Publications

Topics
Country
Region
Gender and Energy Capacity Building Workshop for South Asia

In 2000, the Armenian capital’s water utility, the Yerevan Water and Sewerage Enterprise (YWSE), entered into a five-year, performance-based management contract with private operator Acea Spa Utility (Acea).  Over the contract period (2000-2005), the duration of water supply was increased from 6 to 18 hours per day, collection rates improved from 20 to 80 percent, and electricity consumption was reduced by 30 percent.

 

Prior to the project, YWSE was in poor financial health with a very dilapidated system. Financially, the utility could not cover its operations and maintenance (O&M) costs and collections stood at a mere 20 percent.  About 80 percent of those connected to the network only had access to tap water between 2-8 hours a day.  Pumps broke down frequently and network leakages were rampant with some 72 percent of non-revenue water (NRW) (870,000 m3/day).  To meet water needs, many households purchased storage tanks and apartment buildings installed costly booster pumps.

 

In response, the Government of Armenia (GOA) decided to solicit private sector expertise through a management contract.  Acea, a joint venture led by an Italian water operator, won an open and competitive bid to operate YWSE’s system for five years.  The World Bank and GOA also established an investment fund, for Acea’s capital investments in the water utility infrastructure.  Over the course of the contract, Acea invested US$24.07 million for a number of targeted improvements including: establishing water pressure sectors in the distribution network of three districts, purchasing and installing meters, rehabilitating several pumping stations, implementing a water leakage detection and repair program, and increasing gravity-fed water supply.

 

The project demonstrated that, under a conducive legal and regulatory framework, private operators can be effectively engaged using a performance-based management contract to deliver significant improvements in service quality, operational efficiency, financial performance, and energy efficiency in municipal water and sanitation utilities.  Due Acea’s strong performance and overall project results, GOA subsequently entered into a follow-on 10-year lease contract in 2005 with Veolia, a French international water company.

Users also downloaded
This report adopts the concept of the total carbon price (TCP), introduced in Agnolucci et al. (2023a; 2023b), to estimate the net carbon price signal resulting from the most deployed energy, climate…
May 13 2024
The report provides overviews of ESMAP’s 7 main program areas and summarizes key results across its 29 programs, followed by a financial review of the year. 
May 10 2024
This report summarizes the findings of a review aimed at understanding emerging approaches to energy subsidy reform, discerning trends, and identifying major strands of thinking and research in the…
May 1 2024
This report takes stock of political economy analysis (PEA) and communications in the context of country-specific technical assistance activities supporting energy subsidy reforms that benefited from…
April 15 2024