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...high of $5.6 billion in 2002 to $4.2
billion. That slippage alone accounted for practically all
of the difference for the Top 200 between 2002 and 2003.
Not to worry, says Andrew Seidel,
president of the American arm of Frances Veolia Group,
formerly Vivendi S.A. While French authorities were moving
in on former Vivendi Chairman Jean-Marie Messierhe was
arrested June 20 in connection with alleged stock manipulationVeolia
was moving on.
In the past two years, the French
parent company has been divesting itself of several non-core
U.S. Filter assets that Seidels predecessor, Richard
J. Heckman, rolled up in the 1990s before Vivendi took over.
These include Filtration & Separation, Plymouth Products,
Everpure and Culligan.
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| REPOSITIONING
With public works spending tight, many firms are concentrating
on industrial client base. (Photo courtesy of Montgomery
Watson Harza) |
Veolias annual report, filed
in May, shows a $2.7-billion write-down in 2003 for the sale
of U.S. Filter assets. Veolias dispersal of U.S. Filters
water and wastewater works business reduces the North American
presence to 7.5% of the company.
Yet another dramatic change is
in store. Frankfurt-based Siemens AG expects to close its
$993-million purchase of U.S. Filters water systems
and services division by July 31. The unit generates about
$1.2 billion in annual sales.
I think itll be very
good for U.S. Filter, Seidel predicts. Overall,
water just remains a great market. What other market grows
at 3 to 4%, regardless of economic conditions? He points
to the 2002 U.S. EPA study that identified a $535-billion
gap in water and waste-water funding over the next 20 years
(ENR 10/14/02 p. 12).
The race toward public-private
partnerships has cooled, dropping from a 15% annual growth
rate to a still respectable 8 to 10%, Seidel notes. For various
reasons, several municipal systems have scrapped privatization
deals, although the renewal rate for privately operated systems
approaches 100%, he says. Major players such as Suez, CH2M
Hills OMI, Thames Water and Veolia have taken
a step back to focus more closely on existing operations,
Seidel says.
The U.S. market is
so fragmented and so political, says Richard Kuchenrither,
senior vice president for Black & Veatch. This doesnt
fit the British model, where the entire country is divided
among five or 10 companies. There are 15,000 wastewater systems
and another 15,000 water systems and foreign competitors
are likely to find the going tough, he says.
Black & Veatchs annual
revenue slipped 5% in 2003 to $665 million, which dropped
it one spot on the overall list to No. 13. A healthy backlog
is bolstered by major jobs such as the Lake Pleasant design-build-operate
water treatment plant in Phoenix and expansion of Chicagos
Stickney Water Reclamation Plant. Greeley and Hansen (No.
84) and Black and Veatch are designing a master plan to expand
the 65-year-old 1,200-mgd wastewater treatment plant.
High-profile work with major clients
is backstopped by a broad customer base among mid-range customerssystems
that serve populations of around 500,000. Kuchenrither says
many big cities are spreading their work out over 15-year
periods and others are opting to fight consent decrees to
delay mandated improvements for as long as legally possible.
The company is growing business not through acquisitions,
but organically. Were on track for double-digit
growth this year, he says.
CH2M Hill Cos. held the No. 3 spot
overall, adding nearly 7% in annual environmental revenue.
Over half the firms business is in the water and wastewater
treatment sectors. It trails only U.S. Filter in each of those
categories. In the domestic market, the drivers are population
growth, aging infrastructure, security concerns since 9/11
and emerging water-quality issues such as trace pollutants
and endocrine disruptors, says Thomas Searle, president of
CH2M Hill Cos.s water group. Prolonged drought also
is putting pressure on water systems in the Southwest and
parts of the Southeast and last summers blackout raised
questions about reliability, he adds.
The recent economic turnaround
has not trickled down to the water and wastewater sectors.
With an overriding national perception of laissez-faire compliance
and no major regulation on the horizon, big systems
have not yet shown a willingness to invest in upgrades,
says Searle. Were seeing a just-in-time approach
of staged phasing of improvement [and] were also seeing
substantial project delays between the award announcement
and the notice to proceed.
In a relatively flat domestic market,
CH2M Hill is trying to capture a larger market share by diversifying
project delivery offerings. Were willing to provide
design-build, DBO, DBOFwhatever it takes, says
Searle. Were willing to take an equity stake in
a project if thats required [and] were concentrating
on high-end programs...to prevent profit margins from eroding.
Were going to have
a pretty flat year, says Robert Uhler, president and
CEO of MWH. It moved up to No. 6 from No. 10 last year despite
a 1.3% slip in revenue to...
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