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Background
With the exception of Turkey, the
performance of the water supply and sanitation sector in the Europe and
Central Asia (ECA) Region has been significantly influenced by the recent
transition events. Depending on a host of factors-such as the state of the
sector prior to the transition, the evolution of macro economic
performance and household income, the extent of reforms undertaken so far,
availability of external assistance-outcomes have been strikingly
different among the countries in the region. Some countries have made
great progress in improving the level and quality of services and
institutional and financial performance. In others, the sector is still in
the midst of a severe crisis and deep reforms needed to improve sector
performance and service to the people have not yet been initiated. Great
differences in service provision, and institutional and financial capacity
also continue to exist within countries. Large cities have been able to
deal much better with the transition than smaller ones. Rural communities
are still suffering most from the transition and the failure of
governments to initiate and sustain reform.
In terms of sector performance and
prospects, the ECA region may be divided into four broad groups of
countries. Group I includes the first tier European Union (EU) accession
countries. In these countries, the transition is well under way and has
largely succeeded in improving the level and quality of services and the
capacity and financial viability of sector institutions. The main
challenge for the future is to continue enhancing the efficiency of sector
institutions and mobilize the enormous resources needed to meet standards
for wastewater treatment demanded by the EU. Group II includes the second
tier EU accession countries. These countries have also made important
strides, but have a much longer way to go than countries in Group I. Group
III comprises the post conflict countries of the Balkans. There, war
related damage and ethnic divisions exacerbate the magnitude and
difficulty of sector reform. Group IV includes the countries of
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), excluding the Baltic states.
These countries have a far less developed infrastructure and institutional
capacity and suffer from much more severe fiscal constraints, reductions
in household income, and a much slower reform process than the other
countries in the region. This has led to an alarming deterioration of
services and weakening of sector institutions. Of the CIS, countries in
Central Asia and the Caucasus are facing a particularly challenging uphill
battle in preventing the collapse of present infrastructure and urgently
need to reform sector policies and rebuild and strengthen sector
institutions.
Region-wide Issues and Constraints
The poor state of the water supply and
wastewater industry in ECA is largely due to the policies and practices of
sector management in the past. The following sector development issues and
constraints are common to all countries in the region, although their
severity and relative importance vary widely.
Institutional/Regulatory Weakness.
Compared to international standards, water and wastewater enterprises are
over staffed, poorly managed, and inefficient. Lack of modern management
and control systems makes informed decision-making difficult. Sector
enterprises have limited autonomy and control over crucial aspects of
their business (e.g., tariff setting).
Poor State of Repair of Facilities.
Lack of appropriate maintenance, poor planning, use of low- quality
materials and equipment, and substandard construction quality, combined
with the recent shortages of resources, are responsible for the poor state
of repair and continued deterioration of assets. Large investments are
needed to rehabilitate existing systems.
Inefficient Operation.
Plants are often inappropriately designed and poorly maintained. Water
networks suffer from excessive leakage (loss rates of 50 percent and more
are not uncommon), hydraulically improper design, and excessive
infiltration in sewer pipes. Consumers, unaccustomed to water
conservation, tend to use more water than counterparts in Western Europe.
These inefficiencies unnecessarily drive up operating costs, particularly
for energy.
Lack of Financial viability.
While some water utilities in Group I countries have attained financial
viability, the loss of past subsidies, low tariffs, and poor collections
have placed most, if not all, water and wastewater enterprises in the
region in a financially untenable situation. Particularly in Group IV
countries, enterprises no longer have the resources needed for maintenance
or addressing even the most urgent rehabilitation needs. Many have stopped
paying their suppliers, most notably electricity providers. Due to
increases in energy costs, electricity has become the highest cost item
for most utilities. A solid financial footing for enterprises is essential
for the revival and development of the sector. The financial crisis is
particularly acute in smaller cities and rural areas. Throughout the
Central Asia and Caucasus countries, many rural communities have lost
their water supply systems
Restricted Willingness to Pay and
Affordability. The transition
has led to significant erosion of personal income and dramatically
increased the number of the poor. Safety nets adopted by most countries to
assist the most vulnerable are not operational. In this situation, many
people are reluctant or unable to pay the increased rates that enterprises
need desperately to survive and provide services. In the absence of
subsidies from government, consumers will have to pay more and/or service
provision will need to be aligned to consumer's ability to pay.
