Post on 27-Mar-2015
Private sector participation in water Private sector participation in water infrastructureinfrastructure
OECD perspective OECD perspectiveCéline Kauffmann
OECD Investment Division, Directorate for Financial and Enterprises Affairs
OECD 2
Structure of the presentationStructure of the presentation
1. Recent trends
2.Checklist for Public Action
3. In country policy dialogues
OECD 3
Recent trends
OECD 4
Private participation in WSS: trends & factsPrivate participation in WSS: trends & facts
• Huge investment needs. But some cases of high profile cancellations & expected surge in investment has not fully materialised: water perceived as a risky sector => complexity, necessity to consider different policy areas
• Public ownership and management remain preponderant but most countries have had some experience & continue to seek the involvement of the private sector => important lessons from past experiences
• Increasing diversity of private actors: emergence of regional players, new businesses and blurring of distinction between public and private. Continuum of risk-sharing arrangements => new opportunities and challenges for public action
OECD 5
PSP in % of population, country levelPSP in % of population, country level% PSP Water % PSP Sewerage
Austria 7 0
Belgium 3 10
France 74Veolia: 39% - Suez: 19%
55Veolia: 26% - Suez: 18%
Germany 21 (RWE: 16%) 18
Hungary 29 27
Italy 40 (ACEA: 16%) 29
Lithuania 0 0
Netherlands 0 10
Norway 6 0
Poland 3 3
Sweden 1 1
Switzerland 0 0
UK 88(> 17 private utilities)
90
Sources: Pinsent Masons Water Yearbook 2009-2009, Veolia, Suez, ACEA, RWE
OECD 6
Recent market entrantsRecent market entrants
Categories ExamplesDiversification into water of co with core business elsewhere. Boosted by dynamism of BOT in treatment plants, concerns over resource scarcity.
• Desalinisation projects (GE, Siemens). Trading companies offering treatment systems, developing integrated services (Hyflux).• Increased involvement by construction firms and big users such as beverage and mining companies (Nestlé, Coke, Penoles)
Expansion by established water operators
• Local private operators taking over other projects internally or externally • Public companies acting in a commercial fashion and venturing into market (Vitens + Rand Water in Ghana, ONEP in Cameroon).
Joint venture: Combining public & private capacities
Saltillo (Mexico) - SIMAS is a mixed company constituted by the municipality & Agbar.
Graduation of small-scale APWO (Uganda)
OECD 7
Contractual arrangements (G/P)Contractual arrangements (G/P)Service contract
Management contract
Affermage / Lease
Concession BOTJoint
ventureDivestiture
Asset ownership
G G G G P/G G/P P
Capital investment
G G G P P G/P P
Commercial risk
G G Shared P P G/P P
Operations / Maintenance
G/P P P P P G/P P
Contract duration
1-2 yrs 3-5 yrs 8-15 yrs 25-30 yrs 20-30 yrs Infinite Infinite
Source of retribution of operator
Municipality
Municipality: fee is fixed or
based on performance.
Operator collects user fees. Lease: fee paid by municipality Affermage:
revenue shared
Users Municip. Users Users
Occurrence 1991-2009 (WB PPI
Database)
Not part of scope
Together: 111 of 715 projects
278 of 715 projects
294 of 715
projects
Not a separate category
32 of 715 projects
OECD 8
Complexity of the sectorComplexity of the sector
Capital intensive, high fixed costs, long-term investments, technology-specific, inelastic demand, low returns and important asymmetry of information.
Monopolistic
Essential for lifeBasic need, important externalities on health, gender equality and environment. Essential input for business.
RiskyCommercial risk, contractual risk, forex risk, sub-sovereign risk, risk of capture by vested interest. Combination amplifies the risks.
Many stakeholders and segmentation
Public sector, communities, users, employees, private sector, donors, NGOs. Responsibilities split between different ministries and across national, regional & local authorities.
OECD 9
OECD Checklist for Public Action
OECD 10
OECD OECD Checklist for Public ActionChecklist for Public Action
• A tool for policy dialogue in support of governments’ efforts to build a shared understanding of risks and opportunities related to PSP in water infrastructure and harness more effectively private sector contributions.
