ppps lessons from the last 18 months

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  • 8/14/2019 PPPs Lessons From the Last 18 Months

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    Any unauthorized disclosure, copying or distribution of the contents of this information is prohibited.

    PPP Days 2010PPPsLessons from the Last 18 Months

    Rajiv B Lall

    March 22, 2010

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    Full

    Privatization

    Works &

    Services

    Contracts

    Management

    ContractsOperation

    Concessions

    Build Operate

    Transfer

    Concessions

    Low High

    Extent of private sector participation

    Asset

    OwnershipPublic Public Public Public & Private Private

    Commercial

    Risk

    Public Public Private Private Private

    Typical

    Duration

    1-2 Years 3-5 Years 15-20 Years

    (depends on

    feasibility)

    20-25 Years

    (depends on

    feasibility)

    Indefinite

    Sectors Roads EPC;Sewerage

    Project

    Toll Stations City Bus Service Highways;Bus Terminals

    Telecom, Power,Waste Processing

    Private Sector Participation (PSP) in India

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    PPP trends

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    After establishing themselves in Roads, Power and

    Telecom, PPPs foray into challenging Urban Infrastructure.

    Contribution of private investment:

    National Highways: Close to half

    Power: Projected to double between 10th (01-06) and 11th (07-12) 5-Year

    plans and reach USD 40 billion. Telecom: 2/3rd of total investment in FY 08-09

    Use of both traditional and innovative PPP structures

    Traditional PPPhighways, urban public transportation, airports

    Innovativepower sector

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    Generation Transmission Distribution

    MoU based PPAs

    Competitive Bidding

    SPV for project

    development

    Ultra Mega Power Projects

    GoI/Power Finance Corporation

    PPA

    Tariff based

    competitive

    bid

    Utilities

    Private

    Player

    Central & State

    Utilities

    PSPInter state & intra state

    JV- Central/State Transmission

    Utility & private player

    oTala transmission system

    Independent Power

    Transmission Corporation -

    oPrivate sector awarded

    projects through tariff based

    bidding

    o2 schemes under Western

    Region System Strengthening

    Utilities

    Management

    Contract

    OperationConcession

    Privatization

    Metering

    Billing

    Collection

    Delhi

    distribution

    business

    Distribution

    Franchisee

    Bhiwandi

    Power

    Supply

    PPPs in all three components of Power

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    Huge upsurge in Road activity

    Source: NHAI (for Projects awarded from 1999 to March 2009); IDFC (rest)

    Of the 47,000 kms earmarked for PPP development under NHDP, about 14,000 kms has been

    bid out in 122 PPP Concessions across the country for a total investment of about Rs. 70,000

    crores.

    In FY 2010 we could do more in just PPP contracts than was awarded in EPC and PPP

    contracts together in the peak year of 2005-06 when 4,740 kms worth of road contracts were

    awarded.

    Significant private sector interest

    No ofProjects

    Length(km)

    ProjectCost (Cr.)

    From 1999 to March 2009: Projectsawarded 95 7,600 46,369

    April - Dec 2009: Projects awarded/bidswon 27 2,568 25,404

    Pipeline: Projects w/ likely bids 26 3,348 34,439

    Jan-Feb 2010: Projects in RFQ stage 24 2,459 20,091

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    The Port Sector PPP model has been very successful

    Share of Private Sector in Container Volume

    FY2002 FY2009

    PrivateTerminals

    Volume 2009

    Mumbai 90

    Kandla 138

    NSICT (DPW) 1,427

    GTI (APMM) 1,256

    Pipavav(APMM)

    195

    Mundra (DPW) 808

    Cochin (DPW) 260Tuticorin (PSA) 439

    Chennai (DPW) 1,143

    Vizag (DPW) 90

    Total (000 TEU) 6,054

    (000 TEUs)

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    Total TEUs: 2,885

    Private TEUs: 1,385Total TEUs: 7,848

    Private TEUs: 6,054

    (000 TEUs)

    Private

    52%

    Government

    48%

    Private

    77%

    Government

    23%

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    All major airports are PPP

    Notes:

    The investments refer to original investments and there have been significant

    cost overruns.

    Currently Mumbai cost is estimated around Rs. 9,800 Cr as per press reports.

    Government ownership is 26% in all 4 airports, in Delhi and Mumbai AAI holds

    26%. In Hyderabad and Bangalore, AAI has 13%, with respective State

    Government holding 13%. In addition to the Grant of 107 Cr, GoAP has also

    given an interest free loan of Rs. 315 Cr to the Hyderabad airport.

    Total

    Investment

    Govt

    grant/VGF

    Govt.

