https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO2106/S00017/advancing-the-evidence-base-three-waters-reform-programme.htm
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Advancing The Evidence Base – Three Waters Reform Programme
Wednesday, 2 June 2021, 3:02 pm
Press Release: Infrastructure New Zealand
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About the Reports
Phase 2 Analysis – advancing
the evidence base
Today the Department of Internal
Affairs (DIA) released a second tranche of evidence-based
reports, commissioned to inform the case for change for the
Three Waters Reform Programme. The complete reports are
published here.
This
analysis further demonstrates the need for reform and its
potential benefits and addresses key questions raised by
local government members through recent engagements. The
analysis uses the Request for Information (RfI) data
provided by councils and publicly available information,
including international benchmarks, to undertake economic
analysis of reform options.
This information release
provides national-level analysis on the case for change (the
size of infrastructure investment need into the future, and
how reform options could help us meet this more affordably)
– WICS Phase 2.
The release
includes two independent reviews of the WICS Phase 2
methodology and assumptions to ensure it is fit-for-purpose
in a New Zealand context – undertaken by Beca
and Farrierswier.
The
release also contains a broader economic analysis on the
potential impacts of reform on the economy and workforce –
Deloitte report.
This national level
information release is just one part of a series of
information packages DIA will provide to support
understanding of the potential impacts and opportunities of
reform at a national and local level.
Further
council-specific analysis and supporting information will be
provided in the coming months as key decisions are taken by
Cabinet, including on the number and boundaries of new water
services entities.
Infrastructure New Zealand will
partner with DIA to provide several workshops on the reform
programme in the coming months.
Background on Phase 1
information
- In December 2020, DIA released a
package of information on the case for change, commissioned
as part of the Three Waters Reform Programme.
- This
early analysis was conducted by the Water Industry
Commission for Scotland (WICS), a respected three waters
economic regulator familiar with the New Zealand context and
with experience of water services reform in the United
Kingdom and parts of the European Union.
- The Phase 1
report was high level and directional in nature as it used
publicly accessible council information. Several limitations
were noted at the time, including not accounting for
population growth. However, the report provided was valuable
in providing an early indicative view on the size of New
Zealand’s Three Waters infrastructure deficit and the
potential benefits of reform.
- Local government
representatives have expressed concerns over the validity of
parts of this analysis (particularly the size of the
investment deficit and potential efficiencies of scale) and
its applicability to the New Zealand
context.
The Request for Information (RfI)
process
- In late 2020/early 2021 councils
undertook a Request for Information (RfI) as part of the
Three Waters Reform Programme.
- This RfI provided
up-to-date and more detailed information at a local level to
inform further economic analysis, and other commercial and
financial analysis as part of the reform
programme.
- This process represents a major
undertaking by the local government sector to improve the
state of knowledge and understanding about three waters
assets, network performance, service delivery costs,
commercial arrangements, and future investment requirements
and is no small feat.
- Given the timeframes with
which councils had to complete the RfI, not all information
provided could be audited or fully researched. To reflect
this, the Department and WICS asked councils to apply
confidence grades to their raw data.
- This will of
course mean there is variability across the country in this
foundational data, and it should be treated as indicative
and reflective of the point in time at which it was
commissioned and provided.
- The analysis has also
been informed by emerging draft long-term plans that
councils have been producing during this
period.
Key findings
WICS Phase
2
The WICS Phase 2 report builds on the findings of
the earlier report to provide a more up-to-date analysis.
The key findings of the report are in three
parts:
- The modelling indicates a likely range for
future investment requirements at a national level in the
order of $120 billion to $185 billion. This
investment is estimated as necessary for New Zealand to meet
current levels of compliance that water utilities in the
United Kingdom achieve with EU standards over the next 30
years. These standards are assessed by WICS (and confirmed
by Beca) to be broadly comparable with equivalent New
Zealand standards.