Water Resources Scarcity and Pollution.
Many water supply enterprises in the region suffer from water shortages
and poor water quality. At the same time, they are major polluters, along
with agriculture and industry. Present institutions, legislation, and
policies dealing with water resources are not equipped to introduce modern
[water resources management] principles that would ensure a cost
The Challenge Ahead
The resources needed to rehabilitate
existing systems and provide a safe level of water supply, sanitation
services, and adequate waste water treatment exceeds the present financial
capacity in all countries in the region. The financial shortfalls are most
acute in Group IV countries, where the need for investment is the
greatest. The recovery and future development of the sector will have to
proceed in phases. In each country, the pace of recovery will be
determined by the level of resource mobilization from all sources and the
cost-effective utilization of these resources. To achieve these goals, the
root causes of poor performance will have to be addressed. Particularly,
Group IV countries will have no choice but to undertake aggressive sector
reform programs if they are to stem the current trend of continued service
deterioration and put the water supply and water sector on a sustainable
footing. These reforms must address the sector issues and constraints
identified earlier.
Strengthening Sector Institutions and
Governance Relationships. For
large cities, the development of an autonomous, corporate,
commercially-oriented, and self-reliant utility operating under the
regulatory oversight of municipal government is essential. For smaller
cities, economies of scale suggest the creation of autonomous regional
utilities. Extensive institutional strengthening and intensive capacity
building are essential. Working with autonomy and insulated from undue
political interference, utilities must be held accountable for improving
service and productivity by their regulators.
Putting the Sector on a Viable Financial
Footing. Recognizing their
inability to fund the sector from already over stretched budgets,
governments have no choice but to strive for full recovery of operation,
maintenance, and capital costs from the consumer. Tariff increases and
rigorous collection are the basis for the financial viability of
utilities. Reliance on full cost recovery as the sole source of financing
the sector is clearly not possible, however, particularly in the poor and
disadvantaged areas of Group IV countries, some subsidies will be
unavoidable.
Improving the Cost-Effective Utilization of
Scarce Resources. The
more effectively
resources are used, the faster services
will improve. Programs of demand management, plant and network efficiency
improvements, energy conservation, leakage reduction, and careful priority
setting will bring the highest return in reducing operating costs and
improving service.
Making Consumers Key Participants in Future
Sector Development. Consumers
need to understand that the level and quality of services they receive
will depend largely on the level of tariffs they are willing and able to
pay. Sector institutions must strive to provide the service that people
want at the least possible cost. Consumers should not be asked to pay
higher tariffs only to have them squandered by wasteful management and
inefficient operations. In rural areas, community driven and supported
development needs to be introduced.
Promoting Private Sector Participation.
A private support industry providing quality equipment and services at
competitive prices has already emerged in country Groups I, II and III,
but is still missing in Group IV countries. Given the severe limits on
public financial resources and the dearth of management and operations
capacity, entry of private utility operators and investors in the form of
management contracts, leases or concessions will be a key element of
future sector development. The flow of private sector expertise and money
has already begun in Group I and II countries. Although conditions in
Group IV are not yet conducive for private investment, the provision of
private sector know-how in utility management and operations through
service or management contracts is crucial for addressing the severe
capacity shortages in these countries.
The Bank's Role and Response
Within its overall mission to reduce
poverty and improve living standards through sustainable growth and
investment in people, the Bank's objective for the sector is to help
people obtain adequate and safe water supply and waste water services at
an affordable price. The Bank offers assistance to governments and the
sector communities in the ECA region to improve water and wastewater
services in accordance with their needs and capacities. The Bank's support
for a country and a specific project depends on a number of
considerations. While need is an important criterion, the Bank is
selective in deploying its limited capacity to assist in preparing and
implementing projects. The Bank gives preference to those governments and
borrowing agencies which demonstrate commitment to a mutually agreed
reform agenda that ensures sustainable results. In its policy and project
advice the Bank brings to bear international best practices adopted for
local conditions.
