Description
The author of this book is Sanford Berg and it is about water utility benchmarking. Berg explains that benchmarking is essential for those developing and implementing water policy, and that without benchmarking methodologies, policy-makers, regulators, and managers do not know where they have been or where they are. Berg also emphasizes the importance of performance evaluation and how it can bring about far more good than harm.
Benchmarking is essential for those developing and implementing water policy. If decision-makers do not know where they have been or where they are, it would seem to be impossible to set reasonable targets for future performance. Information on water/sewerage system (WSS) operations, investments, and outputs is essential for good management and oversight. This book is designed to help decision makers identify the data required for performance comparisons over time and across water utilities, to understand the strengths and limitations of alternative benchmarking methodologies, and to perform (or commission) benchmark studies. This book provides an overview of the strengths and limitations of different methodologies for making performance comparisons over time and across water utilities (metric benchmarking). In addition, it identifies ways to determine the robustness of performance rankings. Current benchmarking activities in Latin America, Asia, Africa, Central Europe/Asia, and OECD nations are summarized. Five basic approaches to benchmarking characterize current studies: * Core indicators and a summary or overall performance Indicator (partial metric method), * Performance scores based on production or cost estimates ( total methods), * Performance relative to a model company (engineering approach), * Process benchmarking, and * Customer survey benchmarking. This volume is of interest to the water professionals, water utility managers and senior staff of regulatory agencies, professionals in related government agencies, and consultants. The Associacao Brasileira de Agencias de Regulacao - ABAR, recognizes and applauds the merits of this book. We welcome the way Sanford Berg's underscores the critical need for key information about how service is affected by the efficiency of water and sewerage operations, investments, and incentives. Without benchmarking methodologies, policy-makers, regulators and managers do not know where they have been nor where they are, and it is impossible for them to establish feasible performance targets to be reached by operators. This book explains how water and sewerage services can be offered at affordable cost to all consumers-the main objective for citizens andpolicymakers. RICARDO PINTO PINHEIRO, President of Agencia Reguladora de Aguas, Energia e Saneamento Basico do Distrito Federal (ADASA), Brasil; and President of the Associacao Brasileira de Agencias de Regulacao (ABAR) 2010. Review: The Associacao Brasileira de Agencias de Regulacao - ABAR, recognizes and applauds the merits of this book. We welcome the way Sanford Berg's underscores the critical need for key information about how service is affected by the efficiency of water and sewerage operations, investments, and incentives. Without benchmarking methodologies, policy-makers, regulators and managers do not know where they have been nor where they are, and it is impossible for them to establish feasible performance targets to be reached by operators. This book explains how water and sewerage services can be offered at affordable cost to all consumers-the main objective for citizens andpolicymakers. RICARDO PINTO PINHEIRO, President of Agencia Reguladora de guas, Energia e Saneamento Basico do Distrito Federal (ADASA), Brasil; and President of the Associacao Brasileira de Agencias de Regulacao (ABAR) 2010. Berg has assembled a solid piece of work; not quite a basic text, a how-to manual, nor a guide for stakeholders in urban water utility performance, but a combination of all three. The author's familiarity of key drivers and problems in the water business is evident, relating to both developed and developing countries. Throughout the book, he makes insightful comments about strengths and weaknesses of all the available tools for measuring and comparing utilities. Evidently, maturely applied performance evaluation, despite some uncertainties, has the power to bring about far more good than harm, and Berg's book presents a strong case for practising evaluation, and makes a useful contribution to operators, regulators and policy