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Water
Industry News
Aqua America
Chairman decries wave of non-utility buyers of water companies
BRYN MAWR, Pa.-- June 27,
2005--Aqua America, Inc.(NYSE:WTR) Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer Nicholas DeBenedictis today cautioned
regulators about the growing presence of private-equity funds
in the regulated utility market. He made the remarks at the
10th annual convention of the Mid-Atlantic Conference of
Regulatory Utilities Commissioners (MACRUC), which is meeting
in
Hot Springs, VA.
"With the nation's water
infrastructure in dire need of repair, we need companies that
are in this business for the long haul," DeBenedictis
told the MACRUC convention. "My concern stems from
non-utility buyers who might bring a short-term investment
horizon, therefore, not making major long-term investments
needed for water quality improvement and replacing old
pipes."
He noted that the utility industry is the most
capital-intensive industry in the country, with water
requiring more capital investment per dollar of revenue earned
than all other utilities, according to statistics in the 2004
C.A. Turner Utility Report. On June 14, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency issued a report that estimates $277 billion
will need to be invested over the next 20 years to
upgrade and maintain the nation's water infrastructure.
Nearly 84 percent of the country's 50,000 water systems serve
less than 3,300 people, according to the EPA. As state and
federal water quality standards become more stringent, many of
the small water systems will not be able to afford the
required and mounting infrastructure improvements, said
DeBenedictis.
"As more of these troubled systems come on the market,
their customers will be best served if they're acquired and
integrated into larger, well-managed systems with high
professional standards," he said. "The long-term
demands of our infrastructure are too great, and our water
resources are too precious to put at risk. We need a steady,
long-term investment policy to begin immediately."
Aqua America's subsidiaries in 13 states will invest
approximately $262 million in 2005 for main replacement
projects, main cleaning and lining, plant upgrades, and other
capital improvements.
Aqua America, Inc. is the
largest U.S.-based publicly-traded water utility, serving more
than 2.5 million residents in Pennsylvania, Ohio, North
Carolina, Illinois, Texas, Florida, New Jersey, Indiana,
Virginia, Maine, Missouri, New York, and South Carolina. Aqua
America is listed on both the New York and Philadelphia Stock
Exchanges under the ticker symbol WTR.
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