
Data Analyst
Circa £34,561 dependent on skills and experience
Permanent, full time (37 hours) with flexibility for part time
Huntingdon / Peterborough
Dive into a world of opportunity, and join our team!
The Data Analyst is a key role working with stakeholders across the Quality, Environment and Assurance directorate to deliver safe, clean drinking water and environmental prosperity through data and information. You’ll apply analytical techniques, develop subject matter expertise in regulatory contexts, and interpret opportunities for data to add value through reporting and analysis products.
You’ll ensure statutory data returns are provided within required timescales, support sampling programmes, respond to information requests, and proactively seek opportunities to translate data into insights for business decision making.
Key responsibilities
As a valued employee you’ll be entitled to:
What does it take to be successful?
Inclusion at Anglian Water:
Inclusion is for everyone and we are an equal opportunity employer, which means we’ll consider all suitably qualified applicants regardless of gender identity or expression, ethnic origin, nationality, religion or beliefs, age, sexual orientation, disability status or any other protected characteristic. We recruit and develop our people based on merit and their passion for creating better outcomes, and we’re committed to creating an environment where all our colleagues feel they belong.
Closing date: 22nd June 2026
#loveeverydrop

Anglian Water supply water and water recycling services to more than six million domestic and business customers in the east of England and Hartlepool. Our services are at the heart of every single family and community in our region. We clean water to the highest standard, deliver it to millions of homes, and carefully manage it to ensure it never runs out.
We’re the largest water and water recycling company in England and Wales by geographic area. We’re also one of the driest regions in the country, with just 600 millimetres of rain each year, on average a third less than the rest of England. In fact some areas have a lower annual rainfall than Jerusalem. That’s why it’s vital that we look after the water that we’ve got.