Documentaries/ videos – SAVEGREEKWATER / Initiative for the non privatization of water in Greece Wed, 29 Jan 2014 20:52:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 The 2nd Monitor of German TV on water privatization german audio greek subs /archives/2565 /archives/2565#respond Mon, 10 Jun 2013 12:12:41 +0000 https://ideaspot.gr/savegreekwater/?p=2565 In this second informative report of the “Monitor” by public German television we follow the results of the movement of citizens in Germany against the privatization of water,  the spread of the movement throughout Europe, and the political game played out on the backs of the German society by the Christian Democrats and the Liberals over this issue. Despite public assurances these two parties actually approved the privatization of water and did not object even typically at the procedures held by the competent bodies of the European Union. It is impressive that the German Christian Democrat Vice President characterizes water asfood”.

The report also follows the European Citizens’ Initiative https://www.right2water.eu/ and the results of the privatization of water in Passos de Ferreira in Portugal with price increases that exceeded 400%!
The producers promise to come back again in this matter which concerns a large part of German and European public opinion.

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Movement 136 press conference video /archives/2440 /archives/2440#respond Tue, 14 May 2013 20:28:53 +0000 https://ideaspot.gr/savegreekwater/?p=2440 On the 2nd of May, Movement 136 held a press conference presenting their basic strategy on entering the TAIPED tender for the sale of EYATH. Watch the 30 min video

Written Press Release in English

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“No means No” The short film on water is ready just in time for the world water day! /archives/2006 /archives/2006#respond Fri, 22 Mar 2013 10:16:07 +0000 https://ideaspot.gr/savegreekwater/?p=2006 [vc_row el_position=”first”] [vc_column width=”1/4″] [/vc_column] [vc_column width=”3/4″] [vc_column_text el_position=”first last”]

[box] The short film produced by wordgrapher.com in collaboration with SAVEGREEKWATER is released today 22 March, just in time for the world water day. Watch it and spread its message! The film is subtitled in English.[/box]

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Sign for Greece (everyone)

https://www.avaaz.org/en/petition/SAVE_GREEK_WATER_FROM_PRIVATIZATION_SOSTE_TO_NERO_APO_TEN_IDIOTIKOPOIESE/

Sign the European Citizens Initiative (All EU Citizens)

https://www.right2water.eu/el

(Website owners and bloggers are kindly requested to copy paste the links above when embedding the video)

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[box type=”info”] Correction to the video content: Munich was ALWAYS public and NEVER privatized. It is until now PUBLIC.[/box]

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“Putting Water Back Into Public Hands” when it is privatized in Greece? /archives/1835 /archives/1835#respond Tue, 12 Mar 2013 12:12:19 +0000 https://ideaspot.gr/savegreekwater/?p=1835 With the occasion of the production of a short video animation related to putting back water management into public hands,  a video that was based on the published research of Corporate Europe Observatory, the Municipal Services Project and Transnational Institute we republish and translate a recent relative article by Martin Pigeon.  Before the article please watch the short video that was subtitled in Greek by SAVEGREEKWATER team. You can read more info on the research and its results here. Once more, as it seems, the “solutions” forced  in our country, are already obsolete for the societies not only of Europe but also of the emerging world.

By Martin Pigeon

“A business of real public importance can only be carried on advantageously upon so large a scale as to render the liberty of competition almost illusory […] It is much better to treat it at once as a public function.” – J.S. Mill, 1872

Almost a year has now passed since Remunicipalisation: Putting Water Back Into Public Hands was first released. This book examined the ongoing trend of water “remunicipalisation” – how cities are taking back control of their water systems. It is exciting to give it a second life today, in the form of a Spanish book, as well as through a short animation film.

Researching and writing this book was intense: five urban water systems were studied, one per continent, with radical geographical, political and cultural differences among them.

As I looked at water struggles all over the world, more and more it felt as if I were observing the circulation of life’s blood. The cities had a lot in common: their water systems were technology-intensive, comparably standardized, costly, vital… And for at least these two last reasons they had been privatized. Many investors love monopolies, and urban water networks are natural monopolies on a lifeline resource. However, after a period of significant expansion in private water management globally (1980-2000), the trend was reversing.

Lessons from remunicipalisation

As campaigners against water privatization, we encourage public water management: we welcome this new trend, but to what extent is it good news? Our research found that:

  • remunicipalisation can save money for public budgets, and sometimes a lot such as in Paris where the city saved enough to reduce water tariffs by 8% without endangering investments and financial stability
  • it always allows for more transparency
  • it can increase the system’s efficiency (performing to best technical capacity as opposed to just complying with legal standards)
  • it often puts extension of coverage and equal access back on the agenda[1]

In short, remunicipalisation works!

But other findings are equally interesting. The most striking one perhaps is that the decision to remunicipalize is usually taken mainly on financial and technical grounds. Pro-public water political campaigning does help, but the mere fact that private management fails to run systems in a technically sound and politically acceptable way can be enough to lead to remunicipalisation. In short, privatization is its own worst enemy.

Ongoing struggles

The remunicipalisation wave continues. Veolia just lost one of its oldest contracts in France in the city of Rennes. A city spokesperson explained: “There’s a contradiction between the council’s aim to reduce water consumption and that of the operator whose interest is to see it increase.”

The water companies’ business model for municipal contracts is outdated, at least in the EU. Consumption slowly but steadily decreased over the past 20 years, limiting revenue while costs skyrocketed, and the resulting hike in water tariffs has generated political discontent and high scrutiny. Cities that don’t remunicipalize renegotiate their contracts fiercely: it is common for water multinationals to give 30% rebates these days to keep their contracts, hoping they can still recoup their costs later.

They are now trying to restructure their businesses, with two major options:

  1. Veolia seems to focus more on traditional engineering works and services for public and private clients, as well as new ones such as the mining and oil industry (fracking requires enormous amounts of water and involves high clean-up costs).
  2. Suez seems to try to capture the very management of the resource and the politics of water through “integrated water governance” contracts, trying to sell cities “water health contracts” and co-opting the language of the progressive water world.

One remark: the European Commission seems to completely ignore all of the above. It has never promoted water privatization as enthusiastically as today, imposing this failed model on Greece, Portugal and everywhere it’s given the chance. It has for the first time included water in Internal Market legislation on concession contracts, causing an uproar – and intense corporate lobbying – in Brussels these days. Indeed, “the Commission believes that the privatisation of public utilities, including water supply firms, can deliver benefits to the society when carefully made.”(EC, DG ECFIN 2012)

Making ‘public’ work

Public ownership is a pre-requisite but never a guarantee for better performance. “Public” must go hand in hand with democratization of the service. Only that way can challenges of the water sector be tackled in a sustainable way:

How can we finance costly infrastructure without giving control to corporations or banks?

How can water management be integrated in urban and land planning, in forestry and agriculture policies to improve resilience, resource quality and adapt to climate change?

How to fight other forms of privatization such as the end-of-pipe technological approach to pollution, or useless and dangerous ideas such as water rights markets?

How to translate these technical issues into political issues that all can understand and contribute to?

Remunicipalisation advances these debates by raising water issues on the political agenda and is a golden opportunity to try and solve them.

Martin Pigeon is a researcher and campaigner with Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO). CEO is a research and campaign group working to expose and challenge the privileged access and influence enjoyed by corporations and their lobby groups in EU policy making.



[1]     The World Health Organisation estimates than every dollar invested in water supply and sanitation saves between 4 and 12 dollars in avoided health costs.

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“Water makes money” /archives/1379 /archives/1379#respond Sun, 03 Feb 2013 11:14:11 +0000 https://www.savegreekwater.org/?p=1379 The film “Water makes money” by Leslie Franke and Herdolor Lorenz focuses on the effects of water privatization in Europe. One and a half years after the premiere, and after the court case of Veolia against the film in the french courts, the publicity manager of Veolia Germany, Matthias Kolbeck, made the following statement: “Unfortunately, Veolia’s lawsuit against the film is not directed against the German filmmakers as well. After the German public authorities refused a French letters rogatory, the French parent company prompted the German Veolia subsidiary, to file a lawsuit against Leslie Franke and Herdolor Lorenz according to German law. Veolia Germany however refused this request after due consideration, with the following reason: Water Makes Money and the French lawsuit did cause already excessive damage to the multinational, and a German lawsuit would do nothing but increase the damage.”

A small victory of the civil society by a film which has served as a tool for many anti-privatization water activists around the globe.

Members of the Movement 136 in knowledge of the producers made this 45 minute shorter version of the film and added Greek subtitles. Watch it (1st, 2nd and 3rd part)

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MEP Swoboda responds to SAVEGREEKWATER’s Intervention at “The South Ιn Talk” /archives/1344 /archives/1344#respond Mon, 28 Jan 2013 21:16:39 +0000 https://www.savegreekwater.org/?p=1344 A question – intervention was made by SAVEGREEKWATER Initiative on 25/1/2013, at the open discussion entitled  “The South in Crisis: Time for a Southern Progressive Response? organized by the PASOK MEP Marilena Koppa at the  amphitheater Technopolis- Gazi (Athens),  in the presence of MEPs and politicians from socialist parties of the Southern Europe but also the Austrian  Hannes Swoboda, President of the Socialists and Democrats Group in the European Parliament.  Despite the fact that the time appointed to receive  questions from the audience was very limited, a thing that prevented us from retaking the speech to question the MEP\’s regarding the violation from EU Commission\’s part of the EU Treaty that ordains neutrality on public or private water services management, nor  about how the privatization in Greece can be obstructed since it is the Troika (a member of which is the EU Commission) that pressures towards this direction, we had at least the chance to ask Mr.  Swoboda a very specific question.

