रविवार, 16 सितंबर 2007

Water privatisation -- Torrent of trouble -Sudhirendar Sharma

"How is it that water which is so useful that life is impossible without it, has such a low price; while diamonds, which are quite unnecessary, have such a high price?" — Adam Smith

THE FACT that 1.1 billion people, mostly in the developing countries, lack access to adequate clean water is reason enough for the growing water industry to rejoice. Estimated to be worth $7 trillion, the global water industry has assured itself of profits at least for the next 25 years, during which time the number of people without access to potable water will move closer to the incredible 3-billion mark.

Believe it or not, the growing water industry survives on the patronage of the water-stressed people. With odds stacked against them, the poor have little choice. At one extreme are the irresponsive governments that have repeatedly failed to sustain water supplies and at the other are the exploitative multinational corporations that have skillfully controlled the emerging water market. Under a shrinking international aid environment, governments are finding it hard to raise the $31-35 billion needed annually to provide universal access to water.

But this is not quite what the world had promised a decade ago at the historic Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. Northern governments have fallen short of their promise to contribute 0.7 per cent of their gross national product (GNP) annually to bring the developing countries at par. According to OECD, official development assistance dipped to $53 billion in 2000, down from $ 69 billion in 1992. Far from being any closer to the 0.7 per cent mark, actual aid spending as share of GNP had slipped to a shocking 0.2 per cent in 2000.

The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have been of no help as both seek to pursue policies that open floodgates for private investment in the water sector only. With national co-financing of World Bank water projects already at its lowest 10 per cent during the decade, the Bank made an already bad situation worse by demanding that the governments `slash spending, pull money out of circulation, and privatise public utilities'.
The World Bank has been assertive in its campaign. Water privatisation is one of the many conditions that determine the extent of loans under the World Bank's Country Assistance Strategy. Paraguay is the latest victim of this revised strategy as the Bank suspended a $46-million loan for not complying with the stipulated conditions attached to the loan.

However, for accepting its pre-condition to raise water tariff by 95 per cent, the World Bank had approved a similar loan of $110 million for Ghana in July 2001. By doing so, the Bank has made its intentions clear: Ensure `full cost recovery' and privatise public sector utilities. No surprise, therefore, that share of private investment to the total fund flow to developing countries has increased to 70 per cent in the last decade.

This is what the World Bank and its affiliated think-tanks were campaigning for the better part of the post-Rio era. Though they have been heavily criticised for their anti-poor policy advice, World Bank officials argue that increased cost recovery and privatisation will actually expand access to clean water. They are not alone in arguing a case for privatisation. The multi-donor World Commission on Water for the 21st Century is convinced that `if the poor have to survive they must buy water for their daily needs'.

But privatisation critics say the Bank's calculus is flawed on numerous grounds. Higher prices for water mean the poor have to use less or go without it. In Ghana, for instance, price increases have already forced many people to cut down water consumption drastically. Public health officials link such reduced access to increased health risks. In South Africa, enhanced water tariff forced people in the Kwagulu-Natal region to consume polluted river water instead — the resultant cholera outbreak claimed some 32 lives in 1999. Cut off from municipal systems, the poor are forced to buy water off the back of a truck and often get a diseased swill responsible for some four million deaths per year.
Protagonists of privatisation are not convinced. They contend that the poor manage to find money for water that can be parleyed into profits for reputable suppliers. In a bid to justify privatisation, a handful of studies are quoted to show that both rural and urban poor are willing to pay higher fees to have a reliable water supply. World Bank-sponsored studies indicate that urban poor people already pay five times the municipal rate for water in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire; 25 times more in Dhaka; and 40 times more in Cairo. However, it is not clear if poor can sustain paying the increased tariff for long. They might be paying so much that they can afford to buy cups of water to drink but not 40 litres per day, the minimum necessary to meet basic human needs on a daily basis.

By inefficient handling of water resources and by allowing the municipal infrastructure to crumble, governments the world over have made themselves and their poor citizens vulnerable to onslaught, both in content and design, by forces out to reap a huge windfall.

