Title: None
1PPP for Infrastructure Financing in the MENA
region Istanbul, November 8, 2006 Public Private
Partnerships
Nuran Durmaz
PwC
connectedthinking
2Agenda
- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
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- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
4What is a Public Private Partnership?
PPP is a generic term for the relationships
formed between public bodies and the private
sector with the aim of introducing private sector
resources and/or expertise to provide and deliver
public sector assets and services.
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- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
6Benefits of PPPs
Encourage the injection of private sector capital
Development of specialist skills
Private sector takes life cycle cost
Quality of service has to be maintained
Risks are allocated to the party best able to
manage or absorb
Force the public sector to focus on outputs and
benefits from the start
Budgetary certainty
The public sector pays when the services are
delivered
PPPs deliver value for money
7Opportunities
8Risks
- Partner selection
- Long-term connection (e.g. a change in
requirements) - Complexity and expenses of PPP-projects
- Protection of public interests
- Alibi competition
- Long-term connection (e.g. calculation of the
final compensation) - Diverging interests
- Long-term decision-making processes
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- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
10Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- Before pursuing a PPP approach, the public sector
authority should consider - Does sufficient private sector expertise exist to
warrant the PPP approach? - Does the public sector have sufficient capacity
and skills to adopt the PPP approach? - It is not always possible to transfer life cycle
cost risk - PPPs do not achieve absolute risk transfer
11Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- The public sector must recognise the
disadvantages of PPPs if they adopt a PPP
approach - PPPs imply a loss of management control by the
public sector - PPP procurement can be lengthy and costly
- The private sector has a higher cost of finance
- PPPs are long-term relatively inflexible
structures
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- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
13Basic Structure of a PPP-Project
14Summary of the PPP-Buying Process
PPP only in appropriate projects and if positive
effects are established!
15Five Phases of a PPP Procurement Project
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- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
17Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- Legislative impediments to transport PPPs
- National governments should continue to work to
identify and eliminate legal uncertainties and
impediments to PPP. - Procurement and State Aid issues
- Guidance on PPPs for the public sector should
include guidance on procurement procedures. In
our view, until the competitive dialogue is
proven as a PPP procurement route, such guidance
should include guidance on the availability and
use of the negotiated procedure as an
alternative. - Affordability issues
- A shadow private sector bid model should be
produced prior to starting the procurement so
that the authority has a realistic view of the
affordability of the project.
18Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- The speed and cost of PPP procurement
- The public authority should critically assess the
number of bidders and bid rounds necessary for a
particular project. It is often better to reach
financial close on a good deal rather than
negotiate ad nauseam for the best deal. A degree
of central government guidance to procuring
authorities might help such sensible decisions be
made. - Building a PPP Centre of Excellence
- There is clear value in having a central unit
giving guidance and policy on PPP issues within
each EU country. Developing an EU knowledge unit
would also be very effective, but it should only
attempt to give guidance and demonstrate
precedents, not impose a common EU-wide approach.
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- Definition
- Benefits, Opportunities Risks
- Preconditions for Successful PPPs
- About PPP Process
- Recurring PPP Issues and Solutions
- PwC- PPP Services
20PwC Thought Leadership
21PricewaterhouseCoopers Turkeywww.pwc.com/tr