Bringing Water To The Bottom of The Pyramid: Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, India
Bringing Water To The Bottom of The Pyramid: Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, India
Bringing Water To The Bottom of The Pyramid: Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, India
CONTENTS
EXISTING PRACTICES KEY PROBLEM AREAS WHAT SHOULD A SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS MODEL ADDRESS?
Existing Methods Unsustainable for All Stakeholders Financially & Infrastructure Wise The good (but insufficient) and bad ways of current water infrastructure in slums Bottled water companies currently
distribute water @ Rs. 12 per litre
handle community based demand Lack of effort to scale up bore wells or increase the numbers Pond water is unhygienic Credits extended to
1 6
Optimize Bore wells & organizational ponds structure and governance Reduce Bottled demand Water
2
Consolidate and Corporation centralize Supply support services
entrepreneurs and small organizations to build infrastructure or directly distribute Unsustainable due to insufficient demand generation and lack of later stage funding
A class of merchants buy water from the corporation or other sources in bulk Subsequently they sell it to inconvenienced slum dwellers at high premium
7
Develop Private credit capabilities model and mindsets
5
Water Enable IT Mafia
3
Off-shoring and Point-of-use outsourcing water treatment
4
Rainwater Lean optimization harvesting
CONTENTS
EXISTING PRACTICES KEY PROBLEM AREAS WHAT SHOULD A SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS MODEL ADDRESS?
Numbers speak for themselves. The problem is grave and escalating!!! (1/2) Quantity
30
Issues with the existing model of water supply are large difficult to ignore (2/2) Quality, Access & Management QUALITY About 13% of slum taps are probably contaminated with disease vectors like viruses and bacteria Every year, water borne disease causes 6,300,000 cases of illness which leads to 5,600 deaths Slum dwellers manage other activities with highly polluted water Rural ponds/lakes are unprotected, tube-well water is ACCESS In most slums, only about 5 hours of water services is provided per day Hence women & children who line up are forced to wait in long queues Results in loss of work time for women and education for children Villages do not suffer from such access problems, but face crisis during summers MANAGEMENT Population density makes it difficult to efficiently distribute water to all households Cost recovery practices are poor Significant percentage of water theft and pilferage happens Presence of illegal water middle-men who poses a competitive threat to any existing model Difficult to switch rural consumption patterns and generate consumer base
CONTENTS
EXISTING PRACTICES KEY PROBLEM AREAS WHAT SHOULD A SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS MODEL ADDRESS?
A sustainable and acceptable solution would be the one that addresses the following social, moral and business obligations
Help address the lost opportunity
Bridge the Demand Vs Supply Gap & other social issues
cost due to large wait times for water in urban slums Avg. of 5 Hrs. lost daily, equivalent to an earning opportunity of ~INR 100/- for urban women Childrens education suffers due to such large wait times Replace illegal water supply method s (e.g. water mafia) at high premium Replace the currently unhygienic water collected from different sources Door-to-door distribution should however at minimal cost for the service provider Extending pipelines not a solution as that would involve large capital costs and recurring maintenance costs Appropriate division of labour to separate water harvest from transportation to households as that would increase stakeholder interests
optimal price for the slum dwellers compared to existing water facilities A systematic collection method from slum dwellers so as to avoid default risk for the business An established cycle of cash-flow generation from consumers as well as other financing methods to enable scaled up solutions and further investments
CONTENTS
EXISTING PRACTICES KEY PROBLEM AREAS WHAT SHOULD A SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS MODEL ADDRESS?
Summarizing the 5 implementation parameters of our proposed business model Distribution being the key value addition towards a sustainable business model
Source Primary sources of water rain, ground, and lakes Not a big bottleneck in our proposed model Sources might be altered based on seasonal availability or on hydro -geographic nature of the land and meteorological patterns (e.g. Desert regions may not always Purificationhave rain water) One time investment in infrastructure to purify water to be supplied to cluster of slums; Technology available readily Distribution Door-to-door supply in bottles of 20 litres Ensure optimal supply to reduce reversal cost Central to local distribution agency to consumers model Market & Pricing
Source and Purification are not the bottlenecks. Focus on distribution, market creation and financing.
in 20 lt bottles Demand Pull system: Water Card (Kanban) system Incremental charges to ensure consistent usage & Financing demand Initial financing through USD 1 Bn from Water.org Revenue generated from consumers to fund subsequent growth via revenue bonds
FRANCHISE model Distributor would transport 20 L can of purified water to the consumers door Distributor trucks will follow planned travel routes to maximize distribution system potential
Water to be priced at 50 paisa per liter Incremental charges for consumption above the pre-fixed
Market
benchmark to ensure judicious use of water; Water Cards to be issued to the consumers to guarantee the same Demand Pull system: Each family to be given a fixed number of 20 L cans (say 2). As and when a can empties out, it can be exchanged with a filled one from the distributor truck
from distributor to used to service the intersect payments of the bonds; Methodology used by Municipal Corporations Revenue bonds can be swapped with LIBOR bonds to increase liquidity Principal from the bonds used to SCALE UP the model Scalability via replicability
Summarizing the overall flow of our model: distribution is the focus again
Flow of water Purification and Bottling at the central location Distribution by local entrepreneur Door-to-Door delivery to consumers
Water Collection
Flow of money
Distribution System: 300 Thousand liters of water to be supplied every day; ~24 Trucks needed
Suggested pricing: Rs. 0.50 / litre = 33 cents / day Net Revenue generated (considering distribution costs, private player margin, initial fixed costs, operation and maintenance costs):~ 0.5 million USD / year (for those interested: computation in the last slide) Financing: If used to service interest of the revenue bonds, can generate 10 million USD (5% coupon rate) which will fund 10 more such projects
CONTENTS
EXISTING METHODS & Its FALLACIES KEY PROBLEM AREAS WHAT SHOULD A SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS MODEL ADDRESS?
Distribution / Market
Appoint local entrepreneur as distributor Distribution of bottles from central location to slum centers in trucks Water Card system and incremental pricing to ensure judicious use of water Revenue collection by the distributor
Financing
Leverage financial markets; Water.ORG to issue revenue bonds Revenues collected from the distributor to be utilized to service interest payments of Revenue Bonds Revenue bonds can be swapped with LIBOR bonds to increase liquidity Principal of the bonds to use to replicate the model in other cities
Consumers Get access to clean water at their door step Pay for 20 L cans of water Incremental charges to ensure judicious use Water Card system to monitor the consumers
Distributor Collect 20 L cans from the central facility Supply the cans door to door Collect money from the consumers Assured returns Commodity swaps with Water.org Fund
Water.org Commodity swaps: Embracing the risks associated with revenue collection Revenue bonds: Get more money in the systems Revenue bond swaps with LIBOR bonds to increase liquidity Principal used by Water.org to replicate the model in other cities
CONTENTS
EXISTING METHODS & Its FALLACIES KEY PROBLEM AREAS WHAT SHOULD A SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS MODEL ADDRESS?
ACTION PLAN Aiming for a phased implementation Our current project feasibility
18
Week Background Research - need analysis -source mapping -water analysis -project planning Negotiations -land acquisition -permits Plant set-up Recruitment Distribution set-up
Month 1 1 2 3 4
Month 2 1 2 3 4
Month 3 1 2 3 4
Month 4 1 2 3 4
Month 5 1 2 3 4
Month 6 1 2 3 4
Marketing
Test run
Today
SOURCE
11.4
23.4
Net Investment
Extraction
Storage
Other