Hispanagua will be integrated into Canal de Isabel II, which will absorb all its staff
Hispanagua will be integrated into Canal de Isabel II, which will absorb all its staff
2020-10-21
The company supports Canal de Isabel II in services related to installing, inspecting and repairing meters
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Canal de Isabel II is the sole shareholder of this public limited company, with which it has signed management entrustment agreements
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All of the company’s employees will keep their jobs and will now be part of the staff of Canal de Isabel II
Hispanagua was founded as a public limited company in 1995, in order to support Canal de Isabel II in building, maintaining and operating infrastructure related to managing the water cycle, such as executing connections, installing and replacing meters, making various kinds of inspections and reports and repairing the network. Canal has been making management entrustments to carry out work of this kind, and the deadlines for executing some of these entrustments passed recently and for legal reasons could not be extended.
Canal de Isabel II will commission this work, on a temporary basis, from the public company Tragsa, so that it can continue providing the complete water cycle services that the company provides while guaranteeing employment rights.
The solution approved today by the Board of Directors of the public limited company, as a result of an analysis by independent experts and specialist advisers, entails a merger-by-absorption operation between Hispanagua (absorbed) and Canal de Isabel II (absorbing). This decision also contributes to the corporate simplification of its group of investee companies.
Canal de Isabel II was founded more than 165 years ago to supply water to the city of Madrid. Today, its more than 2,800 employees serve more than 6 million people in the region. It is a 100 % public-owned company, innovative, and internationally recognised for its management of the integrated water cycle.
It operates 13 reservoirs; 78 spring tappings; 14 drinking water treatment plants; 17,651 kilometres of conveyance and distribution network; 131 pumping stations for drinking water and 133 for waste water; 15,317 kilometres of sewage networks; 65 storm tanks; 157 waste water treatment stations; and 651 kilometres of regenerated water networks.
10 COMMITMENTS AS CLEAR AS MADRID'S WATER
As we want to speak to you clearly and offer you more solutions for your needs, we have taken another step in our relationship with you. We assume 10 commitments with which to continue providing you with a quality, fair and transparent service. 10 commitments as clear as the water of Madrid.
CANAL IN 60 SECONDS
The care of our rivers begins in thewaste water treatment plants and continues in our laboratory in Majadahonda, where we analyze the water that we return to the rivers. Julio Rodrigo explains what the analysis of treated waste water consists of and why it is so important for the environment.