Perhaps Irag, oil, and the like are a smoke screen hiding this kind of
hanky panky by the world bank and corporations.

Brian McAndrews



Cholera and the age of the water barons

By the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists


This is the first segment in a 10-part series.

When cholera appeared on South Africa's Dolphin Coast in August 2000,
officials first assumed it was just another of the sporadic outbreaks
that have long stricken the country's eastern seaboard. But as the
epidemic spread, it turned out to be a chronicle of death foretold by
blind ideology.

In 1998, local councils had begun taking steps to commercialize their
waterworks by forcing residents to pay the full cost of drinking water.
But many of the millions of people living in the tin-roof slums of the
region couldn’t afford the rates.

Cut off at the tap, they were forced to find water in streams, ponds,
and lakes polluted with manure and human waste. By January 2002, when
the worst cholera epidemic in South Africa’s history ended, it had
infected more than 250,000 people and killed almost 300, spreading as
far as Johannesburg, 300 miles away.

Making people pay the full cost of their water "was the direct cause of
the cholera epidemic," David Hemson, a social scientist sent by the
government to investigate the outbreak, said in an interview. "There is
no doubt about that."

The seeds of the epidemic had been sown long before South Africa decided
to take its deadly road to privatization. They were largely planted by
an aggressive group of utility companies, primarily European, that are
attempting to privatize the world’s drinking water with the help of
the World Bank and other international financial institutions.

The days of a free glass of water are over, in the view of these
companies, which have a public relations campaign to accompany their
sales pitch. On a global scale, and in many developing nations, water is
a scarce and valuable and clearly marketable commodity. "People who
don’t pay don’t treat water as a very precious resource," one
executive said. "Of course, it is."

A yearlong investigation by the International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), a project of the Center for Public
Integrity, showed that world’s three largest water companies —
France’s Suez and Vivendi Environnement and British-based Thames
Water, owned by Germany’s RWE AG — have since 1990 expanded into
every region of the world. Three other companies, Saur of France and
United Utilities of England working in conjunction with Bechtel of the
United States, have also successfully secured major international
drinking water contracts. But their size pales in comparison to that of
the big three.

The investigation shows that these companies have often worked closely
with the World Bank, lobbying governments and international trade and
standards organizations for changes in legislation and trade agreements
to force the privatization of public waterworks.

While private companies still run only about 5 percent of the world’s
waterworks, their growth over the last 12 years has been enormous. In
1990, about 51 million people got their water from private companies,
according to water analysts. That figure is now more than 300 million.
The ICIJ investigation, which tracked the operations of the six most
globally active water companies over a 12-year period, showed that by
2002, they ran drinking water distribution networks in at least 56
countries and two territories. In 1990, they had been active in only
about a dozen countries.

Revenue growth, according to corporate annual reports reviewed by ICIJ,
has tracked with the companies’ overseas expansion. Vivendi Universal,
the parent of Vivendi Environnement, reported earning more than $5
billion in water-related revenue in 1990; by 2002 that had increased to
more than $12 billion. RWE, which moved into the world water market with
its acquisition of Britain’s Thames Water, increased its water revenue
a whopping 9,786 percent: from $25 million in 1990 to $2.5 billion in
fiscal 2002.

This explosive growth rate has raised concerns that a handful of private
companies could soon control a large chunk of the world’s most vital
resource. While the companies portray the expansion of private water as
the natural response to a growing water shortage crisis, thoughtful
observers point out the self-serving pitfalls of this approach.

"We must be extremely careful not to impose market forces on water
because there are many more decisions that go into managing water; there
are environmental decisions, social-culture decisions," said David Boys
of the U.K.-based Public Services International. "If you commodify water
and bring in market forces which will control it and sideline any other
concern other than profit, you are going to lose the ability to control
it."

So far, privatization has been concentrated in poorer countries where
the World Bank has used its financial leverage to force governments to
privatize their water utilities in exchange for loans.

In Africa, the ICIJ examination of water company records showed that
they have expanded into at least 10 countries from three in 1990. They
are also active in at least 10 Asian countries and eight Latin American
ones, three in North America, two in the Caribbean plus Puerto Rico,
three in the Middle East plus the Gaza Strip, Australia/New Zealand, and
18 European nations, with most of the expansion in Eastern Europe.
There, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development has played a
key role in encouraging countries to privatize in exchange for loans.


