Dragados
11 articles about "Dragados"
The 2010 Global Water Awards: Desalination Plant of the Year Vol 11, Issue 2 (February 2010)
For the desalination plant commissioned during 2009 that represents the most impressive technical achievement in the industry.
Agbar boss: Spain could learn from the UK Vol 8, Issue 4 (April 2007)
Agbar’s director-general Ángel Simón discusses strategy with Richard Weyndling, and outlines the challenges his company faces both at home and abroad.
EVEN-HANDED Vol 8, Issue 4 (April 2007)
* ACS Cobra Tedagua has won the contract to build the 27,000m<sup>3</sup>/d Denia plant (see desalination tracker).
Domestic firms share out Spanish desal contracts Vol 7, Issue 8 (August 2006)
Degrémont is the only foreigner to gatecrash the party as Acciona, Cadagua, Sadyt, Befesa and Aqualia are all rewarded.
INKING DEALS Vol 7, Issue 8 (August 2006)
* The first four major desal projects in Spain’s Programa Agua have been awarded to consortia with strong local connections.
Four foreigners brave Spanish bids Vol 7, Issue 7 (July 2006)
Only Veolia, Degrémont, IDE and Norway's Aqualyng have tried their luck against the locals in the first big tender for the next generation of desalination plants in Spain.
Inima’s €3 billion global ambition Vol 7, Issue 6 (June 2006)
OHL’s water subsidiary was the first of the Spanish water groups to go international. Director general Antonio García-Zarandieta thinks the business can quadruple in size over the next five years. Richard Weyndling reports.
NEWS IN BRIEF – LATIN AMERICA Vol 7, Issue 4 (April 2006)
* The World Bank plans to grant Venezuela $200 million in loans over the next two years to modernise and extend its network of aqueducts and sewerage systems beyond the capital Caracas.
Privatisation in Brazil Vol 3, Issue 6 (June 2002)
Basic sanitation is one of the last major sectors to remain mostly in public hands following Brazil’s extensive 10-year programme to privatise its state assets (see main text).
Ondeo and Vivendi in command in Morocco Vol 3, Issue 4 (April 2002)
Most concessions in Morocco have linked water and wastewater services to power provision. Such a policy has provided a host of opportunities for Suez and Vivendi Environnement (VE) because of the disparate nature of their businesses. The two French companies are now firmly established in the North African country. Government water policy in the past has lacked an overall strategy but now seems to centre upon private sector participation in the main cities, and a number of major contracts have been offered over the past few years.










