July 2018 No. 73 Vol. 7
Newsline
States Request $82.2 Billion for Water Infrastructure
New data shows that requests to fund water and wastewater infrastructure projects through the EPA-administered State Revolving Fund (SRF) have increased 25 percent since last year. For the 2017-2018 fiscal year, $26.9 billion has been requested for drinking water and $55.3 billion for clean water (wastewater), according to new state-by-state project analysis from Bluefield Research.
“Outside of revenue generated from customer billing, the SRF program represents a bedrock source of funding for municipal utilities, reaching almost 20 percent of their capital expenditure needs,” said Erin Bonney Casey, research director for Bluefield. “Although, the $67 billion difference between requested and awarded funding signals the looming financial challenge for system owners.”
This year, $14.4 billion was committed to SRF loans and grants, which include federal allocations, state matching funds and state-specific financing programs for water infrastructure projects. Of awarded funds, treatment system projects received the lion’s share – 36 percent of drinking water projects and 53 percent of clean water projects. Other types of projects include transmission and distribution networks, sewer collectors and interceptors, water or stormwater storage, water reuse and stormwater overflow corrections.
Bluefield’s annual analysis of the SRF identifies projects and systems that request these low interest loans and grants to fund capital improvements. The data also demonstrates high variability from state-to-state that is underpinned by more local factors:
Ohio dominates the funding allocations, because it has committed to fund all eligible projects, totaling $2.2 billion in 2017.
Illinois issues bonds to augment the available money from state revolving funds.
California and Texas voted in financing to address drought concerns in 2014 and 2013, respectively, which has boosted the size of SRF resources.
Tennessee and other states have not fully matched federal funding, therefore leaving funding on the table in the short and long term.
The current program is already oversubscribed, with only 17 percent of the total requests receiving funding – loans or grants. Further, only a small percentage of municipalities leverage the program. Of the approximate 49,000 drinking water and 18,000 wastewater systems in the U.S., 3,911 drinking water and 3,730 wastewater systems that have requested funding this fiscal year.
“The noted success of the SRF program has not been overlooked in Washington,” said Casey. “In light of what else is happening in D.C. to tackle the nation’s infrastructure challenges and roll-backs of EPA regulations, the SRF program has remained intact amid budget reviews and cuts that have impacted other programs.”
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Bluefield Research, (617) 910-2540, bluefieldresearch.com
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