Having firmly established themselves in Europe, Africa, Latin America,
and Asia, the water companies are expanding into the far more lucrative
market of the United States. In recent years, the three large European
companies have gone on a buying spree of America’s largest private
water utility companies, including USFilter and American Water Works Co.
Inc. Peter Spillett, a senior executive with RWE’s water unit Thames,
said his company projects that within 10 years it will double its market
to 150 million customers primarily because of expansion into the United
States.

So far, the Europeans have privatized waterworks in several mid-sized
U.S. cities, including Indianapolis and Camden, N.J., and are trying to
secure contracts in New Orleans. However, their expansion recently ran
aground in Atlanta, where the city canceled its 20-year contract — the
largest of its kind in the United States — with a Suez subsidiary
after only four years and returned control to the public utility.

The water companies have also dramatically increased their lobbying and
federal election campaign spending. In Washington, they have already
secured beneficial tax law changes and are now trying to persuade
Congress to pass laws that would force cash-strapped municipal
governments to consider privatization of their waterworks in exchange
for federal grants and loans. Government and industry studies have
estimated that U.S. cities will need between $150 billion and $1
trillion over the next three decades to upgrade their aging waterworks.

Worldwide, the ICIJ investigation showed that the enormous expansion of
these companies could not have been possible without the World Bank and
other international financial institutions, such as the International
Monetary Fund, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Asian
Development, and the European Bank for Reconstruction. In countries such
as South Africa, Argentina, Philippines, and Indonesia, the World Bank
has been advising the leaders to "commercialize" their utilities as part
of an overall bank policy of privatization and free-market economics.

In South Africa, heavy lobbying by private multinational water companies
such as Suez together with advice from the World Bank helped persuade
local councils to privatize their waterworks. Some communities began
turning their utilities into commercial enterprises as a preparatory
step to outright privatization. Others immediately contracted out to
private water.  Urged by the World Bank to introduce a "credible threat
of cutting service," the local councils began cutting off people who
couldn’t pay. An estimated 10 million people have had their water cut
off for various periods of time since 1998. The result has been cholera
and other gastrointestinal outbreaks.

The ICIJ investigation focused on the activities of these companies in
South Africa, Australia, Colombia, Asia, Europe, the United States, and
Canada.

The investigation showed that while these companies claim to be
"passionate, caring, and reliable," as one company states, they can be
ruthless players who constantly push for higher rate increases,
frequently fail to meet their commitments, and abandon a waterworks if
they are not making enough money. As in South Africa, the water
companies are pillars of a user-pay policy that imposes high rates with
little concern over people’s ability to pay. These rates are then
enforced by water cutoffs despite the serious dangers to people’s
health that these actions create.

The water companies are chasing a business with potential annual revenue
estimated at anywhere from US$400 billion to $3 trillion, depending on
how you do the math. Water is the basis of life and, if they have to,
people will pay just about anything to get it.

"These companies want to crack open this oyster and go get the pearl
inside. It’s big money," said Boys of Public Services International.

About 1.5 billion people do not have access to safe drinking water. The
United Nations predicts that by 2025 two-thirds of the world’s
population will experience shortages of clean water. Experts claim
enormous financial resources will have to be expended to meet this need.

Water companies, seeing profit in the crisis, are using current fears
over the scarcity of clean water to advance their financial interests,
said Ricardo Petrella, professor at the Catholic University of Louvain
in France and an advisor to the European Union on Science and
Technology.

"Water has become important for capital because water is increasingly
characterized by a crisis of scarcity," he said. "And scarcity is the
basis of modern capitalism. They enter into the water sector in the
developing countries because they start from the principle that even the
poor are ready to pay for water," he said. "They say, 'water for free is
not possible; even the poor understand this.'"

Financial fund managers are taking note of the expanding water market.
Switzerland’s second oldest bank, the Pictet Bank, last year started
its Global Water Fund in the United States after starting a similar one
in Europe two years earlier. They offer a basket of water companies and
predict that by 2015, 75 percent of European and 65 percent of U.S.
water utilities will be privatized.

As Thames’ executive Peter Spillett said, "You have such a steady
market, there is huge growth potential."

He noted that "water stocks actually do better than other utilities"
because of the long-term contracts that stretch for 10 to 30 years,
offering a reliable and predictable return on investment. "That is why a
lot of pension funds as well as private individuals are willing to put
money into it," he said.