Because of bureaucratic mismanagement of the scarce resource, per capita water availability in India is down to 2,200 cubic metres per year, from a high of 6,008 cubic metres some 50 years ago. Cashing in on this decline — expected to plunge to an alarming low of 496 cubic metres per person per year in the next 25 years — is the mineral water bottle industry that has seen as many as 180 players in the market selling as much as 1,000 million litres of water each year.

While recession, structural adjustment programmes and other problems have undermined the ability of local authorities the world over to provide their communities with well-resourced integrated public services, MNCs have seized the initiative under a favourable donor environment. Leading water companies, such as Bechtel of UK, Vivendi and Suez-Lyonnaise of France, have made inroads into the developing world, as a result of contracts won under international loans, in return for `tied aid' from their governments.
If the recent violent protests in Bolivia and the emerging opposition in Ghana are any indication, the civil society resents privatisation of water.
Yet, there is no let down as governments in developing countries succumb to donor pressure for facilitating privatisation of their water utilities. Already, some 30 cities in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan are bidding their respective municipal water supply to a handful of powerful MNCs specialising in water.

Tiruppur in Tamil Nadu and Hubli-Dharwad in Karnataka have moved closer to privatising their water utilities. New Delhi's water supply will soon be in the hands of Vivendi. The Ministry of Environment and Forests estimates that $65 billion would be required in water and wastewater sector over the next ten years and has consequently urged State governments to raise water tariffs every two years to become eligible for credit.

Interestingly, crucial decisions about water privatisation and cost recovery between donors and key government leaders are made behind closed doors and without the knowledge and consent of citizens. Forced to sign on dotted lines, democratically elected governments in the developing world are clearly at risk of survival on account of their reduced reliability.
Neither the donors (the World Bank or the IMF) nor borrowing governments are obliged to publicly disclose information about loan agreements. However, this is contrary to Principle 10 of the Rio Declaration that entitles individuals to access information and judicial proceedings, as well as the chance to be involved in decision-making. There are many such contradictions to be addressed.

Ten years after the Earth Summit, the steps towards a just and ecologically resilient world have been tentative, uneven and flawed. But the terrible events of September 11 have made `powers that be' realise the need for closer cooperation with the developing countries. It is clearer than ever before that the model of development based on principles of mass production and economic growth may, indeed, be driving the world to a danger less visible than terrorism but over the long run, more serious. As the world moves closer to the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development in September, national governments will have to confront businesses that are waging an offensive on many fronts to swing the sustainable development agenda in their favour. Unless countries are permitted to find their own solutions and keep such basic human services as water under their control, sustainable human development is not possible.
(The author is a water expert attached to the Delhi-based Ecological Foundation. He can be reached at sudhirendar@vsnl.net)

बुधवार, 12 सितंबर 2007

SEMINAR ON THE STATE OF THE RIVERS IN INDIA

September 14, 2007, Gulmohar Hall, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi, India
Time 09.30 Hrs to 18.00 Hrs

Organized as part of the 4th CMS VATAVARAN –Environment and Wildlife Film Festival

Background

Indian rivers account for major source of freshwater supplies in the country. They are revered around the country. Our rivers have been symbols of our civilization. The situation however is not the same any more. The competing demand for freshwater due to development pressure and population growth coupled with encroachments over river beds, indiscriminate pollution, general neglect and people-river disconnect are taking its toll on these lifelines. It is not only a cause of concern for humanity but also for many other kinds of lives.
Large amount of public money and resource have been deployed particularly to deal with the pollution menace. But the results are not visible. What is it, which is ailing the river management system in the country. The objective of this day-long seminar on the “State of Indian Rivers” is stock taking, experience sharing and recommending corrective measures.

Issues to be discussed

· Major River Clean-up Programmes
· Urban Sewage Management
· National River Conservation Programme (NRCP)
· Legal and Regulatory Provisions
· Technical issues and Information system
· Role of Civil Society
· Waste Management and Rivers
· Conflicts
· Community Initiatives, etc.

Objectives
· To facilitate dialogue on this important lifeline of the capital and many others downstream
· To analyse the River Clean-up strategies
· To address the issue by communicating effectively with the help of media.
· To enhance awareness and exchange learnings and experiences on measures taken to protect Indian rivers, particularly the Yamuna in Delhi.

