Water
sector reforms ceding peoples’ rights to transnationals - ERA/FoEN Cautions FG
THIS KIND OF WATER IS NOT SAFE FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION EXCEPT IF RECYCLING TAKES PLACE
The
Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has urged
the Federal and Lagos State governments to step on the brakes on adoption and
implementation of World Bank-funded water schemes that seem tailored to meeting
Nigerians’ water needs but are actually white elephant projects.
ERA/FoEN
position is coming on the heels of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approval
of a 16-year water master plan which will see Nigeria’s Ministry of Water
Resources partnering with the Japan International Agency to implement the
project in three phases.
The
first phase of the water masterplan would run from 2014 and 2020, while the second
and third phases would run 2021 to 2025, and 2026 to 2030 respectively. The
scheme will be due for review by 2030 and will provide the guidelines for
private sector participation in the water sector under a Public Private
Partnership (PPP) arrangement to fund the sector.
Water
privatization is also vigorously being pursued in Lagos by the World Bank's
private arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the same institution
that said to have advised the Manila government, designed its water contracts,
and then invested in one of the resulting water corporations. The IFC is
currently acting in an official advisory capacity with the Lagos government.
Minister
of Water Resources, Sarah Ochekpe had said that the master plan, which
acknowledged the inadequacy of government funding of the water sector, also
proposed the commercialisation of water services to increase the revenue base
of the sector for the maintenance of facilities and development of new ones.
In
a statement issued in Lagos, ERA/FoEN described the master plan and World
Bank-funded water schemes in Lagos as “merry-go-round” that will neither
deliver on the scheme nor provide Nigerians needed water.
ERA/FoEN
Director, Corporate Accountability, Akinbode Oluwafemi said: “We are not only
disturbed by the minister description of the PPP as a model for funding water
supply; we are also worried that the Federal and Lagos governments have started
implementing a model that has been tested and failed in other climes”
Oluwafemi
regretted that the Public hearing on the water sector bill held without
adequate public sensitization and critical stakeholder input, even as he
explained that, “When something as fundamental as water is concerned, we must
evaluate the explicit goals of each "stakeholder." For us, improving
people's access to clean water is of paramount importance. The private sector
sees it in another light. For them, it is profit motives first and this is
counterproductive.”
The
ERA/FoEN helmsman insisted that, “PPPs in the water sector is privatization
with a softer name. Aside from siphoning resources from the infrastructure
investments that are direly needed, identified water PPPs around the world have
time and again caused disaster for residents, including rate hikes, service
cutoffs, poor water quality, worker layoffs, and corruption, among a long list
of woes”.
Oluwafemi
urged the Nigerian government to learn from the examples of Manila, in the
Philippines, where results of a 1997 water PPP have been devastating. In
Manila, in less than two decades, rates have increased more than 500 per cent,
the workforce has been cut, and poor quality which has led to disease outbreaks
and the corporations have broken their infrastructure promises.
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