Suez told ICIJ it instructs all its companies to be profitable within
three years, and the rate of return has to be at least 3 percent over
the cost of capital.

But the private companies are increasingly running up against strong
opposition because of the vital nature of water itself and the politics
that swirl around it.

The most famous example of this is the privatization in Cochabamba,
Bolivia. After Aguas del Tunari, a consortium jointly owned by Bechtel
and United Utilities, took control of the city’s waterworks in 1999
without any contract bidding, the company announced water rate increases
of up to 150 percent. Manager Geoffrey Thorpe threatened to cut off
people’s water if they didn’t pay.


The contract gave the company control over ground water and allowed it
to close down people’s private wells unless they paid Aguas del Tunari
for the water. Union leader Oscar Olivera said, "They wanted to
privatize the rain." When protests erupted throughout the city of
450,000 in 2000, police and army troops were called in. They killed two
people.

The government reacted by canceling the concession. Aguas del Tunari is
suing the Bolivian government, claiming losses of a reported $25
million, although Bechtel has stated that it has not put a number on its
claim. The suit is before the International Center for the Settlement of
Investment Disputes, an organization of the World Bank Group.

It was on the advice of the World Bank that Bolivia began privatizing
its water services in the mid-1990s. Discussions about Cochabamba’s
water began in 1995, said Christopher Neal, the World Bank’s external
affairs officer for Latin America. "The Bolivian government agreed, as a
matter of policy, with the Bank’s view that [privatization] was needed
there," Neal said.

However, according to Menahem Libhaber, the bank’s lead water engineer
for Latin America, the bank opposed the Cochabamba deal with Aguas del
Tunari because it believed it was not financially viable.

In an interview, Bechtel spokesman Jeff Berger blamed the Bolivian
government for the Cochabamba debacle. He claimed the government failed
to explain the long-term benefits of privatization to the people by
delivering flyers and taking out ads in newspapers.

The Free Marketers

Although Neal said the “bank is not ideological” about
privatization, the investigation showed that privatization is a hallmark
of many of its loan projects.

Lending about $20 billion to water supply projects over the last 12
years, the World Bank has not only been a principal financer of
privatization, it also has also increasingly made its loans conditional
on local governments privatizing their waterworks. The ICIJ study of 276
World Bank water supply loans from 1990 to 2002 showed that 30 percent
required privatization — the majority in the last five years.

In major water privatizations around the world — such as Buenos Aires,
Manila, and Jakarta – the ICIJ investigation showed that the World
Bank flexed its financial muscle to persuade governments to tender
long-term waterworks concessions to the major private companies.

The investigation also showed that the bank advised the countries how to
privatize their waterworks and often helped finance the privatization
process. In the case of Buenos Aires, the World Bank not only helped
finance the privatization but also took, through one of its branches, a
7 percent stake in the new company, Aguas Argentinas, which is
controlled by Suez. The World Bank loaned one of its own senior managers
to negotiate large water rate increases with the Argentine government.
The manager then headed a World Bank team that gave a $30 million loan
to Argentina. This occurred at the same time that Aguas Argentinas and
its shareholders were making huge profits of as much as 25 percent. One
shareholder, an important Argentine businessman, earned a profit of $100
million on the privatization.

In Jakarta, Indonesia, World Bank officials not only encouraged
privatization of the city’s utility but also stood by as two
multinationals secretly negotiated with the Suharto regime for the
transfer of the public waterworks into their control. The two companies,
Suez and Thames, entered into partnerships with a business associate and
a son of the former dictator Suharto to gain control over the city’s
waterworks. Both men then made significant profits on the deal.

The bank claims its policy of privatization alleviates poverty by
bringing management efficiency and private capital to developing
countries whose cash-starved water utilities are usually in a mess. The
bank argues that private companies succeed in bypassing the usual
bureaucratic morass and political cronyism and corruption that corrodes
so many public utilities in poorer countries. While it is clear that
considerable improvements have been brought to many waterworks as a
result of privatization, in many cases, the companies put in relatively
little capital of their own, relying primarily on loans from the World
Bank and related international financial institutions to help cover
costs of repairing and expanding waterworks networks.

There’s also evidence that if the World Bank applied the same energy
and money to improving local utilities, while allowing them to maintain
control of their water systems, the local utility would actually perform
better than private companies.