Important objectives for every project are
to improve management and operations, ensure the cost-effective use
of scarce financial resources, and to address the root causes of poor
service. Financial sustainability and cost recovery from tariffs, while
providing inclusion and appropriate protection for the poor, is a key
development objective for every project. Whenever appropriate, the Bank
insists on a community-based approach, particularly in rural water supply
and sanitation projects. The Bank will promote, whenever feasible and
appropriate, the services of the private sector as a provider of
management and operational know-how and capital for investments. Finally,
the Bank is committed to work together with other financial and aid
institutions and recognizes its role of "lender of last resort"
and areas of comparative advantage.
Based on these principles, the Bank's
sector assistance strategy varies significantly among the different groups
of countries in the region. In Group I and II countries, where reforms
have already taken hold and extensive assistance is available from other
financing institutions and the private sector, the Bank will provide
assistance only for activities and investments that are not available from
other sources. The Bank is prepared to join a coordinated effort by the EU
and other financing agencies to provide funding to assist utilities to
meet EU water and wastewater standards. In Group III countries-the post
conflict countries in the Balkans-the Bank is ready to use its
international prestige and experience to help address political issues and
obstacles created by ethnic tensions. The Bank's most needy clients are
the countries of Group IV. Here the Bank is ready to help countries in
defining and implementing the reforms that are necessary to create the
conditions for sustained improvement and growth. Within this strategy, the
Bank offers policy advice to interested countries through sector studies,
dialogue, and financial support for specific investment projects. In Group
IV countries-particularly in Central Asia and the Caucasus-the Bank aims
at increasing its support for small towns and rural areas where poverty
and deterioration of services are most pronounced.
As of June 2000, Bank investments in the
ECA region water and wastewater sector totaled approximately US$800
million. Of this amount, US$50 million was for new investments approved
for three projects in fiscal1 1999. To date, Bank-supported
water and wastewater projects have assisted in policy reform, institution
building, environmental improvements, and efforts to improve financial
viability.
In Albania, the International Development
Association (IDA) approved a US$11.6 million credit for the Durres Water
Supply Project in 1994. The project is helping to improve the quality and
safety of water supply in Durres, the second largest city in Albania, by
rehabilitating existing facilities and strengthening the institutional
capacity and financial viability of the Durres Water Company. The project
was instrumental in initiating a dialogue with the government in support
of reforms in the sector. To help respond to the damage caused to the
sector during the Kosovo crisis, the Bank approved in 1999 a US$10 million
Water Supply Urgent Rehabilitation Project, which provides funding for
rehabilitating water supply assets in four Albanian cities: Durres, Fier,
Lehze and Saranda. A follow-up project that will fund the continuation of
rehabilitation and efficiency- improvement work with the assistance of a
management contract with an international private utility operator is
being prepared.
In Armenia, a US$30 million IDA credit was
approved for a Municipal Development Project in 1998. The project was
designed to fund the emergency short-term improvements in the water supply
system required to restore the safety and reliability of the water
availability in Yerevan. It includes support for turning over the
management and operation of the Yerevan water supply and wastewater
systems to a private foreign utility operator. It also assists the
government in formulating a sector development strategy for the rest of
the country. A follow-up project to assist with improving water services
in the rest of the country is being prepared.
In Azerbaijan, a US$61 million IDA credit
for the Greater Baku Water Supply Rehabilitation Project was approved in
1995. The primary objective is to rehabilitate water supply facilities
throughout the city and improve the quality and quantity of water
available to more than 500,000 people living in the metropolitan area of
Baku. The project includes an important technical assistance program to
help in the creation of the Baku water and wastewater utility and the
definition of a water law for reforming water policies in the country. In
1999, the Bank completed a sector study that provides specific
recommendations for reforming and strengthening the water supply and
sanitation sector in Azerbaijan
In Bosnia and Herzegovina, a US$20 million
loan was approved for a Water, Sanitation, and Solid Waste Urgent Works
Project in 1996, to help repair and rehabilitate war-damage water supply,
sanitation, and solid waste services in municipalities throughout the
country. In 1999, the Bank approved a US$12 million IDA credit for a
Mostar Water Supply and Sanitation Project. The objective of the project
is to reestablish a united water supply and waste water utility, and
provide funding for institutional strengthening and urgent investments for
the rehabilitation of the city's water supply system.
