The regulatory landscape is shifting
The UK’s energy and water sectors stand at a pivotal juncture. Regulators Ofgem for energy and Ofwat for water are intensifying expectations around decarbonisation, system resilience, customer outcomes, affordability and infrastructure modernisation. These are no longer aspirational themes; they are binding commitments that will define how utilities plan, invest and operate for the remainder of the decade and beyond.
The forthcoming price control cycles GD3 for gas distribution, T3 for electricity transmission and AMP8 for water represent the most consequential regulatory reset in a generation. Each framework requires utilities to demonstrate not only prudent capital allocation but also measurable progress toward environmental, social and operational outcomes. The stakes extend beyond individual companies; the credibility of the regulatory model itself rests on demonstrable delivery. For leadership teams across the sector, the imperative is clear: begin preparing now or risk being left behind.
GD3: Decarbonising gas for a clean energy future
Gas distribution networks face a uniquely complex challenge. The transition to Net Zero demands a fundamental rethinking of the role of gas infrastructure. Yet, these networks must continue to deliver safe, reliable and affordable service throughout the transition period. GD3 will require network operators to present credible, costed pathways toward decarbonisation—demonstrating hydrogen readiness, biomethane integration capability and long-term network transition planning.
Infrastructure resilience and safety will remain non-negotiable. Regulators will scrutinize asset condition data, risk-based investment plans and evidence of proactive maintenance strategies. Equally, there will be heightened expectations around operational efficiency and cost control; networks that cannot demonstrate productivity improvements will face tighter funding allowances.
Data transparency and regulatory reporting will become increasingly significant in GD3. Ofgem expects granular, auditable data on asset performance, emissions and customer outcomes. For gas distribution operators, this means investing in advanced asset monitoring, robust data platforms and the analytical capability to translate operational data into regulatory evidence. The networks that succeed in GD3 will be those that can balance the dual imperatives of decarbonisation and dependability.
T3: Building the grid while keeping the lights on
Electricity transmission sits at the heart of the UK’s clean energy ambitions. The accelerating deployment of offshore wind, solar and distributed generation is placing unprecedented demands on the transmission network. T3 will require transmission operators to deliver a step change in grid capacity, expanding infrastructure faster than at any point in recent history, while maintaining reliability and regulatory compliance.
Grid modernisation and flexibility will be central to T3. Regulators will expect transmission operators to adopt digital grid management tools, integrate real-time monitoring and deploy advanced analytics to optimise asset utilisation. The shift from a centralised, predictable generation mix to a decentralised, variable one demands fundamentally new approaches to system operation.
Cybersecurity and system resilience are also rising sharply on the regulatory agenda. As grid infrastructure becomes increasingly digitalised and interconnected, the threat landscape expands in tandem. T3 will embed enhanced performance incentives that reward operators who demonstrate both investment efficiency and operational excellence. For transmission businesses, the challenge is to build out infrastructure at pace while ensuring every pound of investment delivers measurable value.
AMP8: Water for fife and sustenance
Water utilities are entering AMP8 under intense public and regulatory scrutiny. Storm overflow discharges, ageing infrastructure and environmental performance have placed the sector firmly in the spotlight. Ofwat’s framework for AMP8 sets significantly elevated expectations around environmental sustainability, leakage reduction, storm overflow mitigation and water quality improvements.
Climate resilience has moved from a secondary consideration to a central planning principle. Water companies must demonstrate how their investment programmes account for changing rainfall patterns, drought risk and supply-demand imbalances. At the same time, customer affordability and service transparency remain firmly in focus; regulators expect clear evidence that investment is translating into tangible improvements in customer experience.
Perhaps the most significant shift in AMP8 is the expectation for data-driven asset management and environmental accountability. Water companies are being asked to provide granular, near-real-time data on asset performance, environmental compliance and service outcomes. Those that have invested in modern data infrastructure and predictive analytics will be better positioned to meet these demands; those that have not will find the regulatory environment increasingly challenging.
