We've moved to a new site!

Join us at publicservices.international - for all the latest news, resources and struggles from around the world.

We are no longer updating world-psi.org and it will be progressively phased out: all content will be migrated to the new site and old links will redirect eventually.

Water companies and trends in Europe

24 Septiembre, 2012
Fuente: 
PSIRU
This publication is part of a series in which EPSU explores the activities of the private sector in key public services. The series offers an overview of multinational company developments and assist trade unions in considering which companies qualify for a European Works Council.

This major new research paper on the activities of the water companies in Europe reveals a series of trends.

  • The ownership of private water companies in Europe in 2010 is overwhelmingly  dominated by the French multinational Suez Environment (part of GdFSuez) and Veolia.
  • Both Suez and Veolia, and other smaller companies such as SAUR (French) and FCC (Spanish), are increasingly dependent on state capital for activities in water,  both from the government of France and from  international development banks, including the EBRD and the IFC.
  • There continues to be a significant trend towards remunicipalisation, with cities such as Berlin and Budapest following the example of Paris.
    However, the austerity packages imposed in countries of southern Europe have become a new driver for privatisation.
  • There is continued strong public resistance to water privatisation, notably in Italy,  in Portugal against the privatisation of Aguas do Portugal, in Greece, against the proposed privatisation of water in  Thessaloniki and Athens, and in  Spain, against the proposed privatisation of  Canal Isabel II in Madrid.
  • The EU’s long-awaited policy on water resources will be issued at the end of 2012, and the companies are already lobbying on this. But the EU’s development policy in relation to water is more sympathetic to public provision, and more critical of the private sector.


The paper was commissioned by EPSU from the University of Greenwich Public Services International Research Unit, the world’s leading research body on the water industry and activities of private companies which over 20 years of experience exploring this sector.

Descargas

Ver también