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Water management : Partnership between state and community in Cochabamba. Sabine Hoffmann, PhD student at IHEID sabine.hoffmann@unige.ch. Plan : Water management Context History Future. sabine.hoffmann@unige.ch. State service Features Structural deficit (covered 87% of costs 2001)
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Water management : Partnership between state and community in Cochabamba Sabine Hoffmann, PhD student at IHEID sabine.hoffmann@unige.ch
Plan : Water management • Context • History • Future sabine.hoffmann@unige.ch
State service Features • Structural deficit (covered 87% of costs 2001) • Taken out debt (30 million US$, 2005) • Inefficient management • High rate of physical and commercial water loss (55 - 63 %, 2005)
Community services Common features • Social unity, though with divisions • Social organisational model based on principle of reciprocity • Collective and individual rules • Internal authority • Low rate of physical and commercial water loss (5 - 10 %, 2005)
State Private (tank) community Number l/p/d d Price
Life expectancy rate Child mortality rate deaths Deaths / 1000 babies born
Causes of the ‘water war’ Law and the concession • Exclusive right to provide service (monopoly) • Compulsory connection to network • No recognition of right to provide community services within a concession • Price increases (35 - 100 %)
Ending the concession Amendment of the law The new law • Abolition of exclusive rights to provide services (monopoly) • Recognition of right to provide community services within a concession
State- community joint management: SEMAPA • Extending main lines • Selling water « wholesale » Community organisations • Installation of secondary networks • Water management
State- community joint management: • SEMAPA • Credits • Solvency and profitability • Economic viability • Reduction of extension and administrative costs • Reduction of water loss • Maximisation of earnings
State- community joint management: Community organisations • Reciprocity • Eco-sociale rationale • Reduction price of water • Improvement water quality • Increase water quantity • Reasonable demand • Monetary and non-monetary resources