Investment at a glance: GD3, T3 and AMP8
The following table summarises the key investment themes and estimated funding across the three regulatory cycles. Taken together, these frameworks represent one of the largest coordinated infrastructure investment programmes in UK utility history.
| Investment Theme | GD3 (2026–31) | T3 / ET3 (2026–31) | AMP8 (2025–30) |
| Regulatory Framework | Ofgem RIIO-GD3 | Ofgem RIIO-ET3 | Ofwat PR24 |
| Total Expected Investment | Part of £28.1bn upfront RIIO-3 baseline (GD + GT share) | £70bn+ potential; £44bn already committed; £10.3bn baseline totex | £104bn approved (£88bn Ofwat-allocated; 77% increase on AMP7) |
| Decarbonisation and Net Zero | Hydrogen readiness; biomethane integration; methane emission reduction; gas network transition planning | Grid expansion for renewables; 80 transmission projects; offshore wind integration; Clean Power 2030 | Net zero operational emissions by 2030; nature-based solutions (£3.3bn); carbon footprint reduction |
| Infrastructure Resilience | Iron mains replacement completion by 2032; safety-driven asset renewal; emergency repair upgrades | £35bn+ for substations, 3,500 km line upgrades, HVDC links; Scotland–England reinforcement | £12bn to reduce storm overflow spills by 45%; £6bn for nutrient pollution across 1,000 sites |
| Asset Modernisation | Advanced pressure management; AI-controlled gas distribution; smart metering and monitoring | Digital grid management; real-time monitoring; grid flexibility and system optimisation | Data-driven asset management; smart actuation; predictive analytics for network performance |
| Customer and Affordability | Affordability protection amid declining gas user base; accelerated depreciation to manage cost recovery | Net bill impact ≈£30/year by 2031; £80 savings from system efficiency offsetting network charges | Average bill increase of £157 (36%) over 5 years; expanded social tariffs and customer support |
| Environmental and Water Quality | Methane leakage reduction (90–95% of GDN carbon footprint); shrinkage incentives | 50% emissions reduction target; environmental reporting; ZEV fleet rollout | Water quality improvements; leakage cut by 25% by 2030; £48bn long-term RAPID programme for new reservoirs and transfers |
| Cybersecurity and Digital Risk | Data transparency; regulatory reporting modernisation | Enhanced cybersecurity requirements; system resilience standards for the digitalised grid | Real-time environmental monitoring; data-driven compliance and reporting |
| Efficiency and Innovation | 1% annual ongoing efficiency target; cost-sharing via TIM (50%) | 1% annual ongoing efficiency target; TIM sharing (0–25%); innovation incentives | Ofwat outcome delivery incentives: penalty/reward for performance targets |
| Key Regulated Entities | Cadent, Northern Gas Networks, SGN, Wales and West Utilities | National Grid ET, SP Transmission, SHE Transmission | Thames Water, United Utilities, Severn Trent, Anglian, Southern and others |
Source: Ofgem RIIO-3 Final Determinations (December 2025); Ofwat PR24 Final Determinations (December 2024). All figures in GBP (2023/24 prices where applicable). Investment estimates are subject to in-period adjustment mechanisms.
Digital transformation as the enabler
Across GD3, T3 and AMP8, a common thread emerges that regulatory ambitions cannot be achieved through traditional operating models alone. The scale, pace and complexity of the transformation required demand modern digital capabilities as a foundational enabler.
AI and machine learning-driven asset intelligence can move utilities from reactive maintenance to predictive, condition-based strategies, reducing failure risk while optimising investment. Enterprise data platforms provide the backbone for regulatory reporting, enabling transparent, auditable and timely data submission. Cloud-based digital foundations support operational agility, while advanced analytics unlock insights that inform both strategic planning and day-to-day decision-making.
At HCLTech, our approach centres on domain-led utility transformation: pairing deep sector expertise with scalable digital solutions tailored to the specific demands of UK-regulated utilities. From customer experience modernisation to smart infrastructure analytics, our frameworks are designed to accelerate the journey from regulatory ambition to operational reality. The goal is not technology for its own sake, but technology in service of better outcomes for customers, communities and the environment.
Looking ahead
The next regulatory price control periods represent a defining moment for the UK utility sector. GD3, T3 and AMP8 each demand a step change in how utilities plan, invest and operate—with data-driven decision-making, digital-first operations and demonstrable outcomes at the core.
Success will require more than compliance. It will require genuine collaboration between regulators, utilities and technology partners to build the capabilities, platforms and culture needed for sustained transformation. Critically, this means moving beyond incremental improvement toward a fundamental rewiring of how utilities generate insight, allocate capital and deliver outcomes. The organisations that embrace this challenge—starting now—will not only meet regulatory expectations but will set the standard for the sector’s future.
HCLTech is committed to supporting UK utilities as they navigate this critical transition, bringing together the domain insight, digital capability and delivery expertise needed to turn regulatory ambition into measurable impact.
