BOSTON (Feb. 18, 2016) – Many countries are facing a perfect storm of financing constraints and water infrastructure shortfalls. Dramatic declines in oil and commodity prices, low water tariffs, groundwater overdrafts and untreated wastewater discharges are prompting governments to tap the private sector through public-private partnership (PPP) schemes. According to a new report from Bluefield Research, the market for water PPP projects is set to nearly triple between 2016 and 2020, adding an average of 16 million m3/day of treatment capacity annually versus approximately 6 million m3/day between 2010-2015. Total investment is expected to surpass $58 billion, of which 80 percent will target new seawater desalination and wastewater treatment plants. The global adoption of the water PPP model will come to the fore in the next five years through a combination of continued growth in markets where the model is well-established (China and Brazil), resurgence in markets that have stalled (Indonesia, Philippines, Mexico and Egypt) and new markets opening up (Persian Gulf countries, Vietnam, Peru and the United States). "Particularly in emerging markets, led by China, municipalities are hard-pressed to match the financial capacity and operational expertise that the private sector can provide," said Phuong Pham, senior analyst at Bluefield Research. "National governments aim to de-risk their water sectors for private investment with new PPP laws and more attractive contract tenders, while preserving long-term control over assets." An increasingly diverse group of private and semi-private firms are responding to new tender opportunities for PPP contracts. Bluefield's analysis of the portfolio strategies of the 50 largest global water players indicates that the water PPP market is in transition, with a cast of new players emerging. The global PPP market is led by integrated water players Veolia and Suez who have sustained their positions in recent years with more than 19 million m3/day of capacity each, followed by semi-private local utilities (SABESP and COPASA), rapidly scaling Chinese players (BEWG and China Everbright), emerging utility concessionaires (Manila Water and AEGEA) and integrated water players (Aqualia). "Many players turned their backs on PPP opportunities during the recent recession because of their capital intensity, while they deleveraged and reviewed their value chain positions overall," said Keith Hays, vice president of Bluefield Research. "This market shakeout has left a field of players with clearer strategies to navigate continued macroeconomic uncertainty and address new opportunities." These and other insights are found in Bluefield's new report, Public-Private Partnerships in Water: Company Strategies & Market Opportunities, 2016-2020. This report is based on Bluefield's analysis of more than 1,800 PPP projects in 44 countries, including top-down regional trends and bottom up company profiles, accompanied by a robust data appendix. Source: Bluefield Research