• A tool to assess countries’ PSP framework conditions, allowing the identification of country-specific challenges.
• Building on the OECD Principles for Private Sector Participation in Infrastructure and experience of 30 developing and emerging countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America + practices in OECD countries.
• Developed through a consultation process: with NEPAD in Zambia (Nov. 2007), with the ADB in the Philippines (March 2008), with IMTA in Mexico (Sept. 2008).
OECD 11
5 areas of consideration for public action5 areas of consideration for public action
• Deciding on nature and modalities of private sector participation
– Informed & calculated choice, project financial sustainability, tailor-made model, preserving fiscal discipline
• Enhancing the enabling institutional environment
– Enabling environment, fight against corruption, competition, access to financial market
• Developing goals, strategies, capacities at all levels of government
– Consultation, empowerment of authorities, clear and broadly understood objectives & strategies, cross-jurisdiction cooperation
OECD 12
• Making the public-private co-operation work in the public interest
– Communication, disclosure of information, fair & transparent contract awarding, output-based, regulatory bodies, renegotiations, dispute resolution
• Encouraging responsible business conduct
– Responsible business conduct, good faith & commitment, integrity, communication, responsibility for social consequences
Cont’dCont’d
OECD 13
In country policy dialogues
OECD 14
Draft assessments under preparationDraft assessments under preparation
• Egypt, Russia, Lebanon, Mexico and Tunisia
• As part of on-going national dialogues, in partnership with national authorities & other institutions (GWP-Med)
• Building on:
– answers to the Checklist-based Questionnaire
– publicly available material (academic papers, government information, OECD & other organisations’ publications)
– Bilateral interviews during fact-finding missions
• Structure: overview of recent developments and identification of areas for consideration by government.
OECD 15
ChecklistChecklist: Enhancing the enabling environment: Enhancing the enabling environment
• Clarifying public sector responsibilities:
Principle 5. A sound and enabling environment for infrastructure investment, which implies high standards of public and corporate governance, transparency and the rule of law, including protection of property and contractual rights, is essential to attract the participation of the private sector.
• Developing sound regulatory framework:
Principle 17. Regulation of infrastructure services needs to be entrusted to specialised public authorities that are competent, well-resourced and shielded from undue influence by the parties to infrastructure contracts.
OECD 16
Institutional framework under developmentInstitutional framework under development
•Egypt: the regulatory framework is lagging behind
– PPP Law just ratified by Parliament in June 2010.
– Water Law (defining the responsibilities of regulatory body), is under development with no clear perspective for ratification.
•Russia: legislation in transition, PSP in stagnation since 2006
– Amendments to the Concession Law: sector-specific provisions, asset registration & transition of old leases, competitive bidding
– New tariff regulation
– Timeline of technical regulations under development unclear
•Lebanon: the legislative framework is not in place yet, current legislation does not allow PSP in the water sector, but draft laws are under development or approval.
OECD 17
ChecklistChecklist: Goals, strategies & capacities at all levels: Goals, strategies & capacities at all levels
Principle 10. Empower authorities responsible for privately-operated infrastructure projects. Authorities responsible for privately-operated infrastructure projects should have the capacity to manage the commercial processes involved and to partner on an equal basis with their private sector counterparts.
Principle 11. Clear and broadly understood objectives and strategies. Strategies for private sector participation in infrastructure need to be understood, and objectives shared, throughout all levels of government and in all relevant parts of the public administration.
OECD 18
Building administrative capacityBuilding administrative capacity
• Egypt: new assignment of responsibilities but lim. capacity
– Limited decentralisation of responsibilities.
– Establishment of a PPP Central Unit within the Ministry of Finance. Development of sector-specific tools.
– Support from high level foreign consultants.
• Russia: capacity and incentives at municipal level
– Municipalities have responsibilities for infrastructure investment programmes, setting tariffs, registering assets but incentives and/or capacity are often not in place
– Creation of a PPP Centre within VEB, network of regional entities
• Lebanon: who does what and who is responsible for capacity building?