Targeted Participants

Panelists: Environmentalists and social activists, waterworks engineers and authorities, Scientists, Researchers, Water Companies, Policy makers, Media Representatives.

Audience: CMS VATAVARAN would invite members of civil society, students, youth, engineers, economists, journalists, urban planners, social-economists and specialists in rivers and water management, Researchers, Academicians, Entrepreneurs Representatives of TV Channels, News Agencies, etc.

Sessions

I. Inaugural
II. Indian Rivers: How do we Restore Them?
III. Yamuna – Upstream and Downstream
IV. Concluding Remarks and Recommendations

PROGRAMME

09:30 am – 10:00 am Registration


10:00 am – 11:15 am SESSION I
Inaugural Session
10.00 am Welcome Address: Dr. N. Bhaskara Rao, Chairman CMS
10:05 am Chief Guest and Inauguration: Dr. Abid Hussain, Former Indian Ambassador to the USA (Invited)
10.20 am Guest-of-Honour
Mr. Erik Hammerskjöld, Environmental Ambassador, Ministry of the Environment, Sweden
10:35 am Keynote Address: Rajendra Singh, Chairman, Tarun Bharat Sangh
10:50 am Discussion
11:15 am Tea Break

11:30 am– 1:30 pm SESSION II


Indian Rivers: How Do We Restore Them?
11:30 am Session Chair and address
Shri Ramaswamy Iyer, Visiting Professor, CPR
12:00 pm Two Decades of Ganga Action Plan (GAP)
Mr. Rakesh Jaiswal, Director, Eco-Friends
12.30 pm Water Quality Status of Indian Rivers
Dr R. C. Trivedi, Director, Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB)
1:00 pm Discussion


1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Lunch Break


2:30 pm – 5:00 pm SESSION – III
Yamuna – Upstream and Downstream
2:30 pm Chair: Dr Bhure Lal, Chairman, Environment Pollution Control Authority (EPCA)
(Welcome and Opening Remarks by the Chair) (Invited)
2.50 pm Revisiting Yamuna Action Plan
Mr. V. S. Thind, SE (SE (DR) Proj.East/NE)
3:10 pm Yamuna – Upstream and Downstream
Mr. S. V. Suresh Babu, Dy. Coordinator, Centre for Science and Environment (CSE)
3:30 pm Yamuna: How to restore the river?
Dr. Brij Gopal, School of Environmental Sciences, JNU
3:50 pm Yamuna – Legal Concerns and Options
Mr Prashant Bhusan, Advocate, Supreme Court, India
4:10 pm Securing Delhi’s Lifeline and the Ecosystem
Mr Manoj Kumar Mishra, Convenor, Yamuna Jiye Abhiyan
4:30 pm Discussions and concluding remarks by the Chair
5:00 pm Tea Break

NATIONAL GATHERING OF FRIENDS OF THE RIVERS

NATIONAL GATHERING OF FRIENDS OF THE RIVERS

Dear Friends of the Rivers,

No matter where we work in India, our rivers are under threat.

The rapid industrialization to produce chemicals, petrochemicals, steel, and automobiles for the world market is polluting our rivers in remote rural and tribal areas.

Dam building which had been questioned in the 80’s and had slowed down has become aggressive with the limitless demands for energy for a globalising India.

The insane River-Linking project was supposed to take water from the flood prone east to the drought prone west. However, it is not just U.P and Bihar, which have suffered unprecedented, flood damage, Gujarat and Maharashtra too have had major flooding. The River Linking project has no basis in a period of climate change.

Rapid urbanization is eating into our rivers with land mafias grabbing the flood plains that rivers need for their own freedom and our security. From the 1st of August, a Yamuna Satyagraha has started to stop the encroachment into Yamnua’s flood plain by the Commonwealth Games and other projects. On 15th of August, our Independence Day Satyagrahis planted the National Flag in the river to celebrate the freedom of the river and to pledge themselves to defend her freedom.

All of us struggle in different parts of the country on different facets of threats to the integrity and freedom of our rivers. We feel the time has come to pull our energies together and put the defense of rivers at the center of our diverse struggles.