- WICS assesses the scope for
efficiency by looking at the performance of regulated water
utilities in the United Kingdom and making adjustments to
take account of factors specific to the New Zealand context.
It demonstrates that New Zealand’s Three Waters
sector is in a broadly similar position to Scotland in
2002, in terms of relative operating efficiency and
levels of service. In just under two decades, Scottish Water
has lowered its unit costs by 45% and closed the levels of
service gap on the best-performing water companies in the
United Kingdom. WICS considers that New Zealand can
achieve similar outcomes to Scottish Water over a longer
period (30 years).
- WICS has analysed around
30 possible aggregation scenarios, reflecting the large
number of possible number and boundary configurations. The
WICS analysis shows that scenarios ranging from one
to four entities provide the greatest opportunities
for scale efficiencies and related benefits in terms of
improved levels of service and more affordable household
bills (when compared against the likely outcomes ‘without
reform’).
Farrierswier independent review of
WICS findings
- Farrierswier find that the overall
approach WICS takes to its analysis should give reasonable
estimates in terms of direction and
order of magnitude.
- They note that
there are certain limitations associated with the analysis
which decision-makers should be mindful of, which relate to
estimating the level of future investment requirements and
potential efficiency savings that could be realised,
particularly given differences in the nuances of the New
Zealand regulatory and policy context.
- While their
review highlights several limitations associated with the
analysis, they note that these are inherent and to be
expected in modelling of this kind. Farrierswier also find
that WICS’ approach to addressing these limitations
appears reasonable.
- Farrierswier notes that the
approach WICS takes to assessing the potential efficiency
gains appears reasonable but care needs to be taken in
translating overseas experience into a New Zealand context.
They agree with WICS on the factors that will promote
efficiency gains in the water sector, including the quality
of management, clear policy priorities, and an appropriate
economic regulatory regime.
- Farrierswier also
explored the relevant literature to test whether any
concerns arise that amalgamation might lead to water
entities becoming large enough that diseconomies of scale
may emerge. Their view is that the amalgamation scenarios
under consideration – with entity sizes that do not exceed
2 million connected citizens – do not appear to
include entities of a size that give rise to concerns about
diseconomies of scale.
Beca independent
review of WICS findings
- Beca reviewed the
standards and practices in the United Kingdom Three Waters
industry and their relevance to New Zealand given WICS has
used United Kingdom data and benchmarks as part of its
analysis.
- The Beca report considers that, on
balance, the forecasts from WICS modelling may underestimate
the estimated investment requirements and timeframes,
suggesting that WICS modelling of future investment
may be conservative.
Deloitte industry
development study and economic impact
assessment
- Deloitte has undertaken a
comprehensive study of the economic impacts of reform and
the implications for affected industries. Key findings in
their report include:
- The reform is forecast
to impact every corner of the economy and is estimated to
increase Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by $14.4 billion to
$23 billion in present value terms over the next 30
years when compared to the likely outcomes without
reform. In relative terms this increased economic activity
equates to an average increase in GDP of 0.3% - 0.5% per
annum.
- Every region is expected to be
positively impacted by reform in terms of GDP and employment
growth.
- Reform is expected to
support significant job creation across the
economy. Relative to the counterfactual, the
reforms are estimated to result in an extra 5,800 to 9,300
additional FTE jobs between 2022 and 2051.
- Average
real annual wages are expected to increase by 0.16% - 0.26%
over the period from 2022 to 2051. The increase in real
wages mainly reflects a projected increase in labour
productivity.
- The additional jobs
are expected to be spread across a broad range of
sectors. While there is likely to be changes in the
configuration of jobs in the water sector and its supply
chain in the short to medium term. Over 30 years significant
growth of up to 80% is anticipated in the water sector
workforce, presenting significant opportunities for
employment growth, specialisation and increased career
opportunities.
- The report highlights a wide range of
opportunities and challenges for the implementation
of the reforms relating to the workforce, supply chain,
management of the capital investment programme, innovation
and
productivity.
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