San Antonio is one step closer to buying some of the most expensive water ever sold in Texas, just as the deal is drawing more critics.
The San Antonio Water System board on Monday unanimously approved a
$3.4 billion contract to pipe in 50,000 acre-feet, or 16 billion
gallons, of water a year from underneath Central Texas' Burleson County
starting in 2019. The contract is with two companies, Austin-based
BlueWater and the Spanish company Abengoa, whose joint venture is called
the Vista Ridge pipeline.
“The time for
courage is now,” Berto Guerra, chairman of the SAWS board, said in a
statement urging the San Antonio City Council to approve the contract as
well. “Further delays will only serve to create uncertainty in our
water future and risk increased project costs.”
The proposal could come before the City Council as early as next month.
With the encouragement
of groups like the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce, SAWS says the
historic deal is the best way for the growing region to wean itself off
the Edwards Aquifer, whose supply is uncertain in
the wake of drought and concerns over endangered species. The Vista
Ridge pipeline would serve 162,000 new families, according to the
utility.
But critics say the plan is financially risky and premature, because
the city will have to pay for the full amount of water the pipeline can
deliver every year — even though it may be decades before San Antonio
actually needs all of it. Sixteen billion gallons of water is 20 percent
of the city's current annual water demand today.
“People are starting to wake up ... [and ask], ‘Does this smell as
bad to you as it does to me?’” said Amy Hardberger, an assistant
professor of law at St. Mary’s University who teaches water law and land
use. “I think that the next month is going to get pretty hairy.”
At $3.4 billion for a 30-year supply contract, the cost of
the water, including treatment and delivery, will be about $2,300 per
acre-foot — as much as seven times the rate that San Antonio pays for
water from the Edwards Aquifer. By 2050, increasing electrical and
maintenance costs could put that number closer to $2,700, SAWS spokesman
Greg Flores said. The utility estimates that residents will see a water
rate hike of about 16 percent to pay for the pipeline.
Other rate increases are expected in the next few years to help pay
for upgraded water delivery and sewer infrastructure, and to bring in
other new supplies like desalinated water. Combining those increases
with what is needed to pay for the new pipeline means that San Antonio
residents could pay 41 percent more for water and wastewater in 2019
than they are paying today. Such a hike would push the average household
water bill, at $53 per month today, up to $88. Of that bill, $12 would
pay for the Vista Ridge pipeline. (Many of these numbers could be
slightly lower if SAWS secures a lower interest rate on the deal.)
The City Council will be deciding on a project that just a few months ago had even drawn objections from Guerra and SAWS President Robert Puente because of its high cost.
“I don’t think we’ve ever, in one fell swoop, committed to a $3.4
billion project before,” said Ron Nirenberg, a San Antonio city
councilman. “This is one and a half times the city budget,” which is $2.4 billion, he said.
San Antonio isn’t the only city where water rates are climbing; this summer, drought-stricken Wichita Falls boosted its water rates by 53 percent. Industry experts say Americans have been underpaying for
water for decades. The cost of the raw water for the Vista Ridge
project will be fixed over 30 years, prompting SAWS board members to
declare the utility is buying “tomorrow’s water at today’s price.”
Not everyone is so sure of that, however. “If we really cared about
the cost, we would be going after a project that could be financed with
SWIFT money,” Hardberger said. She was referring to $2 billion that
voters approved to be taken out of Texas’ Rainy Day Fund last November, to be given out by the state as low-cost loans for water projects.
The Vista Ridge pipeline is ineligible for those funds because it is
privately financed. Abengoa, a private company, will build the pipeline,
not SAWS, a public utility that could have gotten the cheaper loans
from the state.
Puente had made the same point several months ago, suggesting that
the city should instead expand its desalination plant because that
public project would be eligible for more low-cost state loans. (The
plant is being financed in part by such funds, which SAWS can still pursue for other water projects.)
But Puente and Guerra now say the Vista Ridge deal is better than it
was several months ago. For instance, the contract now ensures that SAWS
will only pay for the water that the companies can physically deliver.
If only 40,000 acre-feet is available one year because groundwater
managers in Burleson County force cutbacks, SAWS will only pay for that
amount of water, and Vista Ridge will have to bear the loss. The
companies also scrapped their initial demand of a $5 million annual
“reservation” fee for the water and capped the interest rate at 6.04
percent. SAWS could still negotiate a lower interest rate before the
deal closes, which the utility hopes would happen within the next 18
months.
But critics say that’s not a justification for such an expensive
deal, and the interest rate is twice as much as what state loans on
public projects could offer. “That tells me it’s very risky,” said
Michelle McFaddin, a water lawyer who has reviewed the 581-page contract
between SAWS and Vista Ridge.
McFaddin, who was the lead attorney for infrastructure loan programs
at the Texas Water Development Board for six years, now works for the
League of Independent Voters. The Central Texas activist group, which is
vocal on water issues, opposes the SAWS deal.
“This is an example of public-private partnerships gone awry,” said
McFaddin, adding that the company Abengoa carries its own risks because
its “credit rating is two levels below investment grade.” Moody’s rated the company at B2 in August, which suggests a higher level of risk for potential investors.
Flores, the SAWS spokesman, argued that “regardless of
their credit rating, if they’re able to secure the financing and the
interest rate is capped, then our ratepayers are protected.” He added
that the ability to sell bonds for the pipeline will depend not on
Abengoa's credit rating but on San Antonio's ability to pay for the
project.
Nirenberg, the San
Antonio city councilman, said he supports the efforts to expand the
city’s water supply beyond the Edwards. But he worried that by the time
the city actually needs the full 16 billion gallons of water per year,
it may not even be available. Many other water provider hopefuls are
placing their straws in the Carrizo-Wilcox aquifer, where the Vista
Ridge project will draw from, and some hydrologists are concerned there isn’t enough to go around.
“What happens to that water, knowing that that aquifer is going to be
sold to other parties as well?” Nirenberg asked. “If the water’s not
there in 30 years, what are we doing? We’re just building a pipeline to
nowhere.”
Disclosure: The San Antonio Water System is a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune. A complete list of Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewed here.
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