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Findstone.com - Marlet Place for Building Stones
Sunita Narain's editorial on Delhi's 24x7 water project

The 24x7 water distribution programme of the World Bank and
the Delhi government has been increasingly controversial. The
programme, which intends to reform the water distribution in the
city, through the engagement of companies to improve
efficiency has come under criticism as it could lead to increased
tariff for water and increasingly greater roles for private players
in the public utility.

We have been following this controversy because of our deep
interest and work in the area of water management and
conservation in the city. We have also taken a careful review of
the programme and its components. It is clear to us that the
programme is poorly conceived as the project proponents have
not taken into account the key imperatives of water
management in the city. Please do see the article below for a
short analysis of the flaws in the project, as it stands today.

Our concern is that the current controversy could end up
jeopardising the momentum for water reform in the city. It is
clear that Delhi cannot deal with its water and pollution crisis,
unless it makes changes in the way it manages this sector. The
real issues are to ensure supply to all, on an equitable basis; to
meter the richer people, to recover fuller costs from them and to
reform the sewage system. The agenda for water is critical for
Delhi and must continue.


Sunita Narain (sunita@cseindia.org)
Suresh Babu (svsuresh@cseindia.org)

-------------------------------------------------

(Editorial: Down To Earth, November 15, 2005)
-------------------------------------------------

I write this because of the continued ineptness of its policies. It
makes us lose time and direction again and again. Just look at the
latest so-called water privatisation programme of the Bank and the
Delhi government.

It is a 24x7 water distribution scheme. Parts of the city will be
hived off to private contractors, who will ensure water supplied by
public utility Delhi Jal Board (DJB) is distributed to homes 24x7. The
contractor will be paid for these services, will collect water bills
and bring "efficiency" to the system. That is, the contractor will
reduce distribution losses -- currently between 40 - 50 per cent of
all water supplied. The plan was developed by the World Bank and its
consultants for the Delhi government, which has been struggling to
reform DJB. The reasoning is impeccable: supply constant water so that
pressure in the pipes will reduce leakage from sewage pipes and, in
turn, contamination of household water supply.

All was well until an intrepid non-government group, Parivartan, got
its hands on the contracts of the deal. It cried foul, finding huge
monies were paid to Bank consultants and even fatter contracts were on
the cards with multinational water distribution companies. If signed,
Parivartan alleged, the contracts would deny water to slums, for there
would be no more free water. The bottomline it said: water tariffs
were set to increase 6 times as a result of these contracts.

The campaign has hit home: resident welfare organisations, political
parities of all hues, have joined the resistance against the World
Bank-private takeover of the city's water supply. The city government
is diving for cover; it is said the plan is 'temporarily' shelved. The
Bank, it is said, is committed to an idea it has tried out in other
poor cities of the world. Unsuccessfully. But persistence, clearly, is
the name of the game.

The fact is the plan is not worth the time being spent on it -- on
proposing it or on opposing it. It is not designed to even work.

Let us understand it better. First: how much water is needed? The
consultant's report makes this mess evident. In one water distribution
zone, the DJB estimated the consumption was 139 million litres daily
(mld). Then supply was measured, and found to be 223 mld, a huge
difference of over 100 million litres of water a day. Unable to
explain this, the consultant simply advises the Bank/government
combine to neglect the difference and go by DJB figures. In other
words, as expected, little is known of the water situation in this
zone.

The outcome is that little is also known of the current demand (based
on water received once a day or even lesser) as compared to what it
will be when water is supplied 24x7. The consultant's monitoring
estimates say it should be 189 litres per capita daily (lpcd). But in
the project's calculations, water demand is estimated by taking into
account a much lesser quantum of daily consumption - 130 lpcd for just
13 per cent of the rich and 30 lpcd for 32 per cent of the poor. The
result is that total demand for this zone is predicted to be just 66
lpcd, or 48 mld. This is jugglery. The purpose: project proponents can
say there is a water surplus in the area and so their scheme is
viable.

The fact is water is scarce and little has been done to change that.
There is absolutely no estimation of how much additional water will be
needed if the scheme does indeed supply water for 24 hours. The
workplan simply is that the private company will reduce the 50 per
cent distribution losses, and that this recovered water will make good
the difference.

But again, there is no understanding of what these "losses" are.
Surely 50 per cent of Delhi's water supply is not being siphoned off
by thieves? From what little is known, it seems water losses are about
leakages from underground connections -- water supply points. Which
company, however efficient, will be able to retrofit all the
underground connections?

Then there is the tariff question. It is estimated it costs the
government Rs 8-9 to supply 1,000 litres of water; for this, it
charges roughly Rs 2. Nobody knows what collection and disposal of
sewage costs, but it is estimated it is normally five times higher
than water distribution costs. The new scheme reproduces these two
travesties. The government will be in charge of water tariffs, which
it promises not to raise even if households use much more water. Also,
the scheme does not include the collection of sewage. In other words,
more water will be supplied, which will not be paid for. More sewage
will be generated, which will not be paid for. A public water utility
that is inefficient also because it does not get paid will become even
more burdened, poorer.

In sum, this is nothing but selective subsidisation, for the richer
people of the city, in which the distributor will collect a little
from those who can pay. This is not privatisation. This is certainly
not reform.

Currently, people whom water reaches use it 24x7, because they store
it in tanks and can afford household devices to clean it. The real
issue is to ensure supply to all, on an equitable basis. Meter the
richer people, recover fuller costs from them and reform the sewage
system.

This is the reform agenda this poorly conceived programme will
jeopardise. As opinions sharply polarise -- between those who support
water 'reform' (read privatisation and the World Bank) and those who
want state control to continue -- crucial time will be lost. An
opportunity for serious change will be missed.

Maybe the World Bank should be transformed into a debating society.
That would be less wasteful: of their ideas and our time.

-- Sunita Narain

Also see : Rainwater Harvesting, Water : News Articles