www.ahabana.co.cu |
The cooperation between the three companies goes back to a project undertaken in the Cuban tourist resort Varadero
since 1994, involving Canaragua, the subsidiary of Aguas de Barcelona
operating in the Canary Islands, and the firm Martinon whose owners also
come from the Canary Islands. After this successful initial experience,
Agbar and INRH signed a contract to operate the water services in three
municipalities La Lisa, Playa and Marianao in Western Havana in 1997.
Following this pilot project, the creation of the mixed company Aguas de
la Habana was decided in a framework agreement signed in February 1999
in Barcelona.[1]
Agbar "facilitated" 24.7 million USD of financing through loans.[1] [2]
At least some of these loans are soft loans from the Spanish
International Cooperation Agency, which financed the first ever major
rehabilitation of the more than one century old Albear aqueduct that
provides 12% of the capital's water supply.[3]
In addition to operating and maintaining the systems, Aguas de La
Habana also carries out engineering studies and executes works.
The company's annual billing is US$ 9m for about 115 million cubic meters of water it delivers to its customers.[4]
As of 2004, Aguas de Barcelona reported significant progress. According
to the company, 95 percent of the city's residents that had to be
supplied by tanker trucks before the concession contract relied on tap
water as of 2004. The continuity of supply had increased from 7 to 10
hours per day.[5]
However, as of 2010 progress was apparently slow, as water distribution
losses are still estimated at 50% in 2010 and more than 100,000
inhabitants suffer from intermittent supply.[6]
See also
References
- Aguas de la Habana. "Nuestra empresa". Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- Grupo Martinon. "Aguas de La Habana". Retrieved 27 December 2011.Aguas de Habana. "Acueductos de la Ciudad". Retrieved 27 December 2011.Agbar (Link broken)
- Fernando Rayón Martín Xavier Segura Ayala (2004). "LA GESTIÓN PRIVADA DEL AGUA EN ESPAÑA Y AMÉRICA LATINA: EL CASO DE AGBAR.". Sector Agua y Saneamiento del Grupo Agbar. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
- El Mundo:La Habana y sus aguas perdidas(Havanna and its lost waters), 26 January 2010
Abstract:
The
privatization and commercialization of water has proven to be one of
the most controversial policy developments of the past 20 years. Largely
associated with the neoliberalization of the world economy, it comes as
a surprise to many that the socialist government of Cuba signed a
25-year contract with a Spanish multinational in 2000 to manage the
supply of water in Havana. This paper provides an historical context for
water reforms in the country and the first comprehensive study of this
little-known contract. Based on key interviews and primary documentation
we argue that there are no easy explanations for why the contract was
signed, or whether it has achieved its objectives. There are, however,
interesting lessons to be learned for public–private partnerships
elsewhere in the world, and insights into the changing fabric of
socialism in Cuba.
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