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Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC). Regulatory Framework in Bulgaria. 11 th Assembly Meeting 15 th March 2017,Grand Hotel Sofia, Sofia, Bulgaria. Multi-Sector regulator : Energy (Electricity, Central Heating, Gas): since 1999 Water : since 2006 Since March 2015:
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Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC) Regulatory Framework in Bulgaria 11th Assembly Meeting 15thMarch 2017,Grand Hotel Sofia, Sofia, Bulgaria
Multi-Sector regulator: • Energy (Electricity, Central Heating, Gas): since 1999 • Water: since 2006 Since March 2015: • Commission of 9 members • Chosen by the Parliament • Sub-panel for Electricity: Chairman, Lawyer, Economist, 4 Members with energy expertise • Sub-panel for Water: Chairman, Lawyer, Economist, 2 Members with water expertise • No of staff: 166 people (members + administration), not all appointed Water and Sanitation Directorate: • 26 people, not all appointed • 2 departments: Prices and Business plans, Control and Dispute Resolution • 2 regional units, not appointed Energy and Water Regulatory Commission
2000: Water Act • 2005: Regulation of Water and Sanitation Services Act • 2006: WS Services Quality and WS Services Price Regulation Ordinances • 2009: Changes in Water Act (Water reform beginning) • 2014: WS Sector Strategy 2014-2023 • 2016: NEW WS Services Quality and Price Regulation Ordinances • 1st regulatory period: 2006-2008 (3 years length, Cost Plus price regulation). • 2nd regulatory period: 2009-2013 (5 years length, Price Cap regulation). • Extension of the 2nd regulatory period: 2014-2016 due to reform. • 3rd regulatory period: 2017-2021 (based on the new ordinances). • Population: 7 364 570 people (2011) • 28 administrative regions • 265 local municipalities • 51 water companies (29 state-owned, 21 municipal-owned, 1 PPP) • Other public or private companies operate General Framework for Water and Sanitation (WS) Sector
Ministry of Environment and Water (MOEW) Water management on national level, National water strategy (2012), EU operational programs management, licenses for water taken and discharge, control on wastewater quality • Ministry of Regional Development and Public Works (MRDPW) Legislation framework for the WS sector, WS sector strategy (2014), coordination of water system management and planning and WA work, principal of the state-owned WSOs • Ministry of Health (MH) Control on the potable water quality • Water Associations (WA) WA manage the WS public assets in areas of more than 1 local municipality, assign contract with WSO, prepare investment programs and approve WSO business plan • Local Municipalities (LM) LMmanage the WS public assets in areas of only 1 municipality, assign contract with WSO, prepare investment programs and approve WSO business plan • Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC) EWRC regulates quality and prices of WS services • Water and Sanitation Operators (WSOs) WSOs operate the WS assets and supply WS services KEY STAKEHOLDERS IN WS SECTOR
OP “Environment 2007-2013”: Project Beneficiaries – Local Municipalities Water Act Changes from 2009: • Transfer of WS assets from balance-sheet of the WSOs to the State/Municipalities (public assets); • Definition of discrete areas of 51 WSOs (29 state-owned, 21 municipal-owned, 1 PPP) Other municipal or private WSOs still exists • Establishment of Water Association for the discrete areas of WSOs, that include more than one municipality for WS asset management • Contract between WA and WSO – 2 options: Water Act / Concession Act May 2014: New WS Sector Strategy (2014-2023), prepared by World Bank: • Investment achieved: < 200 MLN BGN/year, needed > 800 MLN BGN/year • Investment needs for 10 years: 11,7 BLN BGN • Consolidation of WSOs OP “Environment 2014-2020”: • Project Beneficiaries: Regional WSOs • Only regional projects will be financed • Waste water collection and treatment – only for agglomerations > 10,000 e.p. WS Sector Reform Energy and Water Regulatory Commission of Bulgaria, Regulators` Conference EXPO-APA, Bucharest, Romania, 16.06.2015
Regulation of Water and Sanitation Services Act: • No licensing regime. Only business plans approval • 15 main KPIs (developed in the ordinance), long-term levels • EWRC can either approve BP, or to require its change by the WSO • Price regulation: Cost Plus for first period, Price Cap/Revenue Cap for 5-years periods • BP approval: requirement for price approval NEW WS Services Quality Regulation Ordinance • KPIs: reduced to 30 from 76 • Long-term levels of KPIs set individual for each WSO • Separation of WSOs in 4 groups: large, middle, small, micro • Assessment of quality of information provided by WSOs • Assessment of performance on the levels of KPIs • Annual report from EWRC for BP implementation of each WSO and WS sector analysis NEW WS Services Price Regulation Ordinance • Consolidation of BP and Tariff approval in one procedure • Approval of the BP and approval of price for the 1st year • Setting prices for the next 4 years, corrected +I – X (Price Cap / Revenue Cap) • Financial stimulus / corrections if KPIs not achieved (pre-defined 5 KPIs for the regulatory period) • Option to apply coefficients in X after 3rd year if no investments are made / KPIs not achieved • Clear definition when BP/Tariffs can be updated during the regulatory period. Regulatory Regime
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