PPPs Tollway Eng

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Case Study

Vadodara-Halol Toll Road BOOT Project


in Gujarat, India

Dr. Anand Chiplunkar


ADB Staff Consultant on PPP in GMS
Senior Vice President

New Delhi, India


June 13, 2006

Coverage

Issues in Infrastructure Financing


Case Study : Vadodara Halol Toll Road Project

Background
Project Structuring
Project Financing
Post-construction
Experience

Way Forward in Vietnam

Issues in
Infrastructure Financing

The Economic Reality

Level of economic activity and local GDP in


influence area must decide project size & scope
Infrastructure costs need to be competitive

When desire is to create world class assets,


interventions and costs are likely to be higher,
commensurate with global practices

Infrastructure projects typically need support


from Government

Financial - preferably on a one time basis

not necessarily as a grant, but depends on the


project viability and cash flow/liability matching
requirements

Regulatory - throughout the project life cycle

Issues in Commercialisation of
Infrastructure

Monopolistic

Large capital investments, low operating costs

Long cost recovery periods


High uncertainty of revenue streams

Lack/absence of asset backed security

Economies of scale and scope favour supply by


single provider - fears of monopolistic exploitation

Sunk costs
Physical assets
elsewhere

cannot

be

moved

Complex, multiple linkages,


exercise sovereign authority

the

or

utilized

need

to

High dependence on other sections of political


economy

Risks in Infrastructure1

Allocation of risks is key difference between


government and private implementation

Traditionally all risks absorbed by the government

Risks in an infrastructure project include

Project Development

Construction period e.g.Design and Technology risks,


Construction Time and Cost Overruns

Operations period e.g. Commercial, Performance, Design and


Technology, Regulation, O&M, Financial

Other risks

e.g. Land Acquisition, Approvals &


Clearances, Legal and Contractual Framework etc.

e.g. Force Majeure, Env. & Social, Change of Law,

Termination

The most difficult risk for the private sector to


absorb are environment and social risks

Risks in Infrastructure2

Risk profiles of infrastructure projects vary


with the stage of the project cycle
Development of institutional and financing
strategies are closely linked to each phase of
the project cycle
Mobilisation of debt is particularly sensitive to
the phase and risk management strategy

Risk Expectancy

Construction
Project
Preparation

Operation

Basic Features of
Infrastructure Financing

Governments prefer shorter concession periods at


affordable charges. Hence need fiscal and project
incentives to meet market return expectations

Limited recourse and not pure project recourse funding


Government providing tax exemptions to infrastructure
projects passes to all stakeholders

Banks and Financial Institutions are the main


sources - very little appetite in retail sector

Multilateral lines (ADB/WB) available for long tenor


financing of upto 20+ years

Helps to match project cash flows and liabilities

Takeout financing provided by IL&FS proved to be


successful in the retail sector

What is a Successful Project?

Lending institutions want cap on construction


costs and reliable debt servicing mechanism

Implementation to cost and time

Debt service coverage (typical DSCR 1.3)

Equity investors want assured return on


investments

Environmental and social impact mitigation

Realisation of projected revenues

Government wants performance

Implementation to time and quality services

Acceptability to users

Case Study
Vadodara Halol Toll Road

Focus of Case Study

To provide an overview of the development


process undertaken for the Vadodara-Halol
project
To outline the main issues in the
development of the Vadodara-Halol Road
Project
To provide an insight into the experience of
operating the project

Background of VHTRP

Genesis

In 1994, Roads & Buildings Department


(R&B), Government of Gujarat (GoG), India
found need to improve the existing State
road network on a commercial format
Actions taken by the GoG:

Strategic Options Study to identify and prioritise


State roads that require upgradation based on
economic considerations
Road Policy to outline the development and
implementation framework to enable private
sector participation
Amending the Bombay Motor Vehicle Tax Act
1958, to permit the levy of toll on new /
strengthened road sections by non-government
entities

Partnership for Project Development

R&B, GoG signed a Memorandum of


Agreement with Infrastructure Leasing and
Financial Services (IL&FS) on October 31, 1995
to jointly develop two road projects viz.
Vadodara - Halol and Ahmedabad - Mahesana
Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) Vadodara Halol
Toll Road Limited (VHTRL) formed by GoG and
IL&FS to develop and implement the project

IL&FS funded the project development expenses


that were treated as part of project cost and
recovered from successful bidder with returns
Involved Pre-Feasibility, Detailed Feasibility and
Investment Banking Report, Procurement of Bidder,
Project Agreements and Contracting of works

