Circle of Blue: 2012 Water Prices in 30 Major U.S. Cities

released Monday, 14 May 2012

The price that Americans pay for water is rising faster than the cost of any other utility service in the United States — be it gas, electricity, or telephone charges.

According to the newest report in an ongoing national survey conducted by Circle of Blue, water prices in 30 major U.S. cities rose 18 percent over the last two years and 7 percent in the past year.

http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2012/world/map-2012-water-prices-in-30-major-u-s-cities/

2012 Water Prices in 30 Major U.S. Cities | Water quality | Scoop.it

Brubaker & Dachis: Saving Every Last Drop of Toronto’s Water

Saving Every Last Drop of City’s Water: Toronto Star Op-Ed
Published in the Toronto Star on May 19, 2011

CD Howe Institute

by Elizabeth Brubaker and Benjamin Dachis

As the City of Toronto looks to plug its $774 million budget hole, it has kick-started a comprehensive service review. Although the city will need to find savings in many areas, the service review should consider the large potential savings from contracting out the water and sewage services that it currently provides.

The city operates all eight of its water and wastewater treatment plants, the water distribution system and the sewage collection system. In 2009, the city spent $820 million in capital and operating expenses for water and wastewater — almost twice the $420 million it spent on waste collection, recycling and disposal. Toronto Water’s 2011 budget values its water and wastewater assets at $27.9 billion. The sheer size of the water and wastewater budget suggests that large savings can be found.

Toronto’s water and wastewater services are expensive relative to those in other major Ontario cities. The costs of distributing water and collecting sewage are, per kilometre of pipe, among the highest in the province, in part because the networks are older than others. The city also pays more than most for wastewater treatment and disposal.

Torontonians might well wonder if they are getting value for their money. Water mains break more often per kilometre of pipe than they do in any other major Ontario city, and sewers back up more frequently. Overflows from sewers that carry both household sewage and stormwater commonly close beaches after heavy rains. The sewage treatment plant at Ashbridges Bay releases tonnes of pollutants into Lake Ontario every year.

The age and condition of Toronto’s water infrastructure make new investment inevitable. Because it has allowed its water and wastewater infrastructure to deteriorate, the city now has an infrastructure backlog of $1.7 billion and project investments of $8.7 billion over 10 years. Using private partners to finance and construct new facilities can reduce those costs.

Critics claim that the cost of capital for the public sector is lower than it is for the private sector. This saving is illusory. Holders of government debt know that taxpayers will foot the bill when things go wrong. In contrast, those who finance private projects, and who can’t count on a later taxpayer bailout, require a premium that accounts for the risks they take on. The higher cost of capital for private-sector construction is akin to an insurance premium for the public in case a project takes too long, is over budget or doesn’t work.

Additionally, if the private partners finance and build a project and are not paid until its completion, they will have strong incentives to manage construction effectively and complete it on time, thereby reducing overall project costs.

Private partners are not only useful in financing and building water facilities, but also in operating future and existing ones. The evidence around the world shows that competition among private service providers can reduce operating costs. A competitive tendering system will ensure that private operators try to out-compete their competitors — and in the water utility business, there are many.

The efficiencies inspired by competition do not come at the expense of water safety or environmental quality. The city can clearly define performance standards through enforceable contracts that penalize bad performance and reward good performance. Under contracts with municipalities, private managers have strong incentives to meet health and environmental standards.

In fact, it often becomes easier for both municipal and provincial governments to regulate arm’s-length private operations than it is for them to penalize public operations. When public utilities are fined for failure to meet standards, taxpayers lose; when private companies are fined, their shareholders lose.

No one solution will fill the City of Toronto’s looming budget gap. However, introducing competition for the city’s water and wastewater services can both save money and improve the quality of the services.

Benjamin Dachis is a policy analyst at the C.D. Howe Institute. Elizabeth Brubaker is the executive director of Environment Probe and the author of A Bridge Over Troubled Waters: Alternative Financing and Delivery of Water and Wastewater Services, published by the C.D. Howe Institute and available at www.cdhowe.org

OCETA & XPV: The Water Opportunity for Ontario Report

The report suggests that by the year 2015, Ontario can be recognized as a global centre of water excellence and world-class provider of technologies, services and know-how for innovative and sustainable water solutions.

To achieve this goal, new thinking is required to achieve multiple objectives around protection of the environment and public health; the development and commercialization of new water technologies and products; and the growth of existing and new businesses to create jobs and wealth for Ontario.

The report recommends the establishment of a bold vision and strong leadership to make Ontario a global leader; the creation of an Ontario Water Opportunity Act (which was recently announced by the Ontario government); increased collaboration amongst government, industry, academia and the public; and branding Ontario as a sustainable water leader.

Read more:

http://www.oceta.on.ca/cleanwater.htm

http://www.xpvcapital.com/news/newsItem.cfm?cms_news_id=131

Untapped Opportunities in Infrastructure

Managing Water in Southern China

A series of droughts in China, including some earlier this year, has raised concerns that Hong Kong’s water supply might not be as secure as had been thought.

Drinking water has rarely been a concern in Hong Kong, where the supply has historically been plentiful and affordable. But a series of droughts in China, including some earlier this year, has raised concerns that Hong Kong’s water supply might not be as secure as had been thought.

Civic Exchange, a public policy research group based in Hong Kong, has released a report titled ”Liquid Assets,” highlighting water security and management in the Pearl River Basin and Hong Kong.

The report warns that South China’s supply of water – which comes from the Dongjiang, a major tributary of the Pearl River – is threatened by climate change and pollution. Additionally, there is growing competition from industries in the surrounding Guangdong wetlands.