In Croatia, a US$38.4 million loan was
approved for the Eastern Slavonia Reconstruction Project in 1998. The
project aims to repair and rebuild the war-damaged water sector
infrastructure while mitigating the negative environmental impacts on the
adjacent nature reserve that are likely to occur when local agricultural
activities resume. Repair of the water sector infrastructure, especially
for local agriculture, is critical to restarting the country's economy. A
US$36.3 million loan was approved in 1998 for a Municipal Environmental
Infrastructure Project, which is designed to improve water and wastewater
facilities in the cities of Split, Solin, Kastela, and Trogir; to help
protect the coastal environment; and improve the safety, reliability, and
delivery of drinking water in the area.
In 1999, a US$31.6 million equivalent loan
was approved for a Municipal Waste Water Project in Hungary. The project
supports investments for expanding municipal wastewater treatment capacity
in the cities of Budapest and Dunaujvaros.
Also in 1999, a US$16.5 million loan was
approved for a pilot Water Supply and Sanitation Project for the city of
Atyrau in Kazakhstan. The project aims to strengthen the capacity of the
city's water and wastewater enterprise to provide reliable and safe
drinking water and disposal of sewage in an environmentally responsible
manner. It entails physical investments in two of the most heavily
populated areas of the city and changes in institutional and management
structures to improve the financial and operational management of the
city's water and wastewater enterprise. The project also finances the
preparation of a full-scale project to improve the infrastructure in the
remaining parts of the city.
In Poland, a US$21.5 million loan was
approved for the Bielsko-Biala Water and Wastewater Management Project in
1996. The project supports the water and wastewater enterprise in
Bielsko-Biala, a city with an estimated population of 190,000, located in
the southern region of the country. Its aim is to improve the efficiency
of water operations and expand wastewater treatment, thereby making a
significant contribution to lowering the pollution load on the Vistula
River. With the Bank's assistance, the Bielsko-Biala water and wastewater
enterprise has developed into a well-managed, efficiently operated and
financially healthy utility that can attract private investors for future
ventures.
Turkey accounts for the highest proportion
of Bank water loans in the ECA region. A US$173 million loan for the
Ankara Sewerage Project was approved in 1989, a US$129.5 million loan for
the Bursa Water and Sanitation Project was approved in 1993, and a US$13.1
million loan for Cesme Water Supply and Sewerage was approved in 1998.
These projects help to improve and expand water and wastewater services
and strengthen project executing institutions. Recently the Bank has
concentrated its efforts on bringing in private sector know-how and
capital to assist smaller cities. The Antalya Water Supply Project, a
US$100 million loan approved in 1995, will rehabilitate and expand water
supply and wastewater infrastructure under a concession contract with a
foreign operator. The Cesme Water Supply Project supports improvements in
the city's water and wastewater infrastructure through a management
contract with a private foreign operator. The Bank responded very quickly
to the earthquake in Turkey on August 17, 1999. Reconstruction of housing,
water, and sewerage systems are high priorities in order to provide
permanent housing, safe drinking water, and sanitation to the hundreds of
thousands of people given temporary shelter and services. A large-scale
project is being prepared to support this reconstruction as well as other
potential needs in infrastructure and restoration of services in
Turkmenistan, a US$30.3 million loan was approved for a Water Supply and
Sanitation Project in 1997. It was designed to improve water supply and
sanitation, and to assist with institutional changes in the water and
sanitation sector.
In Uzbekistan, a US$75 million IDA credit
was approved for a Water Supply, Sanitation, and Health Project in 1997.
The project aims to provide safe drinking water along with improved
hygiene education and sanitation facilities for the Republic of
Karakalpakstan and Khorezm Oblast. Decreasing waterborne diseases among
the population, particularly diarrhea among children, is a key objective.
Another objective is to strengthen the institutional capacity of the
involved utilities and regional health centers. Several studies are being
supported to define a new sector development strategy for the country.
Also, a follow-up project is planned for Samarkand and Bukhara.
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