North West Water
North West Water was a water supply company serving north west England. It was originally the North West Water Authority, one of ten regional authorities created by the Water Act 1973. It became North West Water plc in July 1989, and was privatised. It merged with NORWEB in December 1995 (the former North Western Electricity Board) to form United Utilities.[1][2]
The North West Water Authority took over the following statutory water undertakings:[3]
- Bolton Corporation
- Carlisle Corporation
- Liverpool Corporation
- Manchester Corporation
- St. Helens Corporation
- Widnes Corporation
- Calder Water Board
- Eden Water Board
- Furness Water Board
- Fylde Water Board
- Lakes and Lune Water Board
- Lune Valley Water Board
- Macclesfield District Water Board
- Makerfield Water Board
- Mid Cheshire Water Board
- North Calder Water Board
- Preston and District Water Board
- South Cumberland Water Board
- Stockport and District Water Board
- Warrington, Runcorn and District Water Board
- West Cumberland Water Board
- West Lancashire Water Board
- West Pennine Water Board
- Wirral Water Board
The predominance of the Northwest Water Estate, comprising some 56,000 hectares, some of which was acquired through compulsory purchase and statutory powers under the Water Industry Act was handed over to United Utilities.
References
- "International Briefs; North West Water Buys Norweb Shares". nytimes.com. 20 September 1995. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
- "North West Water/Norweb". practicallaw.thomsonreuters.com. 1 December 1995. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
- The North West Water Authority Constitution Order 1973 (1973 No. 1287)
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