The
Third World Water Forum was held in the three neighboring
Japanese cities of Kyoto, Shiga and Osaka from March
16th to the 23rd, on various interlocking themes dealing
with water, especially on how to bring safe water
and sanitation to the entire world.
Some 24,000 participants from 182 countries attended
the sessions. "The key issues addressed revolved around
balancing increasing human requirements for adequate
water supplies and improved health and sanitation
with food production, transportation, energy and environmental
needs. The forum in its conclusion while drawing up
more than 100 new commitments felt that most countries
would require more effective governance, improved
capacity and adequate financing."(From the concluding
statement of the forum; highlights as given in the
statement).
Was it a conference genuinely aiming to solve the
water problems by drawing up implementable plans or
was it one huge public relations exercise serving
to advance the image of the huge multinational water
companies? Which figured more- the concern for the
water needs of the millions around the world or the
millions of dollars of the few large water companies
around the world? Was there any opposition sounded
to the 'magical' water solution called privatization,
in spite of the backing of the IMF-WB, other international
lending institutions and 'democratic' pressure groups
of the water firms?
Last question first. Non-governmental organizations
and pressure groups argued on the basis of past performances
of the private water companies around the world that
private companies are unlikely to provide the solutions
for the millions of poor people without adequate clean
water and decent sanitation.
International lending institutions such as the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund came in for
scathing criticism, from various sections of the non-governmental
and civic organizations, for their "obsession"
with the private sector. The groups presented a report
showing that international companies were not interested
in working in very poor countries, except at very
high rates of profits under sovereign guarantees of
the governments of the concerned poor countries. The
report further argued for the need for policy-makers
to focus on enabling local and central governments
to serve the poor through working with local communities,
replacing their belief in privatization as the panacea
for all water problems.
The report pointed out that international policy-makers
and institutions like the World Bank and IMF are misguided
in thinking that the private sector will have any
real impact on reaching the 1.2 billion poorest people
in the world who lack access to safe water. The report
also expressed a crucial reality troubling much of
the developing world, which is that, the international
community must stop arm-twisting countries to give
access to private sector companies as a condition
for receiving development aid, grants and loans.
But the World Bank itself was not too far in putting
up its own arguments as a counter to that put forth
above. The World Bank claimed that it "simply wished"
to encourage the most effective methods of delivering
water services to the poor.
The bank's vice-president for sustainable development,
Ian Johnson said that the WB always had discussions
with governments who in turn had to determine what
the right combination of public and private sector
roles should be in delivering services. It is only
then that the WB works with the respective government.
According to him, in his own words, "We do not
have an ideological prima facie position that says
that we must force privatization on anyone. We are
not religious zealots when it comes to privatization."
The words of the WB's vice-president are not wrong
per se. The World Bank does have discussions. But
in terms of the stubbornness of what they require
from the governments, in return for their financial
assistance to help their struggling economies, the
discussions are an enforcement of the dikaits of the
World Bank. Further the 'we-are-not-privatization-zealots'
realization has emerged not due to an ideological
transformation at the World Bank, but has emerged
from the need of private companies, who are finding
their profits and positions threatened in the poor
developing countries. The 'public-private partnership'
is a partnership between the government and the private
companies such that the government bears all the risk
while the private companies reap all the rewards of
profit of the government risk.
In short, there were ideological differences but very
little space for dialogue as the international lending
institutions and private companies dominated the discussion.
Even in such a scenario, ideological differences were
put forth. The expectations of true ideological differences
being allowed to emerge and be debated at this forum
are best reflected by the fact that an alternative
forum was simultaneously held at Florence in Italy
as the First People's World Water Forum. This meet
in Italy gathered to protest at the direction of current
water policies - which it believes are dominated by
private corporations who favour large projects such
as dams, instead of simpler technologies. They met
to carry forward the Porto Alegre World Social Forum's
call in January for a new democratic world water parliament
and a halt to water privatization.
The 'ideological battles' were hardly an issue as
the private water companies went out of their way
with marketing techniques to get to the civic and
non-governmental organizations with their newfound
ideological transformation to 'private-public' partnership.
But the underlying theme was the same- Help secure
private profits from water and the water problem will
be solved the world over. Water profits were the issue
and not water problems per se. The call for public-private
partnership is to make the government undertake the
risks in the water business while the private companies
rake in the profits. This answers the second question.
"After eight days of discussions involving 12,000
participants, mountains of paper and lakes of coffee,
beer and sake, the Third World Water Forum ended with
this ringing endorsement from the World Conservation
Union: The (ministerial) declaration will have virtually
no impact on national policies. There is nothing in
the text which will make a difference." This
was the opinion of the BBC correspondent on the water
forum. BBC report went further to say that "international
conferences are often described as talking shops.
But not this one. This was a giant talking hypermarket."
It can be argued that the world's attention was distracted
by the war on Iraq, but it still is doubtful if the
forum would have merited more interest than it actually
received. In terms of solid outcomes it certainly
would not have deserved any more attention than it
got. The six-page declaration agreed by ministers
on the final day is a model of blandness, at best
repeating commitments made at previous conferences
and in some respects moving backwards.
The environmental groups were frustrated by the scant
attention paid by ministers of governments to the
importance of using natural environments to conserve
the supply of fresh water - with the emphasis instead
on big building projects such as dams and pipelines.
Many questioned the credibility of a forum where the
governments do not draw on the 12,000 water specialists
gathered together to identify common sense solutions
to water problems, but instead continue to promote
massive infrastructure as the sole solution to the
world's water crisis.
So has the whole thing been a waste of time and money?
Well, not completely. It would be a pessimist indeed
who did not believe that amongst the thousands of
discussions, formal and informal, amongst such a huge
array of water experts, some practical solutions would
be taken back to communities around the world and
put into practice.
Some NGOs seemed wrong-footed during the forum as
they launched attacks on their enemies in institutions
such as the World Bank for advocating wholesale privatisation
of water - only to find that that the international
institutions had moved the goalposts. Even the most
market-oriented participants now concede that the
vast majority of services to poor communities will
continue to be provided by the public sector, partly
because those water companies venturing into the developing
world have often had their fingers badly burned and
have suffered financial or reputational disasters.
There was also agreement at the forum that the 40%
of the world's population who live in river basins
shared by more than one country required their governments
to come to sensible arrangements with one another
on how to share out the water - though of course that
is easier said than done. But in any case, cross-boundary
national issues can be solved only through active
community participation involving the state and not
through profit-driven private companies. Some had
hoped that the forum would set out a coherent route
map for the world to follow in order to avoid a growing
crisis in the availability of fresh water, but what
emerged was a confused set of directions on the back
of an 'private –public' partnership agenda.
May 21, 2003.
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