Green Party leader Eamon Ryanhas said that three crucial changes and decisions made by the Coalition in setting up Irish Water may potentially cost the taxpayers millions of euro.
Mr Ryan has said the Fine Gael and Labour Coalition has three fundamental questions to answer on how the new utility was conceived and came into being.
The first was the decision by the new Government in March 2011 to change the tender offering consultancy companies the chance to assess the best model for providing water services in Ireland.
Mr Ryan said the original tender was drawn up while Fianna Fáil and the Greens were in power and sought assessments of different models. A single utility company was one possibility, but there were also others, including a number of regional water companies, each based in a particular river basin.
However, when the new Coalition came into power the terms of the tender were changed, with the only option being that of a single company.
Tender
“Why was the tender for the independent assessment changed so that there was no analysis of whether centralising water services was a good idea in the first place?” asked Mr Ryan.
The second question raised by Mr Ryan, a former minister for energy and natural resources, was why the Government rejected the main finding of consultants PWC, commissioned to undertake the assessment. The report recommended that the new company be a stand-alone utility and not form part of an existing utility.
The Government did not follow this advice, instead granting Bord Gáis Éireann the right to set up the new utility as a separate company within the group.
Source: The Irish Times