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PPPs: Panacea or Poison?. 2006 Speak Up Series Presentation by Canadian Taxpayers Federation. What is infrastructure?. Office of Infrastructure Canada includes:
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PPPs: Panacea or Poison? 2006 Speak Up Series Presentation by Canadian Taxpayers Federation
What is infrastructure? • Office of Infrastructure Canada includes: Railways, airports, transit systems, water treatment systems, schools, hospitals, street lighting, internet, email, parks, golf courses, green spaces, bike paths, museums, recreation facilities, as well as a healthy citizenry and workforce
Core Assets: Highways, bridges, roads Airports Schools Hospitals Discretionary Assets: Recreation centres Sports arenas Film theatres Tennis courts Soccer fields Types of Infrastructure
Infrastructure Status • Canada’s infrastructure gap $50-125 billion. • Capital asset management is not a priority for short-term governments.
The Dilemma • Roads, bridges and highways are needed, they cost money and Canadians are already taxed to the max. • Governments are looking for alternatives to traditional procurement. • Public-Private Partnerships or P3s
What are P3s? • Contract. • Government and private partner (or group of partners) to provide some good or service. • Output based performance measures and allocates project risks to the partner best able to manage or mitigate that risk.
Public-Private Partnership Contract Characteristics • On Budget • On Time • Quality Standards • Risk Transfer
D-B-F-O • Most P3’s are design, build, finance, operate. • Role of the private partner in the project. • A group of private partners come together as a consortium to fulfill the DBFO of the project.
35 Year Contract • Private Partner assumes the construction, financing, revenue, operation and maintenance risks. • In exchange for accepting such risks, the private partner receives a fixed annual service payment of $41.9 million (1992 dollars), which represents an estimated annual cost savings of $9.2 million. • The 13 km bridge was built in three and a half years and the 100 year service life. • The private partner assumes the risks in return for a stable, long-term revenue stream—the annual service payment.
How are P3s Different? • “Build it and buzz off” • Traditional procurement: prescriptive and project phases are truncated. • No incentives, no penalties, no outcome measurements.
P3 Checks & Balances • Confederation Bridge as an example. • The partner responsible for maintenance and operation of the bridge will act as a check on the design and builder of the bridge to ensure that maintenance costs are minimal and profit attainable. • Outcome based contracts ensure taxpayer interests are protected.
Why would the Private Sector be interested in P3s? • If done properly, most of the risks that governments do not handle well (budget, construction, material costs) are borne by the private sector, • So, what’s in it for them? • P3s usually include an annual service payment that offers a stable long term revenue stream.
Investment • Investment funds want to diversify from real estate and equity holdings. • CPP Investment Board expanding its infrastructure investments by $470 million this year alone. • MacQuarie Essential Assets Partnerships leads the world in P3 financing.
Why now? • Global expertise • International Success • Governments feeling the squeeze to provide more with less.
International Evidence • UK: started with Conservatives, largely expanded with current Labour government. • Public Finance Initiative: roads, hospitals, highways, bridges and schools. • 64 New hospitals worth $26 billion • 150 New schools with 250 more on the way.
Who else? Chile, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Italy, Spain, South Africa, Brazil, the United States. Singapore: water treatment, incineration, university student housing and IT infrastructure.
Where’s Canada? • Slow, many obstacles to progress. • $17 billion in capital spending just this year! • Some successes: Confederation Bridge, Fredricton-Moncton Highway, Calgary Courthouses, William Osler Health Centre, Charleswood Bridge in Manitoba.
BC: Leading the Country • 2002 Capital Asset Management Framework • Partnerships BC • 11 Major projects from mine clean-ups to bridges to ambulatory centres. • Abbotsford Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre
Contract Details • Labour cost increases absorbed by build partner PCL. • Financial penalties if not open on time. • Quality standards. • Performance based annual payment.
What about the rest of Canada? • Quebec is following BC. • Ontario infrastructure has recognized the need for the private sector. • Municipalities have been doing P3s for a long time. • New Brunswick P3 policy.
P3 Misnomers • Asset owned by private interest • Loss of public control • Private profit = higher costs • Annual service payment wholly additional cost • Transparency lost • Always cheaper • Always more expensive
Obstacles • Vested interest in status quo. • Ignorance on P3 operation. • Political footballs. • NDP in BC, advocated and criticized. • Stunted in ideological partisanship. • Will P3s win out?
P3s are not a Panacea • Only a contract. • Only as good as the tendering and provisions. • It is up to the public partner to be mindful of the taxpayers interest • Just because a project is a p3 doesn’t mean it’s a good idea.
Questions, comments welcome! Thanks for your attention! Email: smacintyre@telus.net