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Evaluation of Water Services Public Private Partnership Options for Mid-sized Cities in India

Authors :
Ehrhardt, David
Gandhi, Riddhima
Mugabi, Josses
Kingdom, William
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015.

Abstract

Successful mid-sized cities will be vital to India’s growth and prosperity in the coming decades. Indian cities are home to over 375 million people now, and their population is likely to double by 2035. Yet water supply in most mid-sized cities falls short of Government of India benchmarks for service, efficiency and cost recovery. In many of them water flows in the pipes for 2 hours a day or less, its quality is poor, and it is provided by utilities that cannot even cover their operating costs. Following a brief introduction to the three city case studies (section two), the report lays out the Indian water sector’s unique challenges, and using case examples to substantiate findings (section three). The challenges include day-to-day operational issues associated with running a utility, as well as policy and planning issues that affect the utility’s governance and investment planning to meet current and future demand. The results of a financial viability gap analysis, applied to Bhubaneswar and Coimbatore reveal the magnitude of improvements required, and the key drivers that affect the utilities’ financial performance (section four). These complex challenges make traditional PPP models, Management Contracts, Concessions and Leases, less amenable for use in mid-size Indian cities. As section five describes, this is because the traditional models are too risky for the operator or government or too limited in scope to create lasting improvements. The remaining sections focus on explaining the design and procurement strategy for the two innovative PPP models, the phased performance based contract and the Joint Venture (JV) Partnership (section six and seven). These models have the potential to deliver better results than the traditional PPPs and business as usual scenarios. This is because in addition to reforming dysfunctional utilities into focused and accountable organizations, they are able to respond to information uncertainty, include strong incentives, have clear sources of funding, and promote capital efficiency.

Subjects

Subjects :
WATER CONSUMPTION
INVESTMENT
PERFORMANCE INCENTIVES
OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE
LEAKAGE REDUCTION
WATER OPERATORS
PRIVATE OPERATOR
WATER PRODUCTION
TOWN WATER SUPPLY
COLLECTION EFFICIENCY
CONTRACT MANAGEMENT
WATER
WATER SUPPLY FACILITIES
LITRES PER DAY
POPULATION GROWTH
BULK WATER SUPPLY
WASTEWATER SECTOR
MUNICIPALITIES
TOWNS
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY
LOCAL ENGINEERING
SERVICE PROVIDERS
WATER DEMAND
OPERATIONAL EXPENDITURE
WATER INFRASTRUCTURE
PERFORMANCE BENCHMARKS
UTILITY MANAGEMENT
WATER TARIFFS
OPERATIONAL IMPROVEMENTS
CONTRACT DURATION
WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
SERVICE STANDARDS
IRRIGATION SYSTEMS
CONCESSION CONTRACTS
SERVICE QUALITY
UTILITY STAFF
FINANCE
QUALITY OF WATER
AFFORDABLE WATER
HOURS OF SERVICE
PUBLIC UTILITIES
OPERATOR PERFORMANCE
OPERATIONAL RISKS
MUNICIPAL PROVIDERS
TOWN
WATER SERVICES
URBAN GROWTH
CONCESSION CONTRACT
COST RECOVERY
RESPONSIBILITY FOR WATER SUPPLY
WATER SUPPLY SERVICES
PRIVATE SECTOR OPERATORS
WATER SECTOR
PRIVATE PARTICIPATION
UTILITY OPERATOR
BULK SUPPLY
LOCAL OPERATORS
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
INVESTMENT PLANNING
WASTEWATER TREATMENT
RESPONSIBILITY FOR WATER
SERVICE IMPROVEMENT
PRIVATE FINANCING
TARIFF INCREASE
CONCESSION AGREEMENT
QUALITY WATER
GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS
TOWN WATER
CAPITAL
QUALITY OF SERVICE
NUMBER OF CONNECTIONS
URBAN WATER UTILITIES
FIXED FEE
TARIFFS
FINANCIAL VIABILITY
METER READING
WATER BOARD
WATER COMPANY
WATER SERVICE PROVISION
WATER PARTNERSHIP
INVESTMENT DECISIONS
CUSTOMER RELATIONS
HOUSEHOLDS
MIXED PRIVATE-PUBLIC OWNERSHIP
RAW WATER
JOINT VENTURE
MAINTENANCE COSTS
POTABLE WATER
ASSET OWNERSHIP
MAINTENANCE OPERATIONS
SERVICE PROVISION
URBAN WATER
UTILITIES
SYSTEMS
WATER SERVICE
WATER DISTRIBUTION
URBAN WATER SUPPLY
PIPE NETWORK
WATER UTILITIES
WATER QUALITY
WATER SUPPLY
DISTRIBUTION FUNCTIONS
TARIFF SETTING
SERVICE IMPROVEMENTS
PRIVATE OPERATORS
CASH FLOWS
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
WATER RESOURCES
URBAN AREAS
TARIFF ADJUSTMENTS
SMALL TOWNS

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2456..7d61cd56cd0a3d81ffd469131ab3acbc