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Water and sanitation - Comments. Anne Lyche Solheim, Senior researcher, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA) World Bank Group and the Private Sector, CMI seminar 14th June 2005. Challenging the hypothesis of sequencing water investments.
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Water and sanitation - Comments Anne Lyche Solheim, Senior researcher, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA) World Bank Group and the Private Sector, CMI seminar 14th June 2005
Water resources cannot wait for sustainable management Persistent blooms of toxic bluegreen algae in Lake Victoria
Example of pollution problem, Uganda • Toxic bluegreen algae dominate the ecosystem of Murchison Bay, Lake Victoria • This water is raw water for Kampala (1 mill.) • This water receives sewage from Kampala • The pollution accelerated after wetland destruction and enlargement of Nakivubo channel • Lack of holistic management
Strategy – priorities should be: • Water quality must be improved now! • Combined and parallel efforts of investment in infrastructure and management necessary • Capacity building at University level necessary • Reliable and continuous monitoring of water resources necessary (also stressed by UNEP as one of the major challenges for sustainable management)
MGD/WSSD –Mid-term Assessment of Progress 1990-2015. Unicef/WHO Aug. 2004 • The world is on track to meet the drinking water target, but sub-Saharan Africa lags behind • Without a sharp acceleration in the rate of progress, the world will miss the sanitation target by half a billion people • From now until 2015, greater effort must be made to reach the poor and those in rural areas, whose deprivation is hidden behind national averages
Investment needs per annum (B USD) ? ? The Millennium Development Goals - MDGs – A Startling Reminder of the Financing Challenge Ahead • Halve by 2015 the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water; • Halve by 2015 the proportion of people without access to basic sanitation; • Translates into a doubling of investment needs from $15 billion to $30 billion per year for water supply & sanitation alone (as part of $180B a year for all water).
Financing Challenge • Investment needs are enormous • Public funding stable or even decreasing in most countries; • International aid is (and probably will remain) small percentage of water and sanitation financing; • Thus how to fill the gap? • The private sector? • Taxpayers? • User tariff? • A combination?
140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Collapse of Private Flows to Infrastructure Annual Private Investment in Infrastructure in 1990-2002, in US$ billion Private sector financed about 22 % of infrastructure investments in the 90s; about 8 % from ODA; 70% domestic financing.
Private Investments in Water Supply and Sanitation Have Been Low Total (international) private investment in infrastructure in 1990-2002 by sector and region, US$ billion US$ 0.8 billion of the total flows (less than 2% of total) in 2003 to water and sanitation; about half to China
200% 150% Financial autonomy 100% 50% 0% Telecom Gas Power Water Reasons NOT to Invest in the Water Business… Degree of cost recovery
Domestic is dominant ~ 85% Domestic dominant 85% Domestic Public and Private Finance Remains the Dominant Source for Water & Sanitation Financing flows into water in 2000 Estimates from “GWP Framework for Action” Billion USD
Going Forward: Long-Term Sustainability: A Must!! • Improve Sector Performance – Closing the Revenue Gap is Key; • Make Use of All Sources of Financing; • Targeted Subsidies; and • Unbundle Finance and Management.
Targeted Subsidies • Stop subsidizing the rich, they can pay for themselves; • Target subsidies better (subsidize connections rather than consumption) • cost recovery in water; • subsidies required for sanitation and waste water (public good component);
Divestitures Mixed Company Concessions Operating Company plc Private BOTs CorporatizedMuni. Service Finance Leases/Affermage Municipal Department Public Mgnt. Contracts Public Private Management Unbundle Finance And Management - Looking at Sustainable Hybrid Solutions Public & Private sector roles in the WSS sector:
Concluding Remarks • Huge investment needs; • Water infrastructure key to economic growth and development; • Long-term sustainability a must; • Improve sector performance – Closing the revenue gap is key; • Make use of all sources of financing – Public or private and create framework where risks are properly allocated and bound by enforceable contracts • And need to move beyond public-private debate: It is about delivering efficient quality services at lowest cost; • Water as an opportunity – not only as cost!