Watch the question and the answer in the following video. In the second, longer video available only in Greek one can listen to what is translated in Greek by the professional translator of the event, for those that were wearing headphones and listened to the interventions in Greek, and those who watched the event on  live streaming via Internet.[/box]

More info on the moratorium against Suez Veolia Saur here.

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“Monitor” of German public TV investigates EU Commission’s role on water privatization /archives/1204 /archives/1204#comments Tue, 22 Jan 2013 15:14:15 +0000 https://www.savegreekwater.org/?p=1204

The tv show of German public television network “Monitor” held recently a research for the pressure that European Commission exerts on EU countries members to privatize the services of water supply.

The reportage starts with e reference on the region Pacos de Ferreira, in Portugal, where the privatization was imposed and within a few years water price increased by 400% and it’s still increasing on a 6% annual rate. “We cannot drink water anymore, as we used to do in the past, it is not good” report the residents of the region who have opposed the privatization since the beginning.

The 8 minutes duration video continues by exploring the heart of the matter in Brussels.It presents an in-depth research of the situation with documents that prove that a decision has already been made on “ opening  the water market ”,  a market, that is estimated in three- digit numbers of billions of euros. This procedure is , as it is mentioned, only to start from the southern countries.

The reportage informs us that the team of experts who act as advisors to Mr Barnier, the powerful man of EU Commission, and who decide the policy on water, is called Steering Group and consists of several CEOs of the biggest corporations of the water market.

“I did not select the group” Barnier declares when the journalist reads to him the participants’ list by adding “If you ask me if the current group composition could be more balanced I’d say yes”

“Water a human right or a billion euros business? ”

“Brussels has already decided”.

“Water in the future shall belong to the corporations rather than all of us.”

This is how a reportage of  a real news  broadcast of  a real public television ends. That of the German  public television.

We wish soon to see the same attitude in one of our own public networks.

 

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Part of Catastroika dedicated to water privatization /archives/590 /archives/590#comments Tue, 18 Sep 2012 10:05:17 +0000 https://www.savegreekwater.org/?p=590 In this excellent documentary by Ari Hadjistefanou and Katerina Kitidi describing the history of privatization in Europe since  Treuhand and the hostile takeover of East Germany from West Germany until the conquest plan of the Russian economy, the catastroika, special mention is made to the history of privatization of water companies. From the 50 ‘minute and on it is described what happened in Paris when Chirac gave Suez and Veolia the management of the water supply. The tariffs increased by 260% in total with no economic or technical justification. When the city mayorship changed hands, in 2010, the municipality took back control of water management. Unlike private companies they reduced tariffs by 8% and profits were invested in improving the water infrastructure networks. The documentary then mentions the case of Italy, where a referendum was held, with 97% of people saying no to the privatization of water. Still,  the European authorities have asked the Monti government to include the water company in the latter package of privatizations. The next case described is the greek one. Watch it…

