According to ABD, China is home to about 20% of the
world’s population, but endowed with only 7% of global water resources. Water
resources in the PRC are remarkably unevenly distributed. Southern China
encompasses 69% of the country’s available water supply and has four times the
groundwater resources of northern China; whereas, the north only has one-fifth
of the China’s total water resources, yet it covers roughly 60% of arable land
for agriculture and is home to some of the country’s largest cities.
Both regions register seriously low per capita
water availability ratios. The south, with water availability at 1,100 cubic
meters (m3) per capita, is within a hairline of the international
water scarcity threshold of 1,000 m3 per capita, while the north is operating
at only 424 m3 per capita or nearly 50% below the threshold.
Source: Goldman Sachs, July 2015
In 2016, the Chinese government announced various
policies under the 13th Five-Year Plan to promote environmental protection,
while tightening the laws and regulations to define more clearly the
responsibilities of environmental protection bodies. According to Uob Kayhian (Jan,
2017), the 13th Five Year Plan (FYP) from 2016-20 estimates total
investment of Rmb564b, up 31% from the amount in 12th FYP, which
will mainly be used as capex for WWT facilities. For the river clean-up in main
cities, the total budget is around Rmb170b in the 13th FYP. The 13th
FYP guided that local governments are responsible for these projects by means
of:
a) Raise funding through Waste Water Treatment (WWT)
tariff to attract investment;
b) Invite more social and private capital (PPP:
Public-Private-Partnership); and
c) Offer more support to less developed regions.
Other than driven by policies, the demand for water
and water treatment is also expected to increase due to the continuing
urbanization and industrialization in China.
Urbanization is one of the factors that contribute
to the increased discharge volume of domestic sewage. According to Frost &
Sullivan, China’s urban population grew from 669.8 million in 2010 to 793.0
million in 2016. In the same period, China’s urbanization rate saw an increase
of 7.4% from 49.9% to 57.3%. Frost & Sullivan estimates that by 2020, and
Chinese urbanization rate to reach 63%. This urbanization trend is likely to
lead to an increase in demand for clean water and wastewater treatment in urban
areas, which in turn would increase the growth potential of the municipal wastewater
treatment industry.
Between 2010 and 2015, the water consumption volume
in China increased from 602.2 billion ton to 634.2 billion ton. During the same
period, per capita water consumption has also increased from 450.2 ton to 461.2
ton. Frost & Sullivan expects China’s water demand will keep growing and
has estimated that by 2020, total and per capita water consumption will
increase to 666.9 billion ton and 464.3 ton respectively.
While official industrial wastewater discharge
reported a declining trend since 2008, ChinaWaterRisk points that it could be under-reported
as it does not synch with the economic growth in China.
Water tariffs have experienced growth in the past
decade. Wastewater treatment fee for residential users rose from RMB0.76 per m3
in 2010 to RMB0.85 per m3 in 2015 and running water tariffs
increased from RMB1.84 per m3 in 2010 to RMB2.11 per m3 in 2015. Industrial
water tariffs and waste water treatment fee are higher than residential users
and Frost & Sullivan believes wastewater treatment tariff will continue to
grow and this bodes well for the WWT operators.
Furthermore, the tariffs rate in
China are still very low compared to those in developed countries. According to
Goldman Sachs (2015), one key reason for China’s chronic and deteriorating
environmental system is due to its low pricing of utilities & water
treatment. Cleaning up pollution across the ecosystem will require a
rationalization of utilities prices, meaning users and polluters will need to
pay more realistic costs so that suppliers of pollution reduction services are
appropriately incentivized to provide good environmental protection and
improvement services.
Coupled with the continued economic growth,
government measures and demographic trends, it is expected that there would be an
increased demand for clean drinking water, industrial water and wastewater
treatment, sludge and hazardous waste treatment services in China and these
investments would be supported by the expected tariff increases.
(Source: Stock Snipers)
Wastewater Treatment Operating Modes
Wastewater treatment is usually conducted by means
of either a BOO or BOT project. In addition, there is also the
O&M project model, in which an enterprise is retained to operate and
maintain wastewater treatment facilities in return for a fee. Generally, for BOO & BOT, the project company
is exposed to financing risks as a large sum of capital is required at the
start up of the project and only gets paid back after a long period of time.
BOT
Municipal projects are using build-operate-transfer
(BOT) model, where local governments are responsible for tariff collection and
payment. BOT projects involve the design, construction and operation of
wastewater treatment plants where concession is granted (usually for 25-30
years) by the local government according to the relevant concession agreement. At
end of the concession period, the plant is transferred to the local government
at zero consideration.
BOO — A B2B
business model with higher returns as well as risks
The build-operate-operation (BOO) method is widely
used for developing industrial WWT projects. BOO projects are built, owned and
operated by the operator. Local governments may act in an initiator/coordinator
role in industrial projects. Generally, operators of industrial WWT projects
need to sign contracts with customers one by one, with no guaranteed treatment
volumes.
Given that BOO projects generally bear greater risk
from potential uncertainty in utilization and tariff collection and the
operator is able to get higher margin by directly negotiate the tariffs with
the industrial users.
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