Contracting for Public-Private Partnerships United Nations Development Programme Special Unit for...
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![Page 1: Contracting for Public-Private Partnerships United Nations Development Programme Special Unit for South-South Cooperation Training Course Wes Strickland,](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062621/551beca0550346b4588b63d7/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Contracting forContracting forPublic-Private PartnershipsPublic-Private Partnerships
United Nations Development ProgrammeUnited Nations Development ProgrammeSpecial Unit for South-South CooperationSpecial Unit for South-South Cooperation
Training Course Training Course
Wes Strickland, Esq.Wes Strickland, Esq.Hatch & ParentHatch & Parent
Arlington, VAArlington, VASeptember 18, 2006September 18, 2006
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Outline
I. Overview of contract types
II. General contract terms
III. Special contract terms for each structure
IV. Final observations
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I. Overview of Contract Types• Operation and maintenance (O&M)• Design build operate maintain (DBOM)• Design build finance operate (DBFO)• Build own operate (BOO)• Build own operate transfer (BOOT)• Buy build operate (BBO)• Privatization
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Key Structural Questions• What is the partnership project?• In what jurisdictions will the project exist?• Under what legal authority does the public partner
undertake the project?• What type of entity is the private partner?• Are there pre-existing assets being contributed?• Are new assets being constructed?• Who will own the assets?• What capital resources are available to the partners?• Who will provide any needed capital and how?
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Key Structural Questions (2)• What will the private partner do?• What payment will the private partner receive?• How will the private partner’s success be measured and
rewarded (or punished)?• How will taxes be impacted? (after tax analysis)• How long will the partnership last?• What types of outside permits/approvals will be required?• Who is the end user, the public partner or the public at
large?– “Sponsored” (public at large) or “managed” (public partner)
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Basic Structural Principles• PPPs are partnerships, and each partner should
act in good faith to further the purposes of the partnership
• Good partnerships are based on clear understandings of each partner’s role
• Tasks should be assigned to each partner according to their ability
• Compensation should be based on each partner’s tasks and assumption of risk
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O&M Contracts
• Utilized when public sector partner already owns an asset for which it needs management services
• Public partner maintains ownership of initial assets
• Private partner provides specific services for a fee
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DBOM/DBFO Contracts
• Utilized when a new asset needs to be designed, built and possibly financed
• Like O&M contract, but adding capital component
• Allows access to private capital markets• Higher risk for private partner than O&M• May avoid some public labor force issues
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Concessions• Utilized when public partner desires to have private
partner take total responsibility for delivering service directly to the public, subject to contractual or regulatory terms– Utilities– Transportation infrastructure, e.g., toll roads, bridges, airports
• BOO, BOOT or BBO• “Franchise”• Affermage contracts
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Triangular Structures (2)
Private Partner forO&M/CapitalComponents
Public Partner Public Partner
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Triangular Structures
Public Partner
Private Partner forO&M Component
Public orPrivate Partner forCapital Component
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II. General Contract Terms
• Contracting to meet basic structural principles
• Basic terms of PPPs
• Jurisdictional limitations
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Contracting to ImplementBasic Structural Principles
• Include all potential tasks in contract• Define each task as specifically as possible, and the
duties of each partner to accomplish that task• Define all conditions that must be met prior to each
duty arising, or that might cause a duty to cease• Define success and what happens based on success
or failure– Reward/punishment– New strategy
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Outline of Basic PPP Contract• Recitals• Definitions• Agreement clauses
– Project definition, duties of the partners– Performance standards, covenants and monitoring– Payments– Risk allocation– Security for performance
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Outline of Basic PPP Contract (2)
• Agreement clauses (cont.)– Term and termination– Wrap-up upon termination– Delay and force majeure– Indemnification– Affiliate guarantees– Dispute resolution
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Outline of Basic PPP Contract (3)
• Agreement clauses (cont.)– Environmental liability– Permitting responsibility
• Acquisition• Violations and fines
– Relations with public end users– Default
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Outline of Basic PPP Contract (4)
• Conditions– Occurrence of milestones in larger public
planning efforts– Environmental studies– Economic studies– Cross-performance conditions
