April 2012 - SES Water | Water Management

Minister: "Water services will remain in public ownership."

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Natasha Wiseman – 26 April 2012 source Edie.Net.

The evolving national water utility in the Republic of Ireland will not be a private enterprise, minister Fergus O’Dowd of the Department of the Environment has told a water industry gathering.

“The Government proposal to create a new water utility is not about privatisation of water resources, nor is it a precursor to such privatisation”, he said. “Water services will remain in public ownership.”

The minister was speaking at the Water Ireland 2012 conference hosted by WWT in Dublin yesterday (April 25). He admitted that there had been a lot of “speculation and some confusion” about what the Government has planned on water service delivery.

Mr O’Dowd promised a €600m (£491m) annual capital investment to raise standards and the roll out the compulsory metering programme, a significant rise from the €370m (£303m) being invested in the current year. However he acknowledged the challenge this posed to the state in the current financial climate.

The minister stressed that the new water utility, Irish Water would be an independent state-owned company within the public gas utility, Bord Gáis. He said that the utility would have an Irish language name too.

Minister O’Dowd said that Ireland’s water resources meant it was “positioned well” in terms of competitiveness and “needed to attract more water intensive industries”, but that this would need to be underpinned by a more sustainable approach to its water resources.

While admitting that the funding model for Irish Water was undecided, the minister said, “Unless we address key funding organisation issues, we will constrain our capacity to gain from this natural advantage.”

He spoke of the need for steady state investment in the water distribution network complemented by domestic metering, expansion of treatment facilities and upgrade of water service infrastructure across the country to ensure public health and environmental compliance. He said cost efficiencies could be leveraged by operating at the national level.

He also promised the establishment of an independent economic regulator, a function assigned to the Commission for Energy Regulation (CER).

Gabriel D’Arcy, chief executive of Bord na Mona agreed that funding was going to be a “massive challenge”, but that there was “a crying need for some of the changes being proposed.” He pointed to the wider context introduction of utility in Irish society.

The rationale “needs to be communicated”, he said. “I believe people would be willing to contribute to a safe and secure water supply if they can see fairness in the system.” he said.

John Mullins, group chief executive of Bord Gáis said he was pleased to hear about the additional funding from the minister and urged the establishment of a consumer council.

Natasha Wiseman


Strong argument against handling over Uisce na hEireann to Bord Gais

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According to the Irish Independent….

BORD Gais is probably the best semi-state operating in Ireland today. It is certainly the best among our large semi-states and John Mullins, who is being hounded from his office for no good reason, is probably the best chief executive.

That still does not mean the Government was right to give Bord Gais responsibility for Uisce na hEireann or whatever the nation’s new water provider will eventually be christened.

There are two strong arguments against handing over Uisce na hEireann to Bord Gais.

The first is the example of the National Treasury Management Agency which has been overloaded with unrelated tasks that have sapped morale, distracted senior management and destroyed the NTMA’s reputation.

The temptation for Government is obvious in both cases. The NTMA and Bord Gais are both well run along commercial lines but with a strong ethos of public service.

The alternatives, such as the Department of Finance or the ESB, are grim. Why not ask the outperformer to take on another task and avoid duplication.

The problem with mission creep is that it can destroy the existing organisation. Bord Gais will see its workforce jump from 1,000 people to 5,000 once it takes over the water system.

Most of the new employees will come from a very different culture to the one forged by John Mullins and is akin to hitching a racehorse to a caravan.

The NTMA already resembles one of those Swiss army knives with so many corkscrews, magnifying glasses and saws that it is too heavy to use properly.

Bord Gais could easily go the same way. It already sells gas and electricity while building and operating windmills.

Trying to improve the often dire quality of water in the regions could well overwhelm Bord Gais and destroy its reputation in the same way that NAMA has overwhelmed and destroyed the NTMA at a time when the the country’s future depends on re-entering the bond markets.

Tender

The second strong argument against Bord Gais taking over Uisce na hEireann is simple; no other organisation was effectively allowed to tender for the contract and this is bad practice.

While there were presentations from Bord na Mona, another semi-state interested in taking over the water company, no private company was invited and it would have been impossible for a private company to make a serious offer without firm information about costs.

Before handing over the valuable assets of Irish Water to a company that is mostly owned by the State but also owned by Bord Gais employees, the Government should have made a real effort to value Uisce na hEireann and then considered the alternatives.

The decision to bypass the scores of excellent water companies around Europe and hand the nation’s waterworks to a gas company instead smacks of panic.

Voters are (rightly) crying foul about the cost of meters but the real scandal is that yet again the Government is handing over a valuable asset for nothing and risks destroying another valuable asset at the same time.

