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Private Water Players Reshaping Global Desalination; Poseidon Enters Top 25

3 Feb 2016  |  Press Release

BOSTON – The top 25 desalination system owners including both public and private companies – added a quarter (approximately 25%) of total capacity additions in 2015, representing an estimated 524,000 cubic meters per day. Private players took an active role in the desalination market in 2015, representing nine of the top 10 biggest movers by capacity additions, according to rankings just released by Bluefield Research.

With the commissioning of its Carlsbad, California desalination plant, Poseidon Resources became the first US company to rank among the top 25 private water owners globally, according to Bluefield Research. “Poseidon’s new position highlights the role of private players in desalination particularly as governments and utilities seek strategies to minimize the impact of diminishing water supplies,” according to Reese Tisdale, President of Bluefield Research.

Currently 85% of the top 25 players’ capacity is held in the Middle East-North Africa region, driven by state owned entity assets and independent water providers.  While the lion’s share of development activity will continue in this region, desalination will enable key players to scale their water portfolios in global hot spots like Chile, Mexico, India, and Singapore.

“Competition for new plant additions is intense.  There are so few large-scale water projects being tendered at any given time, we have seen a spike in geographic diversification among companies like Hyflux, GS Inima, RWL Water and Acciona Agua,” says Tisdale.

Looking forward, Bluefield foresees additional shifts though merger and acquisition. Several companies, including Israel Chemicals and Delek Group have hinted at divestment, and Spain-based Abengoa has entered into bankruptcy proceedings that could result in a sell-off of its ownership stakes in Ghana and Algeria.

Bluefield analyzes the ownership positions, geographies, and plants of the largest desalination owners by capacity, including government entities, pure-play water companies, Japanese trading houses, and infrastructure investors. These and other conclusions are found in Bluefield’s annual rankings – Global Desalination Ownership Rankings: Markets and Company Trends, Year-End 2015.