Eau de Paris explained

Eau de Paris
Type:Municipally owned corporation
Industry:Water industry
Location:Paris
Key People:Célia Blauel (chair)
Products:Drinking water
Area Served:Paris
Parent:City of Paris

Eau de Paris (Paris Water) is the publicly owned company responsible for the public water supply and waste water collection for the city of Paris.

History

In 1985, Jacques Chirac, then Mayor of Paris decided to transfer the municipal water service into the hands of three private entities with a direct contract and without a public procurement procedure.[1] The property of water wasn't formally transferred and was kept as a public common good. Eau et Force and Compagnie des Eaux de Paris had a 25-year concession for the distribution and customer services respectively related to the right and left banks of the River Seine.In 1987, the water production and transport were delegated for a 25-years period to SAGEP, a semi-public company owned by Ville de Paris (70%) and Suez & Veolia (28%).[2]

Eau de Paris was created in 2008 after a ballot initiative from then Mayor Bertrand Delanoë. The city's water was then substantially managed by two private companies (Veolia and Suez) which the municipal government bought out.[3]

Operations

The company distributes 563,000 m³ of drinking water a day.[4] In 2010 the company began installing drinking fountains dispensing fizzy water in the city.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Le Strat . Anne . Paris: local authorities regain control of water management . Transnational Institute . 19 June 2022.
  2. Web site: PDF . Anne Le Strat . The remunicipalisation of Paris’ water supply service . 11 . October 3, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191111104734/https://research.ncl.ac.uk/media/sites/researchwebsites/gobacit/Anne%20Le%20Strat.pdf . November 11, 2019 . live. Google Cache
  3. Web site: O'Brien . Hettie . Our privatised water system has failed - it’s time to look for alternatives. Open Democracy . 25 July 2018.
  4. Web site: Homepage . Eau de Paris . 25 July 2018.
  5. Web site: Fenwick Elliott . Annabel . Paris is installing free fizzy water fountains across the city . The Telegraph . 25 July 2018.