A few words by the creators

It was at the beginning of 1989 when the French academic Jacques Rupnik sat at his desk, in order to prepare a report on the state of the economic reforms in Mikhail Gorbatsov’s Soviet Union. The term that he used in describing the death rattle of the empire was “Catastroika”. In Yeltsin’s time, when Russia instituted maybe the biggest and least successful privatization experiment in the history of humanity, a group of Guardian reports assigned a different meaning to Rupnik’s term. “Catastroika” became synonym of the country’s complete destruction by market forces; the sell off of public property; and the steep deterioration of citizens’ living standards. Now, Catastroika’s unit of measurement was unemployment, social impoverishment, declining life expectancy, as well as the creation of a new cast of oligarchs, who took over the country’s reins. A few years later, a similar effort to massively privatize public property in unified Germany (which is presented as a model for Greece) created millions of unemployed and some of the biggest scandals in European history.
It is this “Catastroika” that is coming soon to Greece; to “Europe’s last Soviet Republic” as the MPs and the ministers of its former “socialist” government liked to call it. Catastroika is the logical aftermath and continuation of “Debtocracy”. Therefore, the logical sequence of our
first documentary, which examined the causes of the debt crisis in Greece and the European periphery as a whole.
Nevertheless, Catastroika is a virus that attacks not only the countries that radically change their economic system (like Russia) or countries under financial occupation. In fact, maybe the most unsuccessful privatization examples occur in financial superpowers that theoretically have the financial strength to control their negative consequences.
Catastroika can be spotted in post-Thatcherite Britain, where citizens were killed in accidents at the privatized rail network. It can be detected in the Dutch privatized and liberalized postal sector, where thousands of jobs have been cut and mail arrives at one’s door two to
three times per day. It can be detected even in California, which left her citizens in the dark when it deregulated the energy market.
However, its consequences are the gravest and most frightening at countries which fell in the trap of foreign lenders and are obliged to proceed to mass privatization. The public property sell-off which takes place in Greece has been tried several times in similar circumstances. The same people, who undertook the selling of public utilities in Latin American countries, now have moved their office in countries of the European periphery –and the most competent among them have been travelling to Athens during the last months.
The procedure always follows exactly the same steps: In the beginning, the government, in collaboration with mass media, starts a forceful attack against public servants, who are presented as responsible for all the country’s financial woes. The myth of the overextended public sector is often based on manipulated data from organizations supported and supporting the government of the time. Concurrently, specific public organizations are deliberately left unsupported, exasperating citizens due to their inefficiency. The process is completed by the sell-off of even the most profitable public organizations at a fraction of their real value.
Catastroika’s team is already travelling in many countries, collecting images, information and material on deregulation and privatization programs that have been implemented at the so-called “developed” world. The final result of the research is never black or white. The divide between the “social character” of the public sector vis-à-vis the inhumane face of the free market is equally simplistic as the theories of Milton Freedman that professed the need to privatize even the air that we breathe. The Greek case however supersedes the simple theoretical discussion on the role of the country in the economy.

TEAM

Directors/Writers: Aris Chatzistefanou, Katerina Kitidi
Scientific advisor: Leonidas Vatikiotis
Production Manager: Thanos Tsantas
Edit: Aris Triantafyllou
Soundtrack: Active Member, Ermis Georgiadis
Other crew: Julia Kileri, Margarita Tsomou, Vaya Pantou, Christos Tsiknias,Graneta Karatza, Costas Efimeros

Production: Infowar Productions

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Blue gold: World Water Wars /archives/539 /archives/539#respond Sun, 19 Aug 2012 12:35:17 +0000 https://www.savegreekwater.org/?p=539 Blue Gold: World Water Wars is an award-winning 2008 documentary by Sam Bozzo, based on the book Blue Gold: The Right to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World’s Water by Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke. It was produced by Mark Achbar (The Corporation) and Si Litvinoff (The Man Who Fell to Earth), and narrated by Malcolm McDowell. Blue Gold:World Water Wars examines environmental and political implications of the planet’s dwindling water supply, and posits that wars in the future will be fought over water. The film also highlights some success stories of water activists around the world and makes a strong case for community action. It has won many awards like ence award for Best Environmental Film at the Vancouver International Film Festival Ecology Now! award at the European Independent Film Festival Jury prize for best documentary feature at the Newport Beach Film Festival

Summary:

bluegoldIn every corner of the globe, we are polluting, diverting, pumping, and wasting our limited supply of fresh water at an expediential level as population and technology grows. The rampant overdevelopment of agriculture, housing and industry increase the demands for fresh water well beyond the finite supply, resulting in the desertification of the earth. Corporate giants force developing countries to privatize their water supply for profit. Wall Street investors target desalination and mass bulk water export schemes. Corrupt governments use water for economic and political gain. Military control of water emerges and a new geo-political map and power structure forms, setting the stage for world water wars. We follow numerous worldwide examples of people fighting for their basic right to water, from court cases to violent revolutions to U.N. conventions to revised constitutions to local protests at grade schools. As Maude Barlow proclaims, “This is our revolution, this is our war”. A line is crossed as water becomes a commodity. Will we survive?

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FLOW for love of Water (2008) /archives/244 /archives/244#respond Sun, 29 Jul 2012 15:18:43 +0000 https://www.savegreekwater.org/?p=244 Irena Salina’s awarded documentary  Flow-For Love of Water is exploring the issue that most  experts consider the most important political and enviromenta issue of the 21st century. The world water crisis. Salina’s research focuses on politics, pollution, human rights and the appearance of several corporations that target the control of water. Have you ever wondered if  “We can really possess water?” After the projection of the film: For a second time the french courts justified  TV Channel ARTE, producer of the awarded documentary FLOW, that describes the catastrophic practices of multinationals in the water sector, among them Suez,  a stock holder of 5,46% of EYATH (Thessaloniki Water Company) that according to recent publications is interested in its full take-over. In 2010, a french court dismissed the δefamation lawsuit law of  Suez aganist FLOW. It also ordered that Suez should compensate the film’s producers for their legal expenses. Diisatisfied from this decision Suez appealed. In 27 June of 2012 the e court rejected the appeal and once more justified the accused. ]]> /archives/244/feed 0