OECD 19
ChecklistChecklist: Ensuring sustainability: Ensuring sustainability
•Informed and calculated choice:
Principle 1. The choice by public authorities between public and private provision should be based on cost-benefit analysis taking into account all alternative modes of delivery, the full system of infrastructure provision, and the projected financial and non-financial costs and benefits over the project lifecycle.
•Financial sustainability of infrastructure projects:
Principle 2. No infrastructure project, regardless of the degree of private involvement, should be embarked upon without assessing the degree to which its costs can be recovered from end-users and, in case of shortfalls, what other sources of finance can be mobilised.
•Preserve fiscal discipline and transparency:
Principle 4. Fiscal discipline and transparency must be safeguarded, and the potential public finance implications of sharing responsibilities for infrastructure with the private sector fully understood.
OECD 20
Sources of Finance for WSSSources of Finance for WSS
OECD 21
Financial sustainability of PPPsFinancial sustainability of PPPs
• Egypt: scalability & long-term affordability for governments
– Limited scope of PPPs (demo BOTs for big projects).
– Demand risk born by the public sector, sovereign guarantee
– Forex risk & limited development of local financial market and banking sector.
• Russia: establishing economic tariff regulation to balance diverse interests
– Important potential market, but tariff regulation has been criticised as providing limited incentive to invest and raising important regulatory risk.
• Lebanon: low cost recovery and high public debt.
OECD 22
ChecklistChecklist: Making the cooperation work: Making the cooperation work•O
utput/performance based contracts:
Principle 16. The formal agreement between authorities and private sector participants should be specified in terms of verifiable infrastructure services to be provided to the public on the basis of output or performance based specifications. It should contain provision regarding responsibilities and risk allocation in the case of unforeseen events.
•Consultation with stakeholders:
Principle 9. Public authorities should ensure adequate consultation with end-users and other stakeholders including prior to the initiation of an infrastructure project.
•Create a competitive environment:
Principle 7. The benefits of private sector participation in infrastructure are enhanced by efforts to create a competitive environment, including by subjecting activities to appropriate commercial pressures, dismantling unnecessary barriers to entry and implementing and enforcing adequate competition laws.
OECD 23
The accountability mechanismsThe accountability mechanisms
•Egypt: limited culture of performance based assessment; efforts to develop dispute resolution mechanisms.
– Just starting the development of monitoring indicators
– 3-step dispute resolution mechanism
•Russia: strengthening accountability in the public interest
– Fighting corruption through limiting discretion, revising unrealistic regulation and establishing appropriate incentives
– Improving the information base and monitoring
– Strengthening the competitive environment
– Supporting accountability towards the end-users
•Lebanon: development of performance indicators.
OECD 24
Recent developments confirm need for strong Recent developments confirm need for strong focus on framework conditionsfocus on framework conditions
• Demand for clearer forms of public support and risk-sharing arrangements
– High level cancellations => less risk taking
– Impact of financial crisis: “the age of easy money has ended”
– Important needs and competition for financing (across countries and across sectors)
• Low financial sustainability is a key bottleneck
– Mixes of 3Ts that do not cover costs
– Inadequate tariff regulation
• Change in “procurement” culture – new tools in the hands of policy makers to ensure accountability
OECD 25
Considerations for the future Considerations for the future an agenda for future workan agenda for future work
• Making reform happen: mix of policy tools and institutional arrangements in support of implementation
• Ensuring financial sustainability: understanding the dynamics of the 3Ts, the role of repayable sources of finance, the importance of Strategic Financial Planning
• Deep change in service delivery culture: democratic aspirations, decentralisation and territorial development are making users participation a priority. How to do this?
OECD 26
Thank YouThank You
www.oecd.org/daf/investment/waterwww.oecd.org/daf/investment/water
celine.kauffmann@oecd.org
Visit our website:
Contact:
Directorate for Financial and Enterprise AffairsInvestment Division