Mike Kilburn, Civic Exchange’s environmental program manager, said that ”while China protects classic farmlands, the story of Guangdong is relentless development.”

”Ecologically, the delta is not in good shape,” Mr. Kilburn said.

The authors of the report said at a news conference that Hong Kong’s water prices were a significant part of the problem, as low prices encouraged consumption.

The International Water Association reports that Hong Kong’s water tariffs are among the lowest in the world, while its per capita consumption of water is among the highest.

According to Civic Exchange’s representatives, the most immediate way to manage the use of water resources is to raise the price, but they acknowledged that political issues might make raising rates difficult.

They also believe that Hong Kong and Macao should be brought in on the discussions relating to water management in South China.

Currently Hong Kong’s role is limited to ”water supplies management” – negotiating long-term fixed rates for water – rather than ”total water management,” which would look beyond the pricing issue at things like conservation, adaptation measures and preservation of South China’s wetlands.

”Hong Kong does not have a water policy,” said Christine Loh, a former Hong Kong legislator and the founder of Civic Exchange. ”What we have is a water department that looks at things like piping, cleaning and negotiating water prices with Guangdong, but this is a supply-led attitude.”

Ms. Loh said Hong Kong needed a demand-oriented water policy and total water management system that looked at broader factors to secure the long-term water supply. Factors include raising tariffs, increasing conservation measures, generating awareness campaigns and planning for alternative sources like desalination plants.

Source: International Herald Tribune, December 30, 2009

Mondaq.com: Water, Water Everywhere – But Did You Get Permission To Take It?

Canada: Water, Water Everywhere – But Did You Get Permission To Take It?

15 December 2009

Fraser Milner Casgrain LLP / Article by Jan-Martin LeBlanc and Pierre Langlois

Québec had a wet summer this past year. While washing out many picnics, the steady rains also replenished our ground and surface water reserves. Although Québec is blessed with abundant water resources, there is wide consensus on the necessity to protect such a critical resource. The Québec legislature has adopted over the past few months new water legislation which will potentially have an impact on businesses. The following summarizes the new regulatory scheme introduced by the Water Act and the Regulation respecting the declaration of water withdrawals.

A New Water Regulatory Regime

The unanimously adopted Act to affirm the collective nature of water resources and provide for increased water resources protection, or Water Act, introduces several mechanisms for protecting and managing water resources. The Québec National Assembly adopted the law June 11, 2009, but had not yet announced the law’s effective date at the time of writing. The Act’s highlights include:

  • civil recourse for the Attorney General to order reparation of any damages to water resources,
  • a new regime for authorizing water withdrawals,
  • acknowledgment that water is a collective resource and part of Québec’s common heritage,
  • water governance rules based on integrated and concerted management of designated hydrographical units,
  • a new water knowledge office, and
  • prohibitions against transferring water outside of Québec that only the government may waive and only for public interest after public consultation.

The Act’s broad civil recourse provisions will have a substantial impact on potential civil liability of companies whose activities are likely to alter the quality of surface or ground water. Basically, in addition to any penal environmental recourse, the Attorney General may commence proceedings for repairs to any water damage caused by or through a person’s fault or illegal act. Under the new law, a company that causes damage to water is liable regardless of intention, carelessness or negligence. Rather, the simple fact that the company caused the damage is enough to establish liability. The Act’s no-fault regime departs from the general civil liability scheme that requires proof of fault. Moreover, unlike cases of environmental regulatory violations, offenders will not be able to raise a due diligence defense to escape liability.

All kinds of water damage are subject to civil recourse under the Act’s broad language. Damage covered includes any degradation of water resources’ physical, chemical, or biological features or ecological functions as well as change in quantity. Offenders may be ordered to restore the resources to their original state, repair through compensatory measures, or pay a lump sum as compensation.

In contrast to other recourse under the civil code that requires complaints be lodged within three years, the new water law only requires the Minister to take action within ten years of the date when the Minister first knew of the damages.

So, to avoid liability under these new provisions, companies will need to pay close attention to the consequences their water activities cause, avoid altering the quantity, and keep from damaging the quality of surface and ground water.

Read the whole article

Full-Cost Pricing Necessary, Says Report

Consumers must pay for every unit of water they use, and the price must reflect the cost of supplying it, the Conference Board of Canada recommends in a new report released last week.

“Water charges based on the value of property—or any other fixed measure that is not directly related to water consumption—cannot provide consumers with clear price signals,” said Len Coad, director, Environment, Energy and Technology.

A cultural shift is required in how we manage our water system. Instead of relying on the tax base and allowing users to pay a below-cost price, those who use the service should pay the full cost of water, including capital expenditures.

Most Canadians pay less than $0.02 per litre for their water and wastewater service. Full-cost pricing would provide customers with a clear indication of the cost of providing water services and increase incentives to reduce consumption. As a basic step, says the report, universal water metering should be implemented immediately.

Secondly, many municipally-owned water and wastewater facilities and systems were built between the 1950s and 1970s, and are due for replacement. But capital investments by municipal governments have been in decline for more than 30 years, and some municipalities have been reluctant to pass costs on to users, allowing a significant but unsubstantiated infrastructure deficit to develop. Full-cost pricing would change the focus of water management from short-term cost savings to long-term service quality and sustainability.

The report, Improving Infrastructure Management: Municipal Investments in Water and Wastewater Infrastructure, is published as part of CanCompete, a three-year program of research and dialogue designed to help leading decision makers advance Canada on a path of national competitiveness.

via: Water Canada