GreenTechSupport GTS 井上創学館 IESSGK

GreenTechSupport News from IESSGK

news20100808gdn1

2010-08-08 14:55:00 | Weblog
[News] from [guardian.co.uk]

[guardian.co.uk > Business > Investing]

Water funds tempt investors with booming growth
Investors look to water funds as alternative to volatile credit and equity markets, with water-technology businesses fuelling growth


Elena Moya
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 8 August 2010 15.40 BST
Article history

{Water funds are tempting investors, a surge fuelled by the water-technology business as utilities need to invest in new pipe work. Photograph: Frank Baron/Guardian}

Funds that invest in water are booming, as investors shy away from volatile credit and equity markets, and from commodities that have already reached dizzying heights.

Global water indices have gained about 9% so far this year, compared with a 4% drop of the FTSE 100 index, according to Guardian research. Water funds have proliferated to more than 100 over the past few years.

Growth is mostly fuelled by water-technology businesses, as utilities need to invest in the quality of pipes to reduce waste, investors say. The average person in the UK uses around 150 litres of water every day and of this around one third is wasted, according to Waterwise, an NGO.

"Water is scarce, and scarcity is a technology question," said Klaus Käempf, who manages the Sarasin Sustainable Water Fund in Basle, Switzerland.

The fund has gained 8.7% so far this year, after rising 33% in 2009. Success has attracted more investors, lifting the fund's size to €113m, from €33m at the end of 2008.

Geneva-based Pictet & Cie runs the biggest and oldest water fund, with €2.38bn under management. The portfolio, which is invested in water-related stocks around the world, has gained 24% over the past 12 months, and 9% so far this year. Almost half of the fund is allocated to the US, where municipal water companies such as Aqua America or California Water Service, are publicly traded.

The fund has dropped companies that produce water bottles since bottled-water consumption has fallen in developing countries over the past few years – amid high transportation and other costs.

Some of its top-performing holdings include Roper Industries, a US water meter maker, which has gained 20% this year, and Hyflux, a Singaporean water treatment company.

Asset managers say water investment is not a short-term bubble, or a safe alternative whose value may plunge when equity and credit markets stabilise and investors return to them. Water companies, – some of which are heavily regulated – have long-term investment horizons of as long as 30 years, to guarantee returns, investors say.

Demand is rising, since less than 1% of the planet's water is drinkable, and consumption increases as economies develop and become more affluent.

The UN estimates that global water requirements will grow by 40% by 2020. Every year millions of people, most of them children, die from diseases associated with inadequate water supply, sanitation, and hygiene, according to the UN. Every day 3,900 children die because of dirty water or poor hygiene, the World Health Organisation says.

Water demand is also pushed by technology and farming companies, as about 70% of fresh water is used in agriculture, Käempf said. Heavy water users also include chipmakers, such as ST Microelectronics, in Switzerland, he said.

Financial companies such as Janney Capital Markets in the US and Standard & Poor's have developed water indexes to track the sector. The S&P Global Water Index, for instance, has gained 9.5% over the past 12 months. Its holdings include Geberit AG, a German developer of sanitary technology. Britain's United Utilities, Severn Trent and Pennon Group are also part of the portfolio.

High returns are making investors pour more money into water funds. ETF Securities says that its water Exchange Traded Fund has $9m under management, a ten-fold increase from when it started in November 2008.


[guardian.co.uk > News > World news > Pakistan]

Monsoon rains threaten to worsen Pakistan's flood crisis
Authorities evacuate people living along swollen rivers as further downpours hamper efforts to help millions already affected


Associated Press in Sukkur
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 8 August 2010 14.17 BST
Article history

{Children displaced by flooding in north-west Pakistan attempt to protect their belongings from renewed downpours. Photograph: A Majeed/AFP/Getty Images}

Pakistani authorities evacuated people living alongside expanding rivers today as forecasts predicted further heavy rain that could worsen the country's flood crisis.

Officials estimate that as many as 13 million people have been affected by the worst flooding in the country's 63-year history. About 1,500 people have died, most of them in the north-west, the hardest-hit region.

Monsoon rains began about two weeks agoand have washed away roads, bridges and many communications lines, hampering rescue efforts by aid organisations and the government. The downpours have grounded many aircraft trying to rescue people and ferry aid, including six helicopters manned by US troops on secondment from Afghanistan.

Confidence in the national government's ability to cope has been shaken by the decision of the president, Asif Ali Zardari, to visit the UK and France amid the crisis.

Floodwaters receded somewhat on Friday in the north-west, but further torrential rain in the evening and early yesterday again swelled rivers and streams. Pakistani meteorologist Farooq Dar said heavy rains in Afghanistan were expected to make things even worse into today as the swollen waters of the Kabul river flowed into the region.

That will likely mean more woes for Punjab and Sindh provinces as well, as the torrents flow east and south.

An Associated Press reporter saw many people walking on foot and travelling in lorries towards safer places in Sindh, where tens of thousands have already fled and floodwaters have overcome many villages. Some Pakistanis, however, refused to leave their crops and homes.

"Let the flood come. We will live and die here," said Dur Mohammed, 75, who lives in a mud brick home in Dadli village.

Mohammed was one of 250 people in Dadli resisting evacuation, even though floodwaters had already reached the embankments of the Indus river less than a mile away. Many feared that if they left and the floods never came, their household items would be stolen.

Pakistan's military said it had rescued more than 100,000 people from flood-affected areas so far, with 568 army boats and 31 helicopters used for the operation.

The army was also providing food and tents to survivors, a statement said.

Some 30,000 Pakistani soldiers are rebuilding bridges, delivering food and setting up relief camps in the north-west, which is also the main battleground in the fight against al-Qaida and the Taliban. Foreign countries and the UN have donated millions of dollars to the aid effort.

Nato said in a statement today that Pakistan had asked for help dealing with the floods. The alliance said it would help co-ordinate assistance offered by members and partner nations, including aid transport.

Islamist charities are also helping in the relief effort, including the Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation, which western officials believe is linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba. Lashkar is the militant group blamed for the deadly 2008 attacks in India's financial capital of Mumbai.

The Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation says it is running 12 medical facilities, providing cooked food for 100,000 people every day, and plans to open shelters soon.

最新の画像もっと見る

post a comment