Litcius/Paper detail

Public policies as strategic asset management enablers: the case of Portugal

Helena Alegre, Renata Vargas Amaral, Rita Salgado Brito, Jaime Melo Baptista

2020H2Open Journal19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Urban water supply, wastewater and storm water services (globally, water services) are essential to society. The lack of permanent, safe, and respondent services has inevitable consequences on public health and the well-being of communities, on the economy, and on the environment. Goal 6 of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) recognizes this; failing to meet it necessarily affects the accomplishment of many of the other SDGs. Water services’ provision depends on expensive and long-lasting physical assets. Managing them strategically (e.g., according to the international standards on asset management, series ISO 55x and to the IWA recommendations on infrastructure asset management) is, therefore, fundamental for sustainable societies. Countries need to have sound public policies that enable asset management of water infrastructure. Portugal is a paradigmatic case. This paper elaborates on key government goals, on why asset management is important to meet them, and on key building blocks that a coherent public policy should consider in order to enable asset management of water infrastructure. It also presents how Portugal has been implementing this process, addressing the challenges that need to be overcome.

Topics & Concepts

BusinessAsset managementAsset (computer security)IT asset managementGovernment (linguistics)Sustainable developmentWater industryWater supplyOrder (exchange)Environmental planningEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental economicsFinanceEconomicsEngineeringComputer securityComputer sciencePolitical scienceEnvironmental scienceLinguisticsEnvironmental engineeringPhilosophyLawWater Systems and OptimizationPublic-Private Partnership Projects