John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 260-61, under the heading “Utilities, Public”.

Public utilities, such as gas, electricity, sewerage, garbage and water systems can be supplied by private enterprise. All the arguments put forward under Public Transport, Post Office and Roads apply equally to these utility services. Problems of duplication of systems would be overcome as soon as companies saw that all would benefit by eliminating duplication wherever possible. One company, for example, could lay a large main pipe to a certain area, and many other companies could connect into this, either leasing space (in the case of electricity or phone lines) or paying a fee for service in proportion to the volume of material transported (in the case of gas, water, sewage and even garbage). Disneyland in the U.S.A., for example, has a pneumatic garbage disposal system which operates all over the city like a giant vacuum cleaner.

Special mention should be made of the tremendous waste that occurs today with our government sewage disposal system. Not only does it pollute our beaches, it also makes no use of the valuable resources available. If the enormous methane that decomposing sewage produces was collected it would provide a valuable energy source for our towns and cities. Because government systems are not profit oriented, they do not even worry about wasting such a valuable resource. No private enterprise company could afford to throw such an opportunity away. It is also likely that the decomposed sewage would find use as a fertilizer, and large amounts of water would be reclaimed.

If private enterprise were allowed to operate, or even compete, much of the garbage collected would also be recycled. Metals, glass, paper and yet more methane and fertilizer could be reclaimed or produced. As resources run down, alternative energy supplies will become more and more important. Free market price movements would encourage this (see Conservation) and profit oriented utility companies would probably be the first to move into such things as solar heating, wind generators and tidal power systems. As electricity and gas became more expensive, this would be inevitable.

It is also highly likely that, by that time profit oriented private enterprise companies would have evolved a more efficient means of collecting garbage. There has to be a better way than men emptying tins into trucks. But who is going to find it (or be stupid enough to announce it when found) while local government has a legal monopoly?

Government bureaucracies are notoriously slow to change. It is only a public finally angered beyond tolerance that will force them to wake up and do something. More variety, diversity and experimentation would take place with competing private companies. While they did their best to put one another out of business, the public, for a change, could sit back and enjoy the benefits, instead of watching government put us out of business.