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Outline of Basic PPP Contract (5)
• General provisions– Representations and warranties– Insurance– Subcontracts– Confidentiality– Choice/conflict of laws– Notices
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Not in PPP Contracts• Public partner ceding power to exercise eminent
domain for compensation– “Just compensation”– Anti-expropriation rules in international law– Right to reclaim concession during term
• Public partner transferring critical assets– Natural resources, e.g., water, gas– Usufructuary rights– Agency theory
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Jurisdictional Limitations• Each nation and subnational jurisdiction may
impose legal constraints on PPP terms• Some countries have comprehensive PPP laws
– Brazil 2004– Mexico 2003
• Types of limitations– Term– Investment amounts or ratios
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Organizational Laws• Awareness and contract implications• Enabling laws of public partner• Franchises required by private partner• Foreign company rules
– Local jurisdiction entity– Parent guarantees– Affiliate transaction rules– Handling of nonregulated business
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III. Special Contract Termsfor Each Structure
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O&M Contracts
• Description of tasks to be performed by private partner
• List of public assets available for use– Initial condition– Final condition– Capital improvements during term: either
party by contract
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O&M Contracts (2)• Expense for agency rather than debt• Payment by public partner
– Scope of activities– Alternatives: cost plus, formula, formula with cap,
regulated rates (see concession)– Performance standards to adjust basic payments both
up and down– Performance standards affect risk and therefore
required compensation for a private partner
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O&M Contracts (3)
• Transition– Services– Labor force
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DBOM Contracts• Define the asset to be built based on the public need
– Public partner review and approval– Cost approval / financing
• Payments– Service component like O&M– Additional payments for adequate return on capital component
• Timeline for completion– Building for growth– Payment for insufficient demands
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Concession Contracts• Define private partner duties by public service to
be provided• Exclusive or nonexclusive• General design and service standards
– More limited review than other types of PPPs– Commercially reasonable service
• Water example: pressure, water quality• Power example: voltage variation, outages
– Objective, generally accepted standards
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Concession Contracts (2)• Compensation
– Paid from members of the public– Public subsidies for necessary services
• Minimum income guarantees (temporary or permanent)• Public capital contributions (priority of financing)• Tax credits or incentives• Policy question for public partner re necessary services• Cross-subsidies
– Sufficiency and security will greatly affect availability of private capital
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Concession Contracts (3)• Contract v. regulatory standards
– Contract• Difficulty of predicting scenarios• Simple approaches create risk (and higher cost)• Complex approaches create voluminous contracts that
increase chance of disputes– Regulation
• Requires expert regulatory infrastructure• Generally accepted methods (?)• Uncertainty and cost of regulation
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Ratesetting• Revenue requirement
– Reasonable expenses pass through– Capital costs
• Debt: return equal to actual interest rate• Equity: return equal to that required to gain sufficient capital,
based on investments of comparable risk– Concession payments to public partner
• Rate design– From rate-payer: fixed and/or variable charges– From public partner
• Implemented by expert, independent organization
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Ratesetting (2)• Rates fair to rate-payers and private partner• Calculation of rates should be objective and
predictable• Rates should be calculated on a full-cost basis
– Ensures that investors are protected– Explicit subsidies– Transparency
• Affordability– No discrimination among similar users– Subsidies may be appropriate for certain classes of user
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Ratesetting (3)• Should allow adjustments for events outside
parties’ control– Credit markets– Labor markets– Construction costs– Tax changes
• Avoid price fluctuations– Limit amount by which rates can grow– Must obtain rate equilibrium
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IV. Final Observations
• Many areas for PPPs are socially sensitive because necessary public services, e.g., water– Services should be affordable
• Contracts should be fair and take public needs into account for this and later PPPs
• Public partner should be the “face” of the PPP for the public
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Implementation of Agreement
• PPPs are partnerships, and you must live with your partner
• Terms of contracts can be revisited and adjusted on a pre-agreed schedule or upon the occurrence of certain events
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Wes StricklandWes StricklandHatch & ParentHatch & Parent
21 E. Carrillo Street21 E. Carrillo StreetSanta Barbara, CA 93101Santa Barbara, CA 93101
(805) 963-7000(805) [email protected]@HatchParent.com