At the last triannual gathering of the
World Water
Forum in 2003, a model of water management that relinquishes
all control over water resources to the private sector through commercialization,
privatization . This was proposed
as the only possible solution to the waters problems of the world.
On what basis was this model developed ? How was this so-called
‘global consensus’ on privatization arrived at? What are the implications
of this?
From the UN World Conference on Water
and Sanitation held at Mar Del Pata in 1977 to latest gathering at the
World Water Forum in Kyoto in 2003 were
landmarks in the long road to constructing
the consensus on the privatisation of water. Except for the Mar Del Pata
conference - which was primarily concerned with task of providing clean
drinking water and sanitation - and rest of the fore fromDublin
Conference in 1992 to the Kyoto Forum were steps in developing
the privatisation agenda. The agencies that powered this agenda are not
United Nations and Inter-governmental bodies, but three interrelated organizations
- The World Water
Council, the World
Water Forum and the Global
Water Partnership - with strong representation of multinational
water companies and aid agencies with a pronounced privatisation
bias.
What is significant to note is that the
United Nations which has historically played a leading role in facilitating
such policy dialogues has been gradually marginalised. and given away to
bodies like the World Water Council and the World Water Forum. These organisations
have been criticized for being unrepresentative and undemocratic
with direct links to multinational companies involved in water business.
For instance, The UN World Water Development Report was presented not at
a UN gathering but at the World Water Forum in Kyoto.
It was also at the same meeting that a report of the Panel
on Financing Water Infrastructure was presented and accepted. The report
(couched in altruistic lingo) presented a series of proposals, the
real objective of which was to further the agenda of the global water corporations
to reshape institutions structures to ensure that investing in `water markets’
is a profit making venture’.
As one commentator observed, the Kyoto
forum succeeded in the incorporation of the UN Development goals on water
and sanitation for all into a framework of rules and regulations that will
involve the private corporations to operate profitably in the water business.