Drinking water and wastewater services must be provided to many
sectors of a nation's economy, including its industrial,
commercial, and residential sectors. This forms the scope of the
water industry's activities and it explains why the privatization
of water sanitation and water services has become a huge market and
a much-debated issue in a number of jurisdictions. Historically the
water industry has been run as a public service which is owned by
the local or national government; however, recent trends suggest
that the role of the private sector is increasing. The growing
economic interests concerning water and wastewater services are
generating a tension with the recent recognition of the human right
to water and sanitation. This tension between human right and
economic rules is the focus of this book, which reviews all the
international rules that form the regulation of global water
services.
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