Argentina Launches Tender To Privatise 90% Of Water Utility Aysa
| Indicator | Reading |
|---|---|
| Stake on offer | 90% (state holding) |
| Employee retained stake | 10% (participatory ownership) |
| Reserve price | None (sin base) |
| Government estimated proceeds | ~$500 million |
| Concession term | 30 years (extendable by 10) |
| Service area | City of Buenos Aires + 26 municipalities |
| User base | ~11 million users (reaches 14+ million) |
| Water coverage / sewage coverage | 85% / 70% (mid-2025) |
| Bid submission deadline | August 27, 2026 |
Once bids are submitted, the evaluation period is three months. Both economic offers and technical credentials will be assessed. Resolution 543/2026, signed in April, had already approved the 30-year concession term and the transfer mechanics, anchoring the legal framework before the tender opened.
What political and legal risks remain?Public-service privatisations in Argentina carry a long memory. The 1993 sale of Aguas Argentinas to a Suez-led consortium ended with the 2006 renationalisation under Néstor Kirchner, citing investment failures and sanitary problems. Unions and Peronist-aligned constituencies have already signalled opposition to the tender. International arbitration risk is non-trivial: the original Aguas Argentinas case generated multiple ICSID claims that took years to resolve.
The 2027 Argentine election cycle is the other variable. A Peronist return to power could attempt to reverse the privatisation through legislative or judicial means. Strategic bidders will price political reversal risk into their offers, which is part of why the absence of a reserve price matters. AySA is also a parallel signal: alongside two mining-project entries into the RIGI large-investment regime announced this week, Argentina is presenting itself as open for international capital across multiple infrastructure verticals.
What should investors and analysts watch next?-
Bidder identities by August 12. Inquiries deadline will signal which international operators are seriously assessing the tender. Acciona, Veolia, Suez, Aegea, and Iguá are the names to watch.
Tariff path. Future tariff convergence will determine returns. Any pre-bid signals from the regulator ERAS on the medium-term tariff trajectory will materially affect bid pricing.
Political opposition. Union responses and provincial-level pushback from Peronist-controlled districts in Greater Buenos Aires could complicate operational handover.
Comparable benchmarks. The simultaneous Acciona-Paraíba result in Brazil and any concurrent Saneago-type tender outcomes will calibrate where international water capital sees value.
2027 election positioning. A Peronist nominee's public stance on AySA will be the most visible political risk indicator for institutional bidders.
Yes. The tender is explicitly national and international, open to foreign strategic operators with water and sanitation experience. The 10% retained by the employee participatory ownership programme does not block foreign control of the 90% stake.
What happens to tariffs?The concession framework requires tariff reviews every five years. AySA tariffs have been rising under monthly adjustments of up to 4% in early 2026 but remain below cost-recovery levels. The future operator must maintain economic-financial equilibrium without state assistance, meaning further tariff convergence is expected.
How does this compare to the 1990s Aguas Argentinas case?Materially different. Aguas Argentinas was a concession to a consortium led by France's Suez. The 2026 tender sells equity in the state-owned company itself, with a different legal vehicle, mandatory private investment without state subsidy, and explicit ICSID-aware framework drafting. Both, however, share the political reversal risk that Argentine privatisations have historically carried.
Connected CoverageThis story extends our Argentina-Milei reform cluster. The wider privatisation programme sits in our Ley Bases reform tracker. The RIGI mining entries this week are framed in our RIGI mining readout. The macro backdrop sits in our Argentina inflation and reserves analysis. The comparable Iberian water bid sits in our Acciona-Paraíba concession readout.
Reported by The Rio Times - Latin American financial news. Filed May 15, 2026.
Read More from The Rio Times
- Argentina Stock Market Rises 0.33% as Inflation Falls to 2.6%, Lowest in Five Months Argentina Inflation Slows to 2.6% in April, Ending 10-Month Streak JPMorgan Pitches Latin America as Refuge From AI Bubble Risk
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment