Egypt’s attentions are focused almost exclusively on the country’s presidential election, which will go a long way to determining future strategy in the water sector. By the time this report appears, the likely winner should be known. The best outcome is that the uneasy interregnum that has been sustained since Hosni Mubarak left the presidential palace in February 2011 will give way to a more coherent political climate, in which longer-term planning on critical infrastructure will be facilitated.
Key themes to highlight for Egypt’s water sector:
Published: July 2012 No. of Pages: 44 Price: US $ 1175
Table of Contents
Key themes to highlight for Egypt’s water sector:
- Egypt’s difficult post-Mubarak trajectory is creating significant challenges for private water developers eyeing opportunities in what was historically one of the region’s most promising markets. In the most damaging development to afflict the country’s water sector for some years, the Central Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Unit – the government organisation geared to towards advancing PPPs in critical infrastructure sectors – announced the official cancellation of plans to build a major wastewater treatment plant at 6 October City near Cairo in early May 2012. The PPP project had been on ice since late 2010, when bidders first submitted proposals to finance and build a 150,000 cubic metre per day (m3/d) plant.
- The new head of the PPP Central Unit in Cairo, Atter Hannoura, will hope any new government formed after presidential elections will offer some sense of stability and outline their intentions for the water sector. It remains to be seen whether the new director of the PPP Central Unit will be as effective as their predecessor. The former head of the unit, Rania Zayed, was to a large degree personally responsible for Cairo’s impressive achievements in pushing throught privately financed infrastructure projects. We anticipate that the Abu Rawash project, under which the existing 1.2mn cubic metres per day (m3/d) capacity plant will be expanded to 2mn m3/d, will still progress.
- Despite the cancellation of the 6 October City wastewater treatment plant, the Egyptian authorities remain committed to the PPP model to meet their wastewater treatment targets. In April 2012, the Construction Authority for Potable Water & Wastewater invited advisors to bid to provide consultancy services for a new wastewater treatment project at Helwan. The African Development Bank (AfDB)-funded project is a major positive for the sector.
- With 150,000 m3/d of potential future water production removed from the equation as a result of the cancellation of the 6 October City wastewater treatment plant, Cairo will have to prioritise alternative sources of water supply if the country is to keep pace with demand – which BMI expects to rise to nearly 8,000mn cubic metres by 2016, a rise of 1,700mn cubic metres on the 2012 production level. Over the long-term, much will depend on what sort of a government eventually emerges. Thing should become clear in Q3 once the identity of the new president is known. Though economic growth will remain subdued, dampening industrial demand for water, the demographic situation is such that the long-term prognosis is anything but favourable.
Published: July 2012 No. of Pages: 44 Price: US $ 1175
Table of Contents
Executive Summary . 5
SWOT Analysis . 7
Egypt Water Industry SWOT . 7
Egypt Political SWOT 8
Egypt Economic SWOT . 9
Egypt Business Environment SWOT 10
Market Overview 11
Domestic Competitive Landscape . 11
Pricing Mechanisms And Regulatory Framework . 16
Sectors . 19
Irrigation 19
Water Supply 20
Wastewater Treatment 20
Desalination 21
Major Projects . 22
PPP Wastewater Projects 22
Water Supply 23
Irrigation 23
Sanitation 24
Desalination 24
Key Projects 25
Table: Egypt – Key Water Infrastructure Projects . 25
Industry Forecast Scenario 26
Table: Egypt Water Production Data, 2008-2016 . 26
Regional Risk Reward Ratings . 27
Table: Regional Infrastructure Risk/Reward Ratings 32
Macroeconomic 33
Company Profile 35
Holding Company for Water and Wastewater (HCWW) 35
Suez Environnement . 37
Veolia Water 39
BMI Water Forecast Modelling 41
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts 41
Infrastructure Risk/Reward Ratings . 42
Table: Infrastructure Business Environment Indicators 43Table: Egypt – Key Water Infrastructure Projects . 25
Table: Egypt Water Production Data, 2008-2016 . 26
Table: Regional Infrastructure Risk/Reward Ratings . 32
Table: Infrastructure Business Environment Indicators . 43
SWOT Analysis . 7
Egypt Water Industry SWOT . 7
Egypt Political SWOT 8
Egypt Economic SWOT . 9
Egypt Business Environment SWOT 10
Market Overview 11
Domestic Competitive Landscape . 11
Pricing Mechanisms And Regulatory Framework . 16
Sectors . 19
Irrigation 19
Water Supply 20
Wastewater Treatment 20
Desalination 21
Major Projects . 22
PPP Wastewater Projects 22
Water Supply 23
Irrigation 23
Sanitation 24
Desalination 24
Key Projects 25
Table: Egypt – Key Water Infrastructure Projects . 25
Industry Forecast Scenario 26
Table: Egypt Water Production Data, 2008-2016 . 26
Regional Risk Reward Ratings . 27
Table: Regional Infrastructure Risk/Reward Ratings 32
Macroeconomic 33
Company Profile 35
Holding Company for Water and Wastewater (HCWW) 35
Suez Environnement . 37
Veolia Water 39
BMI Water Forecast Modelling 41
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts 41
Infrastructure Risk/Reward Ratings . 42
Table: Infrastructure Business Environment Indicators 43Table: Egypt – Key Water Infrastructure Projects . 25
Table: Egypt Water Production Data, 2008-2016 . 26
Table: Regional Infrastructure Risk/Reward Ratings . 32
Table: Infrastructure Business Environment Indicators . 43
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