Through the narration of over 40 contributors, the book brings the reader on a journey around the world, exploring issues of public water services provision during the Covid19 outbreak. Through this journey, we also discover territories, with their diverse geographical characteristics, history, socio-political context, and knowledge. While embarking on this journey, we get to listen to voices: those of workers, of public water operator activists, scholars, network organizers – they open for you the doors of water operators and the issues they faced during the pandemic. Listening and observing, we discover that ‘public’ is not an homogenous category, but rather that there are different public management models: examples include community-based aqueducts, to publicly-owned independent companies, through direct management by municipalities and re-municipalized operators.
The wide variety of cases explored – 25, to be
precise! – cover territories in Europe, Africa, the US, Canada and South
America, and one city in Asia (Jackarta). Such a sample does not aim at
exhaustion, nor at formal comparison or generalizations. Instead, the
perspective is one of ‘lessons learnt’, may they be positive or negative, in a
pragmatic, policy-oriented perspective – more specifically, emancipatory
policy, that means aimed at guaranteeing the human right to water. As we read,
one of the goals is to “identify and critically examine what can be considered
‘good’ (as opposed to ‘best’) practices and how these might be transferable to
different locations” (pg.17).
In all this variety, we are surprised by the
commonalities across distant places – but also how much we can learn from the
differences. Through the pages, common struggles emerge, brought by or
exacerbated by the pandemic. Among these, the daily management of water
provision during a lockdown, which implies telework and changing water flows
demand. More generally, the tension between guaranteeing water access to a
population in dire need and sustaining revenues for the economic management of
a publicly owned water company, thus bringing up issues of affordability. But
also, facing a changing regulatory and legal framework, with its bureaucratic
burdens that may neglect some types of operators.
While the cases explored vary by geography, management
models, and issues faced, some common threads can be found. Rather than
summarizing the cases one by one, for this review I decided to focus on two
broad themes that emerge from the different cases as important for water
services provision, during a global pandemic and beyond.
One recurrent theme that emerges across the pages is
knowledge – with the questions of who owns it, whose is legitimized, and how it
is shared. In the case of Buenaventura, in Colombia, we learn about the
importance of knowing the local history of water services and its
contextualization within broader political and social dynamics. For the case of
community-based aqueducts in Colombia, the knowledge of the physical territory
is paired with the proximity of the users – who collectively manage, repair and
finance the infrastructure. The cases of two networks of water operators – Aqua
Publica Europea, in the European Union, and France Eau Public, in France,
underline the importance of owning and sharing publicly the knowledge that
operators have acquired, especially in an emergency situation. Finally, the
Global Water Operator’s partnership alliance (GWO-PA), a United Nations agency,
highlights the necessity of knowledge sharing based on the principles of
solidarity and non-for profit collaboration, which they addressed through
surveys and internal communication within the network, resulting in online
campaigns, ‘communities of practice’ and the organisation of webinars.
A second overarching theme unfolding from different
perspectives is decision-making: who takes decisions on water services, how,
and with what consequences. In fact, in the case of the US the multi-level
character of water governance slowed down the implementation of prompt
emergency measures. In the case of community aqueducts in Colombia, the
national regulatory framework posed obstacles inasmuch it did not consider
their specificities in defining the bureaucratic and administrative burdens to
access facilitations and subsidies. In Burkina Faso, a hierarchical crisis
management prevailed, with the government developing the response plan together
with donors and neglecting to consult with trade unions or households. While
taking the positive step of providing water for free for three months in urban
areas, the plan did not target the most vulnerable households in rural areas.
Moreover, democratic participation in decision-making has proven of key
importance in taking decisions regarding water access in the cases of
re-municipalized water operators in Europe, particularly in Terrassa and Paris.
In the case of Jakarta, activists advocating for re-municipalization underline
the importance of not only ownership transfer and network expansion, but also
of public participation.
To enrich the debate over public or private provision,
to deepen the understanding of both “knowledge” and “decision-making” across
cases and their connections, it is fruitful to reflect on these two categories
through a critical, political ecology lens: on the one hand, how knowledge is
constructed, owned and shared; on the other hand, how decisions are taken, by
whom and with what consequences. This book goes in this direction brilliantly,
by unpacking what role public operators have in water services governance and
how they can behave in situations of emergency.
With the pandemic exacerbating social inequality
within and across countries, and pairing with multiple ecological, geopolitical
and reproductive crises, it would be interesting to carry out further research
with these and other cases to investigate the long-term strategies of water
operators, beyond the first emergency reactions to the Covid19 outbreak. To
conclude, I highly recommend this book to anybody interested in water services,
not only in their theoretical problematique but also practical challenges.
This review was first published on the blog Undisciplined
Environments on 7 June 2022.
Gemma Gasseau is a PhD Candidate in Transnational
Governance at Scuola Normale Superiore & Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna
(Italy), interested in political economy and ecology, currently researching
water services governance in the EU.
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