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Privatization of water services Timeline, Approaches and Issues in Water privatisation Timeline Privatization of water is as old as the Bible Water Systems in Egypt, Mesopotamia, India, Pakistan, Crete, and Greece Dark Ages decline Industrial Revolution Major private water utilities Suez (ONDEO) £33,502 American Water Works RWE AG (Thames) Company,Inc. $4,324 £22,992 Philadelphia Suburban Vivendi Corporation$1,531 Environment£13,227 California Water Service United Utilities£3,300 Group$359 Severn Trent£2,517 American States Water Anglian Water Company$367 Group£1,502 Connecticut Water Kelda£1,391 Services, Inc. $216 Southwest Water Company$133 SOURCE: Schwab Capital Markets LP (2002). ps :Market Capitalization (in millions) WATER UTILITY PRIVATIZATION AROUND THE WORLD Dublin Declaration (1992) explicitly referred to the role of the private sector. Growth of the private sector in the water market between 1997 to 2010 will be as follows (in %): West Europe 20-35, Central and Eastern Europe 4-20, North America 515, Latin America 4-60, Africa 3-33 and Asia 1-20. Private participation toolkit millennium development goals World Bank and the two other organizations the Public–Private Infrastructure Advisory Facility and the Bank–Netherlands Water Partnership came together to organize a brainstorming of various water experts through out the world to discuss on private participation in public water systems.Out of this emerged the present tool kit Identification of stakeholders Consumers NGOs and community-based organizations Workers Private firms and financiers Media Alternative providers Grounds for private players to work Considering how private participation will affect customers and other stakeholders and involving them in the design of arrangement Working out how tariff might change, according to a proposed arrangement, for eg. After a currency devaluation, and considering whether changes would be acceptable. Choosing and designing good institutions for monitoring operator performance, adjusting tariffs, and resolving disputes. Ensuring the arrangements are transparent – that the contracts are published and operator is selected in an open process STAGES In INTRODUCING PRIVATE PARTICIPATION Developing the policy Develop idea on private participation Get information and involve the stakeholders Designate reform leader and institutions Decide on market structure Decide on competition STAGES In INTRODUCING PRIVATE PARTICIPATION Designing the process Set service levels, tariffs & subsidies Risk analysis & allocation Design contract management & regulatory institutions Create legal & contractual framework Create institutions Interaction with stakeholders STAGES In INTRODUCING PRIVATE PARTICIPATION Selecting the operator Designate transaction management structure Initial market soundings Public notification Prequalification Tender, evaluation & other steps STAGES In INTRODUCING PRIVATE PARTICIPATION Managing the arrangement Ensure institutions in place Provide support if necessary Tariff & service review & other adjustments Re-tendering or other replacement arrangements CHOOSING LEGAL INSTRUMENTS The legal instrument must: Provide a legal basis for the transaction and selection of the operator. Make the tariff and service standard rules legally effective. Make other commercial aspects of the arrangement legally binding. Provide clear and effective dispute resolution and enforcement. issues In Water Privatisation Across the Globe Voices against it Power Politics of Water Who gets clean water and who doesn’t? Gainers Losers Industries Small farmers & ranchers Export agriculture Rural communities Mining Poor in urban slums Large land owners Real estate developers Wealthy urban consumers Privatisation of Water Cure or Disease in itself? Profit driven corporate objectives are at odds with the needs of the public Rates hike usually follow privatisation Wealthy customers get better service Local community needs and objectives are overridden Water Conservation efforts suffer State to private monopoly Checklist of Performance Reality check Efficiency ... ? Eg. Nelspruit, S.Africa Reduced cost...? Eg. Peru, Ghana, Bolivia Better service ...? Eg. Jakarta, Indonesia Improved quality ...? Eg.Bottled water Competition benefitting customers ...? Role of World bodies Smacks of nepotism towards private players IMF & World Bank Push privatisation Full cost recovery Collusion with government WTO Water may be labeled as service under GATS Progressive liberalisation? Benefits MNCs over local players Role of World bodies Anti – People Stance NAFTA – Sunbelt Water Inc. Vs. Canada BITS – Bilateral Investment Treaties ICSID – International Court Eg. Bechtel Vs. Cochabamba, Bolivia Metro Manila, Philippines Status in US Troubling even in the backyard of Capitalism Higher water bills Reduced water quality Reduced local control Less accountability to local citizens Lower quality services Complex contracts Against Privatisation Eg. Pekin, IL Lee County, FL Atlanta, GA Tempa Bay, FL Back home in India Are we Learning from others’ experiences? Cases in public debate Coca-Cola - Plachimada, Kerela Seonath river, Chattisgarh Delhi Jal Board Better Alternatives Needs to be explored , beforehand Public Reform Reorganisation of water & wastewater services under public control Save money Reward employees Enhance services Eg. Pheonix, San Diego, Nashville, Miami References Book referred Approaches to private participation in water services – A toolkit Weblinks www.citizen.org/cmep/water www.indiaresourcecentre.org www.indiatogether.org http://fermat.nap.edu/ Presented By Dhirendra Pratap Singh (13) Harendra Pratap Singh Raghuwanshi (17) Sanjeev Mohapatra (43)