IFC
13 articles about "IFC"
PRIVATE PROGRESS Vol 12, Issue 12 (December 2011)
Saudi Arabia’s National Water Company appears to be in good position to start the process of privatising its wastewater business next year (see story p18) after spending heavily on upgrading and expanding its asset base, most recently with the muchtrumpeted Jeddah sewerage project.
ASIA WATER IN BRIEF Vol 11, Issue 12 (December 2010)
* Bio-Treat Technology has been awarded an RMB500 million ($75 million) BOT contract to build water and wastewater treatment plants in the San Men Xia Industrial Zone in China’s Henan Province.
New directions in Chinese wastewater Vol 11, Issue 10 (October 2010)
Almost 90% of China’s cities now benefit from their own major wastewater treatment plants. It suggests that the days of the big city-wide wastewater deals may be coming to an end, writes Kathy Liu.
Bucharest water PPP saves city $350m Vol 11, Issue 6 (June 2010)
The IFC and Castalia have published a study evaluating ten years of Bucharest’s private water concession. The model has the potential to save the city $1 billion, but is it replicable?
IFC doubles equity commitment to Veolia Voda Vol 11, Issue 6 (June 2010)
Veolia Voda has taken on more equity in order to further its expansion plans in Eastern Europe. The €100 million commitment from the IFC is twice that initially planned.
Foz gears up for international growth Vol 11, Issue 3 (March 2010)
Fernando Santos-Reis, president of Odebrecht’s rebranded environmental engineering arm, talks to GWI about his plans for the future.
Bulgaria looks to roll out concession model Vol 11, Issue 2 (February 2010)
Bulgaria is the poor man of Europe when it comes to unaccounted-for water. The move to introduce 48 concessions across the country could revolutionise the entire water sector.
The 2010 Global Water Awards: Water Deal of the Year Vol 11, Issue 2 (February 2010)
For the deal, contracted in 2009, which has made the biggest contribution to the advancement of public-private partnerships in the international water sector.
Chart of the Month - Aggregate gap between water supply and demand by 2030 Vol 11, Issue 1 (January 2010)
This month’s chart comes from the IFC/ McKinsey report, Charting Our Water Future.
David Lloyd Owen - Beyond financing: utilities can make their limited funding go further Vol 10, Issue 12 (December 2009)
There is one golden rule in financial publishing: just before your book goes to press, a wonderful new study comes out.