In Manila, Maynilad Water, of which Suez controls 40 percent, announced
in December 2002 it was pulling out of its 25-year contract, abandoning
a waterworks serving an area of 6.5 million people. The company was
unable to raise capital to meet contract demands and, as an independent
study commissioned by the local regulator indicates, contracted work to
affiliate companies. Maynilad is before an arbitration court seeking
$337 million from the Philippines government as reimbursement for what
it claims is invested capital. The government argues, however, that  the
company is owed only a fraction of that amount. The company is also
transferring to the government debts totaling $530 million.

A Global Oligarchy

The investigation also showed that the water companies have joined
forces with the World Bank and the United Nations to create an array of
international think tanks, advisory commissions, and forums that have
dominated the water debate and established privatization as the dominant
solution to the world’s water problems.

"What we have seen during the 1990s has been the setting-up of a kind of
global high command for water," Ricardo Petrella, a leading researcher
on the politics of water, wrote in the French daily Le Monde in 2000.


Global Goals for Water Access
The Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council presented these
global targets, called Vision 21, at the Second World Water Forum in the
Netherlands in March 2000 to address water supply and sanitation issues
facing the developing world.

By 2015, the council proposed:

 To halve the number of people without access to sanitation facilities.

 To halve the number of people without access to adequate quantities of
affordable and safe water.

And by 2025:

 To provide water, sanitation and hygiene for all.

Source: Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council


The leading think tank on water issues and the principal adviser to the
World Bank and United Nations is the World Water Council, which was
established in 1996 by the World Bank and the United Nations. It is
headquartered in Marseille, France, and one of its three founding
members is René Coulomb, a former Suez vice-president.

In 1998, the WWC created the World Water Commission to promote public
awareness of water issues and to help formulate global water policies.
The commission holds water conferences around the world and channels its
policy statements through international forums held every three years.

Men with strong privatization backgrounds run the commission. These
include former Suez CEO Jérôme Monod; Enrique Iglesias, president of
the Inter-American Development Bank; and Mohamed T. El-Ashry, CEO of the
World Bank/U.N. Global Environment Facility. Commission chairman is
World Bank Vice President Ismail Serageldin.

Both of these institutions strongly support privatization and a user-pay
policy. "Global experience shows that money is the medium of
accountability," the commission said in a 2000 report.

The commission has held two international forums on water with a third
planned for Kyoto, Japan, in March 2003. At its forum at The Hague in
March 2000, the commission issued a policy statement that said water
management was the main problem facing humankind and the solution was to
treat water like any other commodity and open its management to free
market competition.

Serageldin stated that water delivery should be in private hands but
publicly regulated, in the same way as private companies run the food
industry.

The ties that bind the World Bank to the major water companies include
shared membership on the boards of various policy institutions as well
as personal and business relations.

Monod was special counselor to the International Monetary Fund’s
director, Michel Camdessus, when Monod was Suez’s CEO. After Camdessus
retired in 2000, he was named chair of the “International Panel for
New Investments in Water,” an initiative organized by the water
companies. The panel’s directors include William Alexander, group
chief executive of RWE’s Thames Water of London, and Suez Vice
President Gerard Payen.

At its first meeting in Paris in February 2002, the panel focused on
"how to increase the rate of return on water projects and the related
difficulty of implementing the full cost recovery pricing of water."

Another panel member is the Global Water Partnership (GWP). The
chairwoman of its steering committee is Margaret Catley-Carlson, a
former Canadian deputy health minister. She is also chairwoman of the
Suez Water Resources Advisory Committee. The GWP is a partnership of
government, corporate, and professional organizations examining water
issues. It said, "The water crisis is a governance crisis, characterized
by a failure to value water properly and by a lack of transparency and
accountability in the management of water. Reform of the water sector,
where water tariffs and prices play essential parts, is expected to make
stakeholders recognize the true cost of water and to act thereafter."

On another front, water companies are working closely with the European
Union to enforce trade barriers against any country that refuses to open
its water utilities to privatization.

Working with the E.U. trade officials, the water companies are also
trying to persuade the World Trade Organization to force countries to
open their utilities to free market forces. Documents obtained by ICIJ
show that the European Commission trade office works closely with
Thames, Suez, Vivendi, and other private water companies to push for a
reduction in trade barriers with the WTO.

In a May 2002 letter, E.U. trade commissioner Ulrike Hauer wrote to
Thames, Suez, and Vivendi, thanking them for their contribution toward
negotiations to reduce trade barriers in "water and waste water
services," with a view to open these markets to European companies.