On tap: A short history of Irish water charges

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The Irish Times – Saturday, April 21, 2012.  Harry McGee

The first serious blow against domestic charges was struck shortly after Fianna Fáil came to power in 1977. Its manifesto in that election had promised to abolish domestic rates, and it came good on the promise in the budget of early 1978. Deprived of this funding, local authorities became dependent on a central government fund and were described by critics as “toothless”.

In 1985, the then tánaiste, Dick Spring of Labour (pictured), partially reversed the decision when he facilitated the introduction of a local-authority domestic-service levy.

But in 1985, when local authorities tried to reintroduce water charges, they encountered varying degrees of opposition, at its most concerted in Dublin. Dublin Corporation and county council eventually decided not to reintroduce the domestic service and water charges, leaving an anomaly between the capital and the rest of the country, where everyone else was paying water charges.

The issue re-emerged in 1994 when Dublin County Council was split into three. A fresh attempt was made to introduce water charges in Fingal, South Dublin and Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown county-council areas. A campaign opposing the charge continued for more than two years, involving disconnections and court cases, some of which were successfully appealed.

The decisive moment came in 1996, when a byelection was held in Dublin West following the death of Brian Lenihan snr. While his son Brian, who has also since died, won the seat, he was only a hair’s breadth ahead of Joe Higgins, who stood as an anti-water-charge candidate and polled 23 per cent of first preferences.

In that byelection, the Labour candidate Michael O’Donovan got less than 4 per cent of the vote, and it was widely thought that then environment minister Brendan Howlin’s decision to abolish water charges (which were then flat charges) was in response to the byelection defeat.

He did so despite a report prepared for his department by consultants KPMG that recommended the introduction of meters.

Between then and last year’s general election, Labour has opposed water charges. In the Dáil debate on the Water Services Bill (which was long-fingered) Eamon Gilmore, then Labour’s environment spokesman, said: “The legislation is a thinly disguised attempt to privatise the water supply. Going hand in hand with that is a formula to get around the 1997 Act and reintroduce water charges by another name, be that a rent for the meter or a straight-up charge. It is our duty as an opposition to oppose this legislation.”

It sounds very like the argument currently being used by opponents of Irish Water.

The Green Party did want water to be metered but could not convince Fianna Fáil to include it in their programme for government in 2007. However, it was included in the revised programme in 2009. Subsequently, the introduction of meters formed part of the memorandum of understanding agreed with the troika in late 2010.

In its programme for government the Fine Gael and Labour coalition also stated that its objective was to install water meters in every household in Ireland.

For Labour, that represented a change, given the party had opposed the charges in opposition.

Ireland is the only country in the OECD in which households do not pay directly for the water they use.

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The Irish Times – Saturday, April 21, 2012.  Harry McGee,

Ireland is the only country in the OECD in which households do not pay directly for the water they use.

This can be traced to a series of populist political fudges by successive governments. The first was when Fianna Fáil abolished domestic rates in 1978 without coming up with an alternative model. Seven years later, in 1985, the then tánaiste, Dick Spring, introduced a local-service levy, which included a water charge. Water charges were abolished again in December 1996 by environment minister Brendan Howlin, widely seen as a political move to block anti-tax candidates in a forthcoming election.

Since then, the only domestic users who have paid for water are those in group water schemes. For the rest of us, the water is paid for from general taxes.

In a paper for the World Bank in 2002, Sue Scott of the ESRI wrote about the effect of this: “Under an ‘absent hand’, a generation of people is growing up without realising that water is expensive to deliver.”

THE PAST WEEK has shown that water is still a highly political issue.

Because water is not free as most people believe.   In 2010 water services cost the State €1.2 billion to run, with operational costs of €715 million and capital expenditure of more than €500 million

The Government’s plan to set up Irish Water and to install meters in a million households is fraught with political risk.  The public has a strong aversion to any new taxes, particularly in a period of cutbacks when many households are struggling financially, and so soon after a household charge, or property tax, was introduced.

But there are many other problems. It is a double taxation, say the critics, who contend that water is already paid for by income tax and other taxes.

The United Left Alliance has already portrayed Irish Water as a Trojan horse for privatisation. Fianna Fáil has predicted it could lead to the loss of 1,600 jobs in local authorities.

And, in communication terms, Minister for the Environment Phil Hogan and Taoiseach Enda Kenny have refused to publicly discuss the price or free allowances of water. All that’s really known is that there will be a fixed annual charge of about €40.

Earlier in the week the Government struggled with the pricing issue: Enda Kenny said households would have to pay for meters but that their installation would be free. Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore said no decision had been made on how water meters would be paid for, while the Department of the Environment said the buying and installing of meters would have to be paid for. There was little clarification as the week went on.

Within the Coalition the issue could become a political embarrassment. It’s hardly a year since Labour Ministers, including Brendan Howlin and Eamon Gilmore, were opposing water charges hammer and tongs. The smaller Coalition party will be reminded of this constantly, and it will be painted as a political “flip-flop”.

