New Report Shows Significant Opportunity for Private Investment in Municipal Infrastructure

Bluefield Research’s report values the U.S.’s water and wastewater systems at more than $728 billion

New Report Shows Significant Opportunity for Private Investment in Municipal Infrastructure

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In the wake of tightening municipal budgets, environmental violations, and aging infrastructure, private players are poised to capitalize on struggling water and wastewater utilities.

According to a new report by Bluefield Research, U.S. Municipal Water & Wastewater: Defining the Addressable Market for Private Investment, the total market value of more than 78,000 community water and wastewater systems across the U.S. is estimated to be more than $728 billion.

"We've been talking about this trend for several years — municipalities and smaller private system owners' growing inability to keep up with deteriorating utility infrastructure, so our analysis has been developed as a tool to evaluate the opportunities for investment," says Reese Tisdale, president of Bluefield Research. "There seems to be no shortage of interest, and capital for that matter. Rather, the challenge for new market entrants, particularly for those looking to secure a platform from which to grow, is scale. Big deals are difficult to find."

About 15 percent of community water systems are already owned by private players, including investor-owned utilities, and in the first half of 2017, Bluefield has tracked more than $224 million of investor-owned utility acquisitions across 53 deals. The most notable transaction by an industry outsider, which is still pending, was Eversource's $1.68 billion takeover of Aquarion. Given the geographic and customer overlap of electricity, gas, and water, Eversource anticipates benefiting from synergies in billing, regulatory, and branding.

At the extreme end of the spectrum are highly-stressed public water systems — those with a combination of low-interest loan forgiveness applications, which signal financial distress and serious EPA compliance violations. Bluefield's analysis estimates these represent almost $2.5 billion of potential deal value.

"Herein lies the challenge," says Tisdale. "The lion's share of these systems are smaller and with significant issues, which play into the hands of well-established investor-owned utilities, like American Water and Aqua America, that have more widespread geographic footprints for tuck-in deals."

Driving private interest in public water systems are a number of key market shifts:

  • Public water systems face environmental violations, financial burdens: Approximately 5,300 municipal and private drinking and wastewater systems in the U.S. are listed as significant regulatory violators. "Serious system violations" is the most significant level of U.S. EPA violation designation and indicate an immediate need for infrastructure investment. 
  • Climbing residential water rates are adding pressure to utilities: Adjusting for inflation, the combined water and wastewater bill for a typical U.S. household has increased 18.5 percent since 2012, or 4.4 percent per year on average. This rise is attributed to growing populations, more efficient water usage, and aging systems networks, all of which pressure municipal and utility budgets. 
  • Federal funding for water infrastructure has decreased: Federal funding for water utilities peaked in 1976 at $16.9 billion and has since fallen to $4.3 billion in 2014, passing the financial burden to states and municipalities. A primary resource continues to be the EPA managed State Revolving Funds, which totaled more than $12.7 billion in 2016-2017 for drinking water and clean water projects across all 50 states. 
  • States are encouraging private investment in public water systems: Since 2013, five states — Missouri, Illinois, New Jersey, Indiana and Pennsylvania — have joined California in facilitating private investment with fair market value legislation. The Mid-Atlantic region hosts the greatest private ownership presence in water systems. Texas and Pennsylvania are hot spots for acquisitions with 90 pending and completed deals in 2017.

Mergers and acquisitions are not the only approaches being considered to resolve America's water and wastewater infrastructure woes. Public/private partnerships, including third-party operation and maintenance contracts, and concessions represent other options. These deals have been slow to gain momentum largely because of local resistance, despite readily available access to capital.

"As water needs grow across the country, we expect the private sector to continue to play a key role, including companies from outside the water industry," says Tisdale. "There is no doubt water infrastructure needs serious investment — from private or public capital. The status quo is not an option."

About Bluefield Research
Bluefield Research provides data, analysis and insights on global water markets. Executives rely on its water experts to validate their assumptions, address critical questions, and strengthen strategic planning processes. Learn more about Bluefield's insight services, reports, and consulting capabilities at www.bluefieldresearch.com.



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