On a third front, the French government recently made a proposal to the
quasi-governmental International Organization for Standards (ISO), a
regulatory branch of the WTO, to set international standards for water
utilities. Effectively, the committee would develop rules on how to
manage all aspects of water service and delivery. Critics believe this
will help the WTO forge trade rules that would force countries to open
their public utilities to privatization.

"The companies have a clear strategy based on three things: the WTO, the
WIPO (World Intellectual Property Org), and the ISO," said Petrella.
"Through trade, intellectual property, and standardization, they are
going to conquer the water world."

Financial Titans, Bribery, and Fraud

In addition to their political connections, each of the three leading
companies has enormous financial resources. Each is among the top 100
corporations in the world. Together they had revenue in 2001 of $156.7
billion and continue to grow at a rate of about 10 percent a year,
outpacing the economies of some of the countries in which they operate.
The gross domestic product of Bolivia, for example, is $21.4 billion.

The companies also have more employees than most governments. Vivendi
Environnement, alone, employs 295,000 worldwide; Suez employs 173,000.

Both Suez and Vivendi have doubled their customer base in the last 10
years, with Suez serving 125 million water customers and Vivendi 110
million. RWE’s Thames Water is a distant third with 51 million, but
its recent acquisition of American Water Works Co. Inc. will increase it
to 70 million.

In France, both Suez and Vivendi have close political ties with the
national and local governments. Executives of the two companies have
been charged and, in some cases, convicted of illegal campaign
contributions to politicians and of using bribery and fraud to obtain
water and other municipal contracts. In one case, witness testimony
implicated former Suez CEO Monod, who is now chief adviser to French
President Jacques Chirac. Monod has never been charged and has denied
any wrongdoing.

Though competitors, the companies often form joint ventures to obtain
water concessions in foreign countries. For example, Thames and Vivendi
formed a business alliance in 1995 to capture the Asian market. Suez and
Vivendi share interest in Buenos Aires. And Thames and Suez, with the
support of the former Indonesian dictatorship, divided up Jakarta.

Finally, the private water companies make promises they often can't keep
– a tactic one World Bank water official called "over selling."
Essentially, they promise to deliver a better service at a lower price.
However, governments often drive up water prices just prior to
privatization to give water companies room to immediately reduce prices
and win popular approval.  Once a company has won the contract and
lowered prices, it often quickly attempts to renegotiate for higher
rates and reduced performance targets. The fact that the companies now
control the city’s waterworks gives the company tremendous leverage in
these negotiations. In many cases, water prices soar and original
targets for expanded water and sanitation systems are not met.

In Buenos Aires, for instance, Suez-controlled Aguas Argentinas almost
immediately put pressure on the government to renegotiate the concession
contract for more favorable terms.

Thames Water executive Peter Spillet complained that his company has
lost contracts because of this tactic. "What we find a bit hard is that
in many cases our competitors seem to go in much lower, and then within
a year or two of having successfully gotten that contract, they seek to
re-negotiate with the government of the city."

Since the companies prefer to be paid in American dollars, falling local
currencies usually lead to demands for rate increases. Despite earning
substantial profits, Aguas Argentinas recently canceled expansion plans
and threatened to curtail services unless the government agreed to
higher rates to compensate for foreign exchange losses.

The companies claim privatization is good because it brings the latest
ideas and technology to tired public utilities and clarifies the
responsibilities and mission of the water utility.

"In many cases, when only public servants are involved with delivering
water services or sanitation services, the goals which are expected by
the political decision-makers are not visible, they are not explained,"
said Suez vice-president Gérard Payen. "When you involve the private
sector, the community has more information and the situation is more
transparent."

But the ICIJ investigation showed that companies frequently insist that
all or part of their contracts remain secret. Regulatory authorities in
Buenos Aires, Manila, and Jakarta said they often feel powerless in the
face of demands from the water companies because they don’t have
access to company figures.

When companies are fined for not achieving performance targets, they
often don’t pay, preferring to appeal rulings in lengthy and expensive
arbitration and court proceedings.

Even in developed countries, such as Australia and Canada, which
generally have stronger regulatory bodies than poorer countries,
privatization has weakened public accountability. In Sydney and
Adelaide, Australia, major sewage treatment and water quality problems
were kept secret from the public as regulatory authorities and the
private companies argued over responsibility. In Hamilton, Ontario, a
private company took several years before it agreed to settle fines
after millions of gallons of sewage spilled into the streets and flooded
basements.

