensure customers’ bills are based on actual consumption, but also in providing data to help reduce leakage and improve water efficiency.

Water companies’ plans are expected to propose major investment programmes for household meters. However, the picture for non-household customers is less clear and there remains a risk that companies may prioritise household investment - leaving the NHH market in the ‘slow lane’ - despite the majority of smaller non-household customers’ using water for very similar purposes to households.

Currently 73% of the non-household market’s 1.2 million water meters use traditional technology, which needs to be read manually. Nearly a quarter (22%) use add-on Automatic Meter Reading (AMR) technology, which make meters ‘smarter’ by transmitting a reading to someone walking or driving past. Only 5% of meters use the latest ‘smart’ (Advanced Metering Infrastructure) meters.

The report recommends companies upgrade all sub-25mm ‘traditional’ meters to either AMR or AMI and all meters above 25mm to AMI. Artesia estimates that rolling out enhanced metering would cost the industry approximately £344m, with benefits of £943m (both based on 15-year NPV) and a potential return on investment of five years*.

Commenting on the report, Claire Yeates, Strategic Director for Waterscan and sponsor of the workstream on behalf of the Metering Committee said: “Accurate, timely metering data is critical in the effective management of this precious natural resource. The market cannot progress without improvement in this area - it is quite simply the right thing to do for customers, the environment and trading parties, wherever they may be on their technology journey.”

John Davies, MOSL’s CIO, said: “We are pleased that the research has highlighted such a clear business case for enhanced metering technology for non-household customers. We are also pleased that the report does not restrict companies’ choices on which technologies to adopt, focusing instead on the importance of adopting common data standards.

“We hope that companies will consider the findings carefully and ensure customers in both markets benefit from future investment in enhanced metering programmes and look forward to their feedback on the report.”

Christina Blackwell, Senior Policy Manager at CCW, added: “With the continued spotlight on metering for household customers, we’re pleased to see the report focus on enhanced metering technology for business customers. Making sure businesses have more reliable meter readings is imperative if we’re going to fix the market’s long-standing billing issues and protect customers from inaccurate bill spikes they cannot afford.

“This data will also help businesses to become more water efficient – empowering them to save money and support the urgent action needed to ease the unsustainable pressures on our water resources.  Proper consideration now needs to be given to the pace of the proposed changes.”

The findings from the research were presented at a webinar on Wednesday 6 April. A ZIP file containing the full report, financial model, slides and recording are available here. The results are also featured in the April edition of The Water Report, a copy of which is available here (reproduced with permission).

MOSL is running an informal consultation period until Friday 6 May, during which companies are invited to send any comments to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. For more information, please contact Adrian Smith - email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Editor’s notes

  • *ROI varies between 5 and 10 years, depending upon technology, roll-out, etc. Six years represents the weighted average for NHH customers in water stressed and non-water stressed areas.
  • The image used to accompany this article is reproduced courtesy of Thames Water and should not be taken as an endorsement of Sensus technology. For a list of different AMR and AMI technologies, please click here.  

Receive the most relevant and up-to-date communications from MOSL by signing up to our mailing list.