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1 st NATIONAL WATER & SANITATION FORUM Public-Private-Partnerships (PPPs) in Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Ajisegiri, B.A FMWR. Sheraton Hotel & Towers, Abuja, August 29 – Sept., 1, 2006. Key topics of this Session. Concept of PPP PPP Options & Pre-requisite PPP Selection & Governance
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1st NATIONAL WATER & SANITATION FORUMPublic-Private-Partnerships (PPPs) in Water Supply and Sanitation SectorAjisegiri, B.AFMWR Sheraton Hotel & Towers, Abuja, August 29 – Sept., 1, 2006
Key topics of this Session • Concept of PPP • PPP Options & Pre-requisite • PPP Selection & Governance • Lessons from a decade of PPP in WSS in developing countries • Attributes of a sustainable PPP
What do we mean by PPP in Water? the public service delegation concept Asset owner Operator Delegation of Management The Government – as asset owner and entity responsible ultimately for the delivery of the public service to the population - contracts out to a private party the service provision & operation of assets through delegation of management. PPP in water is NOT privatization (no sale of assets)
Why was PPPs promoted in the 90s for WSS utilities ? • Poor performance of water utilities delivering poor service and without funding for coverage expansion • Improve service quality and access • Better governance framework: arms-length relationships between operator and owner • Access to private financing
PPP Pre-requisites OPTION POLITICAL COMMITTMENT COST-COVERING TARIFFS REGULATORY FRAMEWORK MARKET TRANSPARENCY Management Contracts High Low to Moderate Low to Moderate Low Lease / Affermage Contracts High Moderate to High Moderate Moderate Concession Contracts High High High Moderate Divestiture High High High High
Selecting a PSP option What you get • p.s. incentives for asset managt • financing • p.s.incentives for O&M • know-how Divestiture Concession BOT Mgt contracts, lease Service contracts What it takes • government commitment • macroeconomic, business climate • regulatory capacity
Important Notice! • It is not only the option chosen but the process by which the objectives of the reform process are achieved, that matters. • Ensuring that the benefits of reform accrue to the poor as well as the rich.
Important Notice! • The sustainability of reform and the long-term future of utilities will depend on the success in extending services to low-income communities. • The poor won’t benefit unless the system as a whole delivers a technically workable and financially viable service which is socially appropriate, environmentally sound and delivered by an organization which endures.
Stakeholders • State Executive Council • Ministries-Civil Servants • Infrastructure/Works • Finance/Economy • Environment • Local Government • Consumer Advocates • Stakeholders • Legislative Body • Regulatory Bodies • Civil Society • Judiciary Policy Framework Legal Framework Utility Service Provider Operational Framework Corporate Framework • Stakeholders • Management • Employees • Labor Unions • Shareholders • Investors • Financiers • Stakeholders • Bulk water suppliers • Distribution • Consumer Groups • Professional Assoc. ã World Bank 2005 Governance of a Utility PPP Multiple Stakeholders
Creating the enabling environment • Financial Sustainability • Increasing Efficiency • Controlling and Reducing Costs, by better management, sound O&M, least cost solutions, financial planning • Affordable Standards, Efficient Delivery • Increasing Revenues, by collecting bills, adequate and improved pricing, subsidy policies targeting the poor, , improving service • Good Governance, including • Establishing a Regulatory Framework • Defining public and private roles • Increasing Effectiveness (and Equity) • Increasing access, serving the poor
Lessons from a decade of PPPs in WSS (1) • PPP can bring significant benefits on service quality for customers • But it requires government to address the issue of tariff: • financial viability = full cost recovery: • PPPs are viable only if tariffs are high enough to support sustainable cost recovery • Political resistance to tariff increases …God gave us the water for free… but he forgot to give us the pipes…
Low Tariff – Poor Service: The Vicious circle Poor Services Low Tariff Assets Deterioration Low Revenue Neglect of Maintenance Weak Finances
Lessons from a decade of PPPs in WSS (2) • Ideological resistance to private sector participation in water is a reality • PPPs are complex agreements, which need strong supporting legal & institutional framework • Limited number of private actors, with little appetite for projects in developing countries
Lessons from a decade of PPPs in WSS (3) • Limited scope for private financing: • Financial capacity of operators • Foreign currency risk • Lack of long term loans in local currency • Moving to models of private management/operation with public financing (lease/management contract)
Attributes ofa sustainable PPP framework - 1 • Roles must be clearly Defined and Incentives must be internally consistent – When in conflict, the financial trade-offs must be explicit. • Risks should be allocated to the Party that is Most Capable of Managing such Risks. • Third-Party Agreements should be utilized to hold responsible parties Accountable and to convert implicit charges to explicit ones.
Attributes of a sustainable PPP framework - 2 • Agreements should be at Arms-Length and Enforceable. • There must be an Appropriate Balance of Power – No one party should have overwhelming authority.
A crow was sitting on a tree, doing nothing all day. A small rabbit saw the crow, and asked him, "Can I also sit like you and do nothing all day long?” The crow answered: "Sure, why not.” Jumped on the rabbit... and ate it. So, the rabbit sat on the ground below the crow, and rested. All of a sudden, a fox appeared, CORPORATE LESSON
CORPORATE LESSON Moral of the story is…. To be sitting and doing nothing you must be sitting very, very high up.
Some Issues for Consideration • What roles should the allocated to the private sector? • How can we make the water supply and sanitation sector attractive to the private sector? • How can we make private sector involvement pro-poor?