We, therefore are organizing a one day sharing and strategizing session of friends of the rivers from different parts of the country on 1st October, 2007 from 10.00 am to 5.00 pm at conference room no. 413, Indian Social Institute, Lodhi Road, New Delhi.

The objective of the gathering is to take stock of the state of our rivers and plan collective actions for the defense of our rivers.

We do hope you will join us.

Warm regards,



Rajendra Singh Prashant Bhushan Dr. Vandana Shiva
Jal Biradari Senior Advocate, Supreme Court Jal Swaraj Abhiyan

सोमवार, 10 सितंबर 2007

Groundwater - India’s Water Lifeline needs urgent intervention- Govt is non serious about the crisis

Government’s own figures show that Groundwater is India’s water lifeline. That lifeline is crisis situation and needs urgent intervention. However, even as the first National Groundwater Congress meets on September 11, 2007, it is clear that government is non serious about attending to this situation that has been created due to its own acts of omissions and commissions. Attention to Rainwater harvesting, watershed development, local water systems (tanks, lakes, ponds, talabs, pokhars… there are many names to it, but they are all local water systems), wetlands, forests, floodplains and rivers, all part of existing groundwater recharging systems, can help sustain India’s water lifeline. But the Local water systems, wetlands, forests, floodplains and rivers are facing systematic destruction in the name of development and at best lip service is being paid for their conservation.

Why Groundwater is India’s Water Lifeline Govt figures show that 85% of rural water supply comes from groundwater sources. More than half of the urban and industrial water supply comes from groundwater systems. At least two thirds of irrigated area foodgrains production comes from groundwater irrigated lands. 80% of additional irrigated areas in last two decades have come from groundwater sources. All these figures come from the government documents. The existing groundwater recharging systems listed above help sustain the groundwater lifeline and their systematic destruction is one of the reasons for falling groundwater tables. And yet 80% of the water resources budget for the 11th Plan is going for big dams. That cannot help sustain groundwater lifeline. In fact in many cases the big dams are reasons for the crisis. This is sure invitation for bigger trouble.

Misleading analysis Addressing a function in Delhi earlier this month, the Union Water Resources Minister Prof Saifuddin Soz said, "This (ground water) resource has, however, come under stress due to its overexploitation". This is typical, incomplete and wrong analysis as it ignores the role played by existing groundwater systems and how they are getting destroyed. If the destruction of existing groundwater recharging systems is stopped, the situation would certainly be better. But all over the country they are facing
destruction. In fact the work of the Tarun Bharat Sangh and many such efforts in different parts of the country have shown that when local water systems are rejuvenated, the decline in groundwater levels can be reversed even in arid areas like Rajasthan. Scientists have repeatedly said that even to address the issues like the Arsenic contamination of groundwater, rainwater harvesting and groundwater recharging is the best option. But there is no policy for stopping the destruction of existing systems of groundwater recharge.

Wrong Prescription The govt has been trying to regulate the use of groundwater through a top down, unaccountable, non participatory mechanism of Central Groundwater Authority, in existence since eleven years. But such a mechanism cannot regulate use of groundwater. The Central Authority has failed to achieve its objective. Only a bottom up mechanism starting from local community controlled units can
possibly regulate use of decentralised source like groundwater.

What needs to be done We need dramatic, fundamental changes in the way we approach water resources. As the World Bank said two years ago there is dangerous all round complacency about groundwater. We need a clearly defined policy to ensure that the existing groundwater recharging systems are not destroyed. Creation of more such systems has to be the focus of our water resources development policy. Our plans and
budgets needs to reflect such policy, but they clearly do not at the moment. On anagement front, we need a legally enforceable regulatory system that has community at the focus of regulating use and management of groundwater. Our understanding of science of groundwater aquifers and use of that scientific understanding in groundwater management needs to improve. Use of water saving techniques like the System of Rice Intensification needs to be given more serious attention as it has big potential in reducing groundwater use. The National Ground Water Congress provides an opportunity to address these issues. Will it be used?

Himanshu Thakkar (ht.sandrp@gmail.com, 27484655, 9968242798)
South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers & People (www.sandrp.in)