    Ownership

    Govt. share

    of revenue

    Land

    ContributionRs Cr Rs Cr % % Acres

    Mumbai 6000 - 26 38.7 1875

    Delhi 10225 - 26 45.99 5060

    Hyderabad 2920 107 26 4 5450

    Bangalore 2400 350 26 4 4000

    Airport

    Privatized airports

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    Of the 2009 passenger capacity of 110 million, 56% is handled by

    PPP airports.

    In 2009, PPP airports handled 70% of freight by value.

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    Urban PPP projects: Emerging models validating

    proof of concept

    Any unauthorized disclosure, copying or distribution of the contents of this information is prohibited.

    Urban Transportation:

    Intra city bus service (Indore)

    BRTS (Rajkot)

    MRTS (Mumbai Metro ONEVersova-Andheri-Ghatkopar Corridor)

    Bus terminals (Amritsar, Jalandhar)

    Water Distribution:

    Latur Water Distribution (infrastructure upgrade and water distribution)

    Karnataka Urban Water Supply Improvement Project (KUWASIP)

    Solid Waste Management:

    Rajkot solid waste processing plant (fully privately owned plant)

    Electricity Distribution:

    Bhiwandi

    Delhi

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    Electricity Distribution: Bhiwandi, Maharashtra

    Any unauthorized disclosure, copying or distribution of the contents of this information is prohibited.

    Description: Upgradation, operation and maintenance of the city

    electricity distribution network.

    PPP type: Performance linked O&M contract

    Project Structure:

    Government and private sector contribute to capex. Private sector

    purchases power from the government entity at a predeterminedrate.

    The private sector is responsible forplanning, O&M, metering, billing, collections, and need to achievea minimum reduction in T&D losses; and increase in collectionefficiency.

    Revenue Source:

    Revenues from users.

    AT&C loss reduction by 30%; DT failure rate by 32.5%, and DTlosses by over 40%

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    Bus Terminal, Amritsar, Punjab

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    Description: Renovation and expansion of existing inter-city terminal

    including construction of shops and amenities.

    PPP type: BOT

    Project Structure:

    Entire $47 million (43% equity, 57% debt) of construction costborne by the concessionaire.

    Government provided the land.

    Revenue Source:

    Parking charges from halting buses; lease rentals fromshops/offices; advertisement revenues.

    Actual revenues surpassed projections. For 1st 3 quarters of FY 09bus charges constituted 68% of revenues, lease rents 23% andadvertisement revenues 9%.

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    City Bus Service, Indore, Madhya Pradesh

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    Description: Operate and manage intra-city bus service.

    PPP type: O&M contract

    Project Structure:

    A SPV (Indore City Transport Services Limited - ICTSL) provided

    common infrastructure (such as bus stops and terminals). Concessionaires provided buses and operate them.

    Revenue Source:

    Fares (daily fares, and daily and monthly passes) and advertising

    revenues. Concessionaire retains 60% of the advertisement revenue, 80% of

    pass revenue, and the 100% of daily fare collection. Rest passedon to ICTSL. Concessionaire also pays monthly premium to ICTSL.

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    Karnataka Urban Water Supply Improvement

    Project

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    Description: 24x7 water supply in 5 demo zones of 3 cities(Belgaum, Gulbarga and Hubli-Dharwad)

    PPP type: Performance linked O&M contract

    Project Structure:

    Improvements to bulk water supply made by Karnataka Urban

    Water Supply and Drainage Board. Private sector upgraded the distribution network including

    installation of meters and tariff collection system.

    Revenue Source: Fixed plus performance-based payments.

    60% of remuneration is quarterly fixed payment and the

    remaining 40% linked to targets in the preparatory and O&Mperiods. A bonus of up to $1.2 million can be earned for betteringperformance targets or a maximum penalty of 10% ofremuneration paid for failure.

    Water loss reduction from 50% to 7%.

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    Waste Processing Plant, Rajkot, Gujarat

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    Description: 300 metric tonne (MT) waste processing plant

    PPP type: Build Own Operate (BOO)

    Project Structure:

    Land provided by the Rajkot Municipal Corporation (RMC). RMCalso delivers 300 MT of garbage per day.

    Private sector constructed the plant.

    Revenue Source: Sale of waste by-products.

    40 MT of bio fertilizer/compost; 70 MT of fluff (used as fuel); 15,000

    bricks, recycled plastics and metals. Plant utilizes 85-90% of waste.

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    Way forward.

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    Design & integrity of contracts

    Bid parameter Changes in contract

    Capacity Building: State and ULBs.

    I-CAP/IDFC/associated companies training programmes

    PPP cells in several states (such as AndhraPradesh, Haryana, Orissa and Tamil Nadu) and Railways

    Minimizing fiscal cost of projects

    Control increase in VGF

    Remove implementation impediments

    Clearances

    Land acquisition