In practical terms, to have more than a million meters installed by 2014 is as likely as Ireland winning a dozen gold medals at the London Olympics. Charges have to be introduced by 2014, which means if there are delays, a significant number of households will be charged on an “assessed” basis – that is, the charge will estimated based on the number of people in a home, and the size of the house.

And now it appears that a third of houses eligible for water rates will always have to pay a flat charge, because their properties are not suitable for the installation of meters, according to the executive manager at Dublin City Council, Tom Leahy. This is because the houses share supply pipes with neighbours or their water supply from the mains enters the house under their back gardens.

As the household charge has demonstrated, people have deep antipathy to flat taxes, which make no distinction between thrifty people and spendthrifts.

The presence of meters in group water schemes is one of the reasons water charges have been accepted with hardly a murmur of complaint by a generation of rural households that makes up 8 per cent of the population. In these cases, the voluntary nature of the groups leads to strong “buy-in” and is another persuasive factor.

So what can the Government learn from rural water schemes? Well, in most of these cases, metering works, and works well. Those who run the rural schemes believe that standing, or fixed, charges will fail, because they don’t encourage conservation. They also argue that meters should be paid for by customers upfront.

But they also point out that their schemes are predominantly rural and and run by local communities and by voluntary committees. That gives them a moral persuasion that central government can never have.

In his role as national policy adviser for the National Federation of Group Water Schemes, representing about 370 groups, Sean Clerkin has drawn on his own experience – and his initial shock at having to pay for water – to convince others of the merits of charges. There is almost no scheme that is not metered nowadays.

As his colleague in the federation Brian McDonald says: “We realised from the beginning that [meters] were the fairest and most equitable way of paying for water. If there is a widow on her own paying a flat-rate charge, where’s the fairness or equity in that? She is subsidising the bigger user.”

Clerkin zealously gives The Irish Times a tour of another large scheme in Co Monaghan: the Glaslough and Tyholland scheme, catering for 700-plus households. The source for the scheme is Emy Lough, and there is a treatment works on its shore, which was designed, built and is operated by the French company Veolia. In the plant, there’s a demonstration sink with four taps, each producing water at different stages: raw; filtered; after ozone treatment; and final. The colour changes from brownish to clear.

Committee members David Wright, Padge McKenna and Nuala Murphy describe how about half of the households stay within their free water limit, while most others pay between €50 and €100 a year. However, there is an annual Government subsidy of up to €400 per household.

In Tydavnet, says Clerkin, there is a basic free allocation; the average two-adult, two-child family will pay about €100. The bill is sent out in March each year, and if it is paid by the end of the month there is a 20 per cent reduction. About 96 per cent pay within that first month.

And what of those who refuse to pay? “On two occasions in the past 28 years we have had to bring the digger to the roadside. Our board and management have the power to waive, but we use common sense. If somebody is in difficulty, we will give them time to pay it, but we will insist they pay it in time. We don’t want to give anybody the impression that it is free,” says Clerkin. Both Clerkin and McDonald believe metering works, both in terms of equity and in conserving water. They also argue that the cost per cubic litre must not be too low, and they do not favour the Government’s proposals for a standing charge, not linked to usage, which they say is a disincentive.

“If you give it away too cheaply, people won’t have any regard for it,” says Clerkin.

“If there’s a flat-rate charge and no metering where’s the incentive to turn off a tap? Our emphasis is to put all the water being used on the meter and not have a standing charge. Our view is that the Government should consider giving people the option of paying for the meter upfront. In Arva, Co Cavan, a new scheme was introduced five years ago with meters. There was also a decent charging regime, and the consumption dropped by 55 per cent.”

Watersavingproducts.ie – Help Households Reduce Their Water Consumption and Save

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Watersavingproducts.ie  – Help Households Reduce Their Water Consumption and Save.
Water & Energy Saving Household Kit could save upto 50% of water in the home.

Online retailer Watersavingproduct.ie launch their water & energy saving household kit on the consumer show (with Eddie Hobbs) to be aired next Tuesday on RTE 1 at 8.30pm.

Watersavingproducts.ie is the online store of Smart Energy Systems Ltd, a leading water & energy saving company, committed to helping households save money on water & energy in a number of ways .  The water & energy saving household kit for households includes everything from leak detection tablets to showerhead savers to toilet displacement bags and faucet aerators.  The kits even includes a shower timer to help move along those teenagers!

This project came about as a result of works carried out by Smart Energy Systems for Dublin City Council on some of their Regeneration Projects around Dublin.  The company details were passed on to one of the researchers for The Consumer Show, who contacted the Smart Energy Systems office in Ennis.

As part of a feature on water savings for the Consumer Show, Smart Energy System installed a number of water saving products  in a three bed semi’d in Artane, Co. Dublin.

