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world bank water
projects in asia
Philippines
Indonesia
Cambodia
Philippines
: Asia's
Largest Water Privatization
In January 1997, Manila opened the bidding
for the privatization of the city's
Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System
(MWSS), Asia's largest and, by some measures,
the world's largest water sector
privatization to date.
MWSS, responsible for delivering water and
sewerage services to Manila's 11 million
residents, invited private water groups to
bid for two 25-year concessions, one for the
city's west side, one for the east.
Manila Water Co., won the eastern
concession by promising a huge 74% cut in
water rates. On the other hand, the Maynilad
Water Services Inc., won the western zone
with a promise to lower rates by 44%.
Both concessions would run for 25 years
with the pledge that no rate increases will
be implemented in the first 10 years of
operation. Consequently, people welcomed the
prospects of better and cheaper services but
some keen observers already warned of the
entry of old oligarchs and foreign capital
into vital public utilities of the
country.
Six years after the privatization, water
fees were increased five times without
corresponding improvements on water services
and existing infrastructure. Water charges
tripled in 2001 and in 2003 has an 81%
increase in the eastern zone and 36% in the
western district. As services become more
expensive and inefficient, poorer households
suffered. Similarly, millions of Filipinos
are still not connected to piped water and
almost 50% of the water supply is lost due to
leakage and theft.
Water Districts Outside Metro Manila
The Local Water Utility Administration
(LWUA) is in charge of managing water systems
outside Metro Manila. The same agency
exercises an exclusive right to provide water
and collect fees from around 500 water
districts nationwide. LWUA funds the
construction of all water facilities from
fees collected from consumers, loans from ADB
and the World Bank and official development
assistance (ODA). Local government units
either on the provincial, city or municipal
level appoint LWUA Board Members for each
water district. LWUA is not a profit-making
agency but its mode of operation is
commercialized in the sense that it is
allowed to recover its investments at full
cost. As a consequence, LWUA only operates in
urban areas where the population is huge and
whose residents can afford to pay water
services.
The
Freedom
from Debt Coalition
monitors the
socio-economic impact of local water
districts that have been privatized. Some of
these districts suffer the fate of Metro
Manila residents who are paying higher water
fees in exchange of poorer service.
visit
the website of the Philippine Friends of the
Earth group, The Legal Rights & Natural
Resources Center-Kasama sa Kalikasan
Indonesia:
Privatization of
Jakarta Water Utilities
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image: WAHLI/FoE
Indonesia
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The World Bank's involvement in water
privatization in Jakarta started in June
1991, with a $92 million loan. The loan was
used to build a new water purification
installation at Pulogadung, Jakarta . Both
the World Bank and the Overseas Economic
Co-operation Fund of Japan advised the
government to privatize its water utilities
in Jakarta .
The privatization of Jakarta's water is
the story of powerful multinationals that
deftly used the World Bank and a compliant
dictatorship to grab control of a major
city's waterworks. In alliance with the
Suharto family and Suharto cronies, Thames
and Suez won favorable concessions without
public consultation or bidding. As riots
spread, the companies' executives fled,
according to Indonesian waterworks officials,
exposing millions of Jakarta residents to a
potential catastrophe. Eventually they
returned and renegotiated their contracts
under somewhat less generous terms. As for
the ostensible reason for privatization —
bringing water to the poor and improving the
finances of the waterworks — the companies'
record is mixed.
World Bank Loan to Reform Water
Policy
In 1998, the World Bank approved a $300
million loan to the Indonesian government.
The proposed loan would support a structural
adjustment program of policy, institutional,
regulatory, legal, and organizational reforms
in the management of the water resources and
irrigation sector.
The World Bank placed two key conditions
on the payment of the loan:
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A new Irrigation Policy, decentralizing
the management of irrigation to farmers'
organizations. Decentralization means
farmers will bear the cost of management
and maintenance.
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A new Water Management Bill, which has
caused widespread protest from NGOs,
farmers, urban poor groups and academia.
The main issues coming from the draft of
the Bill are lack of protection of water
rights of the community. Instead of giving
a clear recognition and protection of water
for people, it gives more access to private
investment to have concession on water
resources, from water surface and ground
water.
visit
the
website of the Indonesian Friends of the
Earth group, Wahana Lingkungan Hidup
Indonesia (Indonesian Forum for the
Environment)
Cambodia is remarkable for the number of
private initiatives in water supply provision
that have sprung up in urban and rural areas,
encouraged by the weakness of public
utilities and the absence of a regulatory
regime. Outside Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville,
almost all new investments in water supply
networks have been made by local private
investors, ranging from a few thousand
dollars for villages of a few hundred
families to $900,000 for the provincial town
of Banteay Meanchey (population 100,000 in
2000). In 1997 and 1998, four private
companies were granted concession rights for
water supply in four large towns.
The concessions were granted without
appropriate bidding, resulting in different
privatization processes. The Government sees
no need to add specific provisions to
encourage service access for all because it
assumes that the private sector automatically
wants to sell water to the greatest number of
people. Understandably, the private investors
have established networks in the most densely
populated urban and commercial neighborhoods,
where the investment required is lowest and
consumption is highest.
Households served by private
utilities pay significantly more for piped
water services, and some lower-income
households that are not served by private
utilities are partially limited by the high
connection fees (as opposed to the regular
monthly payments). Overall, while this recent
effort to introduce private sector
involvement in the water sector in Cambodia
is encouraging, the full gains have not yet
been realized.
read
more about
the world bank's involvement in natural
resources
Source: P. Raja Siregar
(2003) “World Bank and ADB’s role in
privatizing water in Asia Region” presented
at the
Asia Pacific Conference on Debt
and Privatization of Water and Power
Service
, held by Jubilee South/APMDD,
in Bangkok 8-12 December. P. Raja Siregar is
Coordinator of KAU/ Anti Debt
Coalition-Indonesia. The author also works
with WALHI (Friends of the Earth Indonesia)
as Policy Campaigner. Any input, or
suggestions can be sent to or . Information
regarding KAU’s activity and issues available
on:
www.kau.or.id
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