Stop water privatisation and strengthen public water supply
A new report by Corporate Accountability International uncovers how the World Bank uses ponzi-style marketing tactics to
sell privatization projects around the globe that it is also positioned to profit from. "Water privatization has been a
disaster,” said Dr Sandeep Pandey, Magsaysay Awardee and national vice president of Socialist Party (India). "We must
prevent the World Bank and corporations like Veolia from expanding their reach and block any potential project."
In response to industry reports of an undisclosed contract between the World Bank and the city of Lagos to design and
implement a plan to privatize water in Lagos, Corporate Accountability International (CAI) and Environmental Rights
Action of Nigeria (ERA) launched a campaign calling on the World Bank to publically disclose the advisory contract with
its private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC). After weeks of pressure from civil society, the
World Bank announced the cancellation of the proposed advisory contract. Leading trade publication Global Water
Intelligence also published a retraction of its earlier claim that the IFC’s contract with Lagos Water Corporation was
in effect.
Central to the groups’ concerns and the focus of the report is the misleading PR the World Bank uses to market water
privatization projects to governments around the world. As part owner of several water corporations including Veolia and
Manila Water Company, the World Bank is positioned to directly profit from this marketing, and the resulting projects.
Two of the Bank’s most often relied upon “success” stories are in Manila, Philippines and Nagpur, India—both cases that
are considered deeply troubled by water privatization experts.
“This week of action and report release mark the beginning of the end to the World Bank’s deceptive marketing and
harmful water privatization projects,” said the report’s author, Shayda Naficy, an international water privatization
expert, “Officials considering such projects deserve to know the truth—the World Bank isn’t an impartial advisor; it has
a vested financial interest in these deals going through. And, second, they’re locking their people into contracts that
entail , regardless of the rate hikes, service cutoffs, labor abuses and other human consequences and don’t solve the
central obstacle to expanded access: infrastructure investment that often result.”
As the report details, in 1997, the IFC, the private sector arm of the World Bank, advised the Philippines government to
contract with two private corporations—Maynilad and Manila Water Company—to manage the city’s water system, and took an
equity stake in Manila Water Company. The results have been devastating. Rates have increased over 500%, the workforce
has been cut, poor quality has led to disease outbreaks, and broken infrastructure promises have resulted in unreliable
or nonexistent access in some communities. And, the corporations have now taken the government to arbitration to force
through new rate hikes.
And, in Nagpur, India, a water project – involving a Veolia subsidiary in which the IFC holds a 13.9 percent stake --
has been marked by failure at every turn. The project has been mired by the failure to deliver the infrastructure
improvements promised, project delays, inequitable water distribution, service shutdowns, and allegations of corruption
and illegal activity that have resulted in ongoing protests, official investigations and legal action. Despite these
problems, the bank has declared the project a success and promotes both cities as models to be emulated elsewhere.
The week of action is part of a growing global movement to reclaim privatized water systems and prevent new deals from
going through. In the U.S., seen as an expansion market for the private water industry, people in Baltimore, Maryland
and Detroit, Michigan are organizing to oppose potential privatization contracts with Veolia, alongside partners from
across the globe
ENDS