Water economics essential principles: Part 2, all channels flow into the Basic Model

May 16, 2008 | Cities, Essential posts, History, Infrastructure, Urbanization | No comments 42 Views

[The original post may be found here: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, and Part 7.]

 

We saw yesterday that cities grow when they have more clean water, and that increasing water supply means mastering technology, law and government, and finance. It’s almost as if the physical difficulties of managing water compelled humanity to learn how to create cities.  But beyond that, as far as I can tell, there’s only one approach to financing water infrastructure that has ever worked at any scale.  I call it the Basic Model, and it has evolved in every urban environment I’ve yet encountered.

 

Continuing from yesterday’s post:

 

5.         In general, the capital costs of water infrastructure are non-recoverable

 

The emperors paid for aqueducts out of general revenues, not user fees. 

 

Aqueduct construction was obviously a major public works project, funded primarily by the emperor and private donations. 

 

As I previously explored a bit in Meta-finance, Part 1 and Part 2, this is the Basic Model of infrastructure finance.

 

Basic_financial_model

 

Having spent the vast sums to create the infrastructure, the emperors were then able to offer a citizenship subsidy – free public water.

 

Lacus water was, in modern parlance, a completely subsidized municipal service – free for the taking.  Excavations in Pompeii have uncovered their spacing of about 150 feet from one another throughout the city. 

 

Use of lacus water was limited by the physical effort of carrying water from the basin to the home, use of water in the home was limited by the cost of paying the vectigal. 

 

Like the English window tax or the Colonial roof tax, the assessors taxed the indirect indicator of consumption, not the hard-to-measure consumption itself.

 

Tax was assessed by the size of the supply pipe nozzle rather than the amount consumed.  A major black market arose in what Frontinus called “puncturing” – attaching secret pipes to main lines in order to draw water illicitly into private residences. 

 

Those who live in a slum may come to see ‘dipping in a little’ as their collective social fiddle against the rich formal outside world, making the resulting utility theft rampant.

 

This became such a problem that a section of the Roman law code was dedicated specifically to this type of offense, made punishable by a 100,000 sesterces fine.

 

The ultimate solution is legalize and tax.  When an informal settlement or spontaneous community is large enough so that its consumption is leaching away free utilities, the locality gains revenue by incorporating and taxing the slum.  If so, slums turn into normal communities through a process of post hoc formalization when their scale, longevity, and civility have collectively legitimized them politically.  This may be the missing link in De Soto’s theories of formalizing property.

 

6.         Private finance works better … if the public-private incentives are properly aligned

 

The story of New York’s drinking water provides an instructive contrast with Rome.  

 

Though I’m a confirmed Bostonian and birthright citizen of Red Sox Nation, I’ve posted many times about New York, as it is the cradle of apartment living, the birthplace of the co-operative, the last holdout of pernicious and metastasizing rent control, and the inventor of air rights.

 

A yellow fever epidemic struck New York in 1795 and many blamed the disease on the city’s foul water and fouler streets.  In an alliance that would seem unthinkable years later, Aaron Burr joined with Alexander Hamilton and other prominent politicians of the day to drive through a public/private solution. 

 

Alexander_hamilton

My partner is a Burr under my saddle

 

As I’ve written in many contexts, government makes an excellent funder and regulator, but a less effective service provider.

 

In an argument that would echo 200 years later in privatization debates, “Hamilton used his considerable influence to persuade the City Council that the municipality should not build its own water works because it could not raise sufficient capital through loans and taxes.” 

 

Hamilton had in mind what we would now recognize as the municipal water company, a public utility.  Burr was financially more ambitious.

 

[Burr] directed only 10% of the Manhattan Company’s $2 million assets toward investments in water works, relying on the Collect as the water source. 

 

Hamilton_burr_duel

I guess this means we’re not partners any more?

 

This is more or less stealing, or to use the more polite term, ‘conversion of public moneys to private profit,’ the more reprehensible since the Collect had been overused.

 

The remainder was invested more profitably in local businesses.   The company did the bare minimum to maintain its charter, laying only 23 miles of pipe in its first 32 years.  Over time, this drinking water company gave up all pretence and developed into the powerful Chase Manhattan Bank.

 

7.         Public-private requires strong legal powers

 

In 1828 a large fire caused extensive property damage and a severe cholera epidemic in 1832 killed 3,500 people in New York but only 900 in Philadelphia, which enjoyed reliable public water supply and streets washed down daily. 