Nor is there any assurance that the private companies are financially
reliable. Since 1998, when Hamilton privatized its utility, the city has
had five different operators. Two of the companies, one of which was
Enron Corp., collapsed under the weight of fraud scandals. In a period
of just five years, the concession has been owned by the city
government, one local company, two American companies, and was recently
taken over by the German utility RWE.

"You don’t know who you are dealing with," said Hamilton city
councilor Sam Merulla. "When you deal with the private sector on behalf
of the public sector, you need stability. In Hamilton, it has been a
revolving door of international corporate owners dealing with one of the
most precious things we have — water."

Global Expansionists

Having established firm footholds on six continents, the big three water
companies say they now intend to concentrate most of their efforts on
the potentially lucrative markets of North America, China, and Eastern
Europe. All three said they hope to more than double their revenue and
their client base in the next 10 years.

Thames’ Spillet said China is opening up because the World Bank is
ready to spend money there, which makes it more attractive to private
companies.

"China is a bit of a sleeping giant because, for people at the World
Bank, there has always been a bit of difficulty regarding financing
issues," said Spillet. "They tend to have gotten a bit clearer just
recently."

Some countries are definitely not on the privatization agenda anymore.
Yves Picard, managing director of Vivendi in South Africa, said his
company is not interested in concessions in southern Africa unless the
World Bank or other institutions finance the capital costs. Otherwise,
he said, there is no payback for the company because people are too poor
to pay the high water rates private companies charge to cover their
capital costs.


Dependence on the World Bank appears to be increasing. There is rising
concern among the companies that capital markets are not open to them
because water is such a volatile political issue and many poorer
countries have unstable local currencies.

In a presentation on private sector involvement in the water business
before the World Bank in February 2002, J.F.Talbot, chairman and CEO of
France’s third-largest water company, Saur, warned that without
increased financing from institutions like the World Bank major
international water companies will "stay at home."

Much of their expansion plans depend on whether people ultimately accept
the idea of water as a commodity. In other words, the days of the free
glass of water are gone. Everyone must pay for water is the principal
message sent out by the World Water Council and its affiliate
organizations. The fact that people are increasingly accustomed to
buying bottled water can only be encouraging for the big water
utilities.

Yet, concerned about the backlash from privatizations such as
Cochabamba's, the companies are beginning to couch their words in less
mercantile terminology. After all, what makes water different is that,
like air, it’s irreplaceable. There are no choices allowing customers
to reject one for another. How can anyone market something that is both
vital to life and has no alternative? As the cholera victims of South
Africa know only too well, nothing can replace clean water.

"Everybody who thought water was a commodity lost," said Vivendi’s
President Olivier Barbaroux. "We do not sell water. You take the water
and you give it back. Exactly the same amount. What we are doing is
bringing the water to your home, making it clean for you to use, and
then taking it back and putting it back in nature clean. And that is the
service we are bringing."

Suez’s Payen flatly stated, "Water is not a commodity. It is a public
good. It is also a social good. It is essential for life." So what does
Suez sell? "We provide the essentials of life," he said.

Thames, however, is sticking to the commodity message. "Water is both a
commodity and a [public] service," Spillett said. He then compared the
water business to a brewing company.

"Clearly people do not understand the value of water, and they expect it
to fall from the sky and not cost anything. But if we use an analogy
with beer — that’s 99 percent water — but breweries have added
their hops and malt, and it has gone through a lot of processing, and
the end product has a lot of added value, and people are prepared to pay
a lot of money for it. In a sense purifying water from the raw state,
then treating it and bringing it to people and taking it away again is
almost the same industrial product. You have a lot of value-added there
and people, if they don’t realize it’s got a value and don’t pay
for it, don’t treat it as a very precious resource. Of course, it is."

The companies also claim that they are not really privatizing water but
rather managing utilities in partnership with governments. They call
these "Public Private Partnerships" or PPPs.

For critics of privatization, however, the essential issue is not water
itself, but access to water. And the key to access is control: who has
their hands on the tap.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) is a
gloal network of journalists that produces cross-border reports on a
variety of topics. ICIJ is part of the Center for Public Integrity, a
Washington, D.C.-based investigative research and reporting
organization.

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
The Center for Public Integrity
The World Bank
Suez
Vivendi Universal
Thames Water
RWE AG
United Utilities
Bechtel


Source: International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

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