Water privatization in Guayaquil

Water privatization in Gayaquil began with the decision taken in 1995 to privatize drinking water supply and sewerage in Guayaquil, the largest city and economic capital of Ecuador, through a concession contract. In preparation for privatization, the previously separate water and sewer utilities were merged into a single utility in 1996. The new utility began a modernization process and began to improve its performance. In parallel, the international bidding for the concession was prepared by Banque Paribas as the international advisor and was supported by the Inter-American Development Bank. The latter made a loan that was signed in October 1997 conditional upon the decision to award a concession. The 30-year concession agreement between the city government and the private company Interagua was signed in 2001. The contract was "poor-friendly", requiring the private company to keep tariffs constant for the first five years and to connect new users in poor areas "at no cost".[1] At the same time, the former municipal water and sewer utility ECAPAG became the regulatory agency for the new private utility. Interagua is a consortium led by the Spanish company Proactiva Medio Ambiente,[2] which in turn is supported by the Spanish construction firm FCC and the French water company Veolia Environnement.[3] In 2012 the regulator ECAPAG was transformed into the Municipal Public Drinking Water and Sanitation Company of Guayaquil in what may be a first step towards the municipalization of the concession.

  1. ^ Grupo Faro - Fundación para el Avance de las Reformas y las Oportunidades (August 2006). "Stay Public or Go Private? A comparative analysis of water services between Quito and Guayaquil" (PDF). pp. 6–9, 62–65. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference FP Guayaquil was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Proactive Medio Ambiente. "Líderes en servicios medioambientales". Retrieved 30 June 2012.