 

Following the recommendations of a state-appointed commission, a permanent Board of Water Commissioners was created and authorized [x] to raise infrastructure capital and [y] to condemn land in order to supply water to the city. 

 

Not only is this eminent domain for economic development, it’s acquisitive eminent domain, with the city over-reaching its boundaries.  A hundred years hence, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts would dam the Swift River to create the Quabbin Reservoir, in the process drowning several towns.

 

House_on_truck_being_removed

House being trucked out of the soon-to-be-flooded Swift River Valley

 

By 1838, condemnation of 35 acres of land in the Croton watershed had been completed.  The Croton Reservoir was a massive project, supplying 95 million gallons daily, yet only satisfied the city’s water needs for a decade.  The city then looked even farther north, to the Catskills and Delaware watersheds. 

 

In echoes of the lacus:

 

As a history of Croton water relates, “Two years after it opened, Croton was primarily a public amenity of great fountains and thousands of fire and free street hydrants; most homeowners and landlords had little inclination to install the costly service pipe.” 

 

As in Rome, we have legalize and tax replacing the informal settlement; or, said in capital terms, the massive public investment in non-recoverable infrastructure costs (the Basic Model) created a valuable network whose incremental hookup costs were small enough that everybody wanted to join.

 

Formalization, meet municipal utility.

 

This changed over the next 25 years as private pipes became more common, but the net result bore a fascinatingly strong resemblance to the Roman system of cross-subsidization from private pipes to lacus at the time of Caesar.

 

8.         All channels lead to the Basic Model

 

Between 1650 and 1850, New York went through three or four different phases.

 

Four_phases_of_man

The four phases of man?

 

Pre-urban communal use (”always ask, always give”) model.

When that was over-stressed – a consequence of urbanization – private pushcart-style water vendors.

Fully private monopoly, inadequately policed and inconsistent with the Basic Model (that government pays the non-recoverable cost).

Public-private partnership using the Basic Model.

 

Only when the [Manhattan] company notably failed to provide even the most basic services for drinking water or fire protection did the city step in and occupy the field. 

 

Rome got to the Basic Model through imperialism. 

New York got there through desperate necessity. 

Cities in the global south are getting there through voter pressure.

 

When I started reading Professor Salzman’s article, I thought of water and sanitation as an important sideline relative to housing.  Now I see it as core.  Without water, shelter must be a slum.  More importantly for cities, however, the efforts to manage water compel municipal leadership to master technology, law, and finance with systems that are economically viable over the long term.

 

Bhopal_water

Clean water takes piping

 

Water, then technology, law and government, and finance.  The path by which humanity has advanced all over the globe.

 

Water_plant

No financial liquidity, no aquatic liquidity

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Water economics essential principles: Part 1, water and cities

May 15, 2008 | Cities, Essential posts, History, Infrastructure, Urbanization | No comments 45 Views

Not only does the availability and amount of clean water control the size of cities, management of water resources has been a principal driver in advances in technology, law and government, and finance.

 

Clean_water_dish

The most basic of needs

 

That idea formed itself as I read, and then re-read, a terrific law article Thirst: A Short History of Drinking Water by Duke law professor Jim Salzman. 

 

Basic_financial_model

Often financed with the Basic Model

 

During April, I posted on it at length [10,000 words!  These are supposed to be blog posts! – Ed.  Hey, I thought it was really interesting — Auth.].

 

[The original post may be found here: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, and Part 7.]

 

This has become a greater preoccupation for me because of AHI’s work for Slum Dwellers International.  If housing is what makes cities, as I believe it is, then water and sanitation is what makes housing habitable, and hence what controls city scaling.  Clean urban water is a problem in infrastructure, so as we saw in the extended multi-part post, urbanization has gone hand in hand with the development of civic infrastructure, both physical and governmental, to create the vast public works projects necessary to sustain increased density of people in a finite urban space.

 

Life_straw

A high-tech solution: the Life Straw filtration pipe

 

Here, extracted and purified from my previous seven-part slurry, are the major takeaways:

 

1.         Water is physically a remarkable and challenging substance

 

Quick – name a liquid that isn’t water!

 

Think_hard_wait

Wait, give me a minute

 

Most of those you could name – the alcohols, ammonia, even carbon tetrachloride – evaporate rapidly. 

 

Water is the only substance whose most common state is as a liquid, and water’s in liquid form over a very wide temperature range.