We initially visited the house about a month ago, where we carried out an audit on the house to see what water saving devices could be fitted both inside the home and in the garden, said Michael Lyons, Smart Energy Systems Director.   A new water meter was then installed by Dublin City Council.

The water meter was monitored over a 2 week period to get an idea of the family’s water consumption before Smart Energy Systems returned to the house and installed the suitable water saving products while it was recorded and discussed with Eddie Hobbs.  The products installed, included a Water Saving Showerhead, A Shower Timer, Faucet Aerators on the Taps, Cistern Displacement Units in the Toilets along with a Rain Water Butt outside.

The water meter has been monitored since these water saving products were installed and the savings on water along with all the information on the Water & Energy Saving Household Kits will be discussed next Tuesday Evening on the Consumer Show at 8.30 pm on RTE 1.

All of the products featured in the show can be purchased online at their new online store www.watersavingproducts.ie

Smart Energy Systems also provide products to the commercial sector such as the Smart Waterless Urinal currently shortlisted for the 2012 Green Product Award and which has been installed in the Aviva Stadium and retrofitted in Thomond Park.  Other products include water saving showerheads, urinal controllers, push taps and aerators all capable of  achieveing cost savings of over 50% – great savings for any company.

Contact Smart Energy Sytems online or call us on 0818-288050

Irish Times – Prospect of €780 water meter fee

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HARRY McGEE, Political Correspondent, Irish Times.

Households will pay an average of €39 per annum over 20 years to cover the cost of the loan from the National Pension Reserve Fund to install water meters in one million Irish homes.

Government sources confirmed yesterday the cost per household, based on the size of the NPRF loan, would work out at about €780, but that the cost would be levied as a standing charge over a period of two decades, in much the same way as such charges are already imposed by other utilities such as the ESB and Bord Gáis.

However, it was stressed that the ultimate decision on the size of the annual standing charge would be a decision for the Commission for Energy Regulation, which will be dealing with the new water metering service.

It will not be in a position to make any deliberation until the new water company had begun its operations.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny confirmed yesterday that householders would pay for the cost of the meters but that the cost would not be an upfront one. Charges are to become operable in early 2014.

“Obviously when you provide water meters somebody has to pay for them. We’ve made absolutely no decision about this. Any charge will . . . be the absolute minimum because of the difficulties that are involved here,” Mr Kenny said.

The clarification came ahead of today’s Cabinet meeting, where Minister for the Environment Phil Hogan will bring a memo setting out an implementation plan for installing water meters nationwide in time for water charges to be introduced in early 2014.

He will also bring proposals to set up the new utility company, Irish Water, on a transitional basis. It will replace the functions currently performed by 34 local authorities.

Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore said today no decision had been made on water meter charges.

Speaking on his way into Government Buildings for a Cabinet meeting, Mr Gilmore said pricing arrangements and proposals for setting up a water company have yet to be discussed by the Government.

He said the Cabinet would discuss the establishment of the Irish Water Company.

In the previous 24 hours the Government had struggled to clear up confusion surrounding the pricing model. Mr Kenny had said that households would have to pay for meters but their installation would be free.

Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore said today no decision had been made on water meter charges.

Speaking on his way into Government Buildings for a Cabinet meeting, Mr Gilmore said pricing arrangements and proposals for setting up a water company have yet to be discussed by the Government.

He said the Cabinet would discuss the establishment of the Irish Water Company.

The Taoiseach said yesterday that as many as 2,000 jobs would be created through the installation of water meters in the State. He also set out what will be a key plank of the Government’s strategy in its efforts to persuade the public of the need for efficient water management systems by saying “water was one of the most precious commodities”.

Government sources said last night that, in general, no charge would be applied until water meters were installed. However, it is unlikely that all one million homes will have meters in place by the end of next year.

The sources said households that have no meters installed will pay an “assessed charge” based on the metered charges paid by comparable metered properties. This system will be applied to the approximately 350,000 households that will not be metered because it would be too costly or too logistically difficult.

Minister for Finance Michael Noonan said no formal decision had been taken yet over who would take over the running of the State’s water and that it would be “premature” to be speculating what costs would be involved for consumers.

“I see meters as the friend of the householder and friend of business, as they’ll prevent people from paying for water that’s wasted,” he said.

Fianna Fáil environment spokesman Niall Collins described the handling of water metering as the “latest fiasco” at the Department of the Environment.

“The lack of any clear answer from Ministers over the last 24 hours on the question of whether or not households will be asked to pay for a water meter proves one thing: this Government has no meaningful strategy on water reform.”

“Already we are seeing worrying similarities with the communications disaster that surrounded the household charge,” he said.

Sinn Féin’s Aengus Ó Snodaigh and Brian Stanley criticised the handling of the issue, as well as the potential costs for householders. The party is opposed to the charge.