 

Water’s physical characteristics confound easy management. 

Water is heavy – it is difficult to move uphill. 

Water is unwieldy – it cannot be packed or contained easily. 

Drinking water is fragile – it easily becomes contaminated and unfit for consumption. 

 

Clean_dirty_water

Anybody can see the difference between clean and dirty water

 

2.         Management of water presupposes technology

 

Moving water thus involves securing a technological construct – a bucket, a can, a bottle – and bringing it to the water source. 

Storing water requires large physical constructs. 

Protecting water requires legal and social constructs. 

 

Cistern_constantine

Constantine’s cisterns, under the old city of Istanbul

 

Management of drinking water was central to urban planning in early settlements, as well.  Thus one can find examples of sophisticated water management in virtually every archaeological excavation of ancient civilizations.  Water storage basins with minimum storage capacities of 10,000-25,000 gallons of water have been excavated in the Mesa Verde region of the American Southwest. 

 

Everywhere you turn, secure water supply defines urban viability.  Control and management of water was a strategic military resource.

 

Urbanization requires water, water requires technology, technology requires law and enforcement, and it will also come to require finance (as I previously explored a bit in Meta-finance, Part 1 and Part 2).  With their fourfold advance – water, technology, law, and finance – humanity has advanced all over the globe. 

 

3.         In pre-technological societies, water is non-economic

 

Dividing pre-urban from urban societies is their approach to water.  In a pre-technological environment:

 

Water is free because no one earned it.

Water must be shared and protected.

 

Clean_water_eritrea

Everybody needs clean water

 

As the Koran relates:

Anyone who gives water to a living creature will be rewarded….  To the man who refuses his surplus water, Allah will say:  ‘Today I refuse thee my favor, just as thou refused the surplus of something that thou hadst not made thyself.’ 

 

Water use depends on need.

Everyone has a duty to share water.  But ‘always ask.’

No one has the right to consume ‘too much’

Water’s cleanliness is culturally protected.

 

[Zimbabwe]  There are clear norms to ensure water quality – such as prohibitions against doing laundry or making bricks near wells.

 

[India]  Rules for ensuring source water quality are detailed.  The water must be approached barefoot, so that shoes do not pollute the source; containers must be properly cleaned before gathering water; no bathing or washing is allowed near the source; etc.  

 

Water hoarding is sinful, and will be met with retaliation (like poisoning the well).

 

4.         Cities arrive as water technology (including legal and financial technology) permits

 

A healthy city requires clear water.  Without it, you have spontaneous communities where housing consumption has outrun infrastructure’s ability to keep up – in other words, slums.  Urban clean water requires technology – well, cistern, aqueduct, piping – which implies:

 

Water_from_pipe_vietnam

Who owns the spigot?  Who built it?  Who paid for its building?

 

Finance — to pay for the technology

Law — to adjudicate who has access to the technology

Government – to enforce the finance and law

 

Rome is the first great city defined by its management of drinking water.  Irrigation reached new heights in the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, and while the cisterns and storage basins of Mesapotamian cultures were impressive feats of engineering, they cannot compare with the graceful aqueducts that carried clean water to the great Roman cities. 

 

Pont_du_gard

The great aqueduct at the Pont du Gard

 

Aqueducts were among the most magnificent structures of the ancient world and some proudly survive today.  Rome is also the first major city we know of that managed drinking water as a priced resource.

 

The Romans were the inventors of apartments (insulae), and of the world’s first homeownership subsidy.  The Romans appear to be the first culture that seriously thought about civic infrastructure from their roads to their forums.

 

Roman_road_in_britain

Two thousand years and it’s still serviceable

 

Moving water involves technological constructs.  Storing water requires large physical constructs – which in turn require large capital constructs.  Protecting water requires legal and social constructs. 

 

Put that all together and it means cities cannot survive, much less expand, without state-of-the-art large-scale infrastructure – like aqueducts:

 

Rome’s first aqueduct, the Appia, was built in 312 BC.  

 

Aqua_marcia

Remains of the Aqua Marcia, built just after the Appia

 

In all, eleven aqueducts were constructed over approximately 550 years.  The Marcia was the third aqueduct, built in 144 BC, and much larger than its predecessors. 

 

Two thousand years ago, Rome used the Basic Model.  Have things progressed since then?

 

Question

Are we making progress?


[Continued tomorrow in Part 2]