The Old Road

Project Specifications

Existing two lane road was widened to four


lane divided carriageway toll road

Provision of toll free service roads for local and


slow moving traffic on both sides

Road Length

32 km

AADT in 1997
Project Cost

20000 PCUs
Rs 1611 mn (USD 35 mn)

Project Viability
Project Structure
Implementation
Format

ERR : 32%
IRR : 20%
BOOT
VHTRL (A Joint venture of
GoG and IL&FS)

VHTRL Project Structuring

Project Development Cycle


Pre-Feasibility
Project Structuring

Detailed Feasibility & Investment Banking


Report
Environmental & Social Assessment Report
Risk Sharing Format
Creation of project SPV - VHTRL

Operationalisation

Finalisation of Contractual Framework


Achievement of technical close

Development of financial structures on project


recourse basis
Financing

Lender approval on key project parameters


Mobilisation of debt and equity

Construction

10

Pre-Feasibility and Detailed


Feasibility Studies

IL&FS prepared a Pre-Feasibility Report (PFR)

Technical Design Report and identification


landed project cost (+/- 10%)

Sector and local economic assessment


Examination of Technical, Environmental & Social,
Legal aspects with estimation of landed
(delivered/commissioned) project cost (+/- 20%)
Plant red flags for further examination of critical
aspects in further studies

Iterations
between
technical
design
environmental and social mitigation aspects

and

Detailed Feasibility and Investment Banking


Report (DFIBR)

Planning with a Conscience

IL&FS, the project developer, is the first


Institution in India to have developed and
adopted an explicit environmental and social
policy framework
The Environment and Social Assessment
Report (ESAR) provides detailed operational
directives for developing
infrastructure
projects and is in compliance with the Govt.
of India / World Bank norms
Implementation and monitoring of the EASR
is undertaken by a separate group
ESAR formed the basis for the E&S Report for
the Vadodara - Halol Road project

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Environmental and Social Plan1

VHTRL was contractually bound to implement


covenants of the Environmental and Social
Management Plan
Alignment and mitigation measures considered
environmental and social aspects, air and noise
pollution during construction and operation e.g.

Ensuring compliance with emission norms


Noise barriers near school
Creating wetlands
Restricting hazards to neighborhood communities

Voluntary relocation of temples, schools, and


environmental infrastructure

Environmental and Social Plan2

Rehabilitation Scheme was evolved after a


number of public consultations spanning
over 12 months
As part of social rehabilitation measures:

VHTRL paid out rehabilitation assistance to


compensate for the difference in land price
between govt. acquisition price and market price
Emphasis was on ensuring livelihood provision
through creation of assets using NGOs rather
than giving cash compensation
Created additional facilities such as service
roads, pedestrian subways, compound walls and
provided additional houses for relocation of
communities

12

Risk Categorization
Risk Type

Sensitivity

Delays in land acquisition

Risk Period

High

Development

Govt
Govt
Govt/Insurance

Ext High

Development

Natural calamities and other acts of


god

High

Throughout

Political risk, including abrogation of


agreements, war; and social risks

High

Throughout

High

Operations

Medium

Throughout

High

Construction

Delays in project development

Regulatory administrative delays


Changes in standards and
regulations
Completion risk
Technology risk

Primary Risk
Bearer

Medium

Govt
Govt
Govt
SPV

Operations

SPV

Project risk

High

Start Up

SPV

Financial risk, which includes inflation


rate risk,interest rate risk and exchange
rate risk

High

Throughout

SPV

Implementation Structure
GoG

Concession Agreement
Debt

FIs
World Bank
IL&FS
Banks
GoG

Equity

Loan

Shareholder
VHTRL

Agreement

Construction Contract

Const. Contractor

Agreement

GoG
FIs/IL&FS
BOT
Operator
AIG Equity Fund

O&M Contract

Operator

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Concession Agreement

VHTRL entered into a Concession Agreement


with GoG to design, finance, build, operate,
maintain and transfer the facility after
recovery of a pre-determined return
The Concession Agreement provided for

Completion of construction within 18 months


Maintenance of the road at predetermined
standards (Roughness, Toll Queue lengths,
Cracks, Structural strength etc)
Post transfer warranties
Independent regulatory mechanisms through the
appointment of Independent Auditor/Engineer

Procurement of Contractor / Operator

There were no previous examples in India of


Request For Proposal (RFP) to invite bidders
to design, construct, finance, operate and
maintain roads and tolling systems
A new RFP document
developed which outlined:

was

therefore

Obligations of VHTRL, GoG, IL&FS


Performance requirements from selected Bidder
Project Design basis
Performance standards during construction,
operations and maintenance
Contractual obligations
Compliant technical and financial bids

14

Selection Basis

Project would be awarded to the bidder who


complies with

Technical and Financial proposal requirements


Offers the lowest price

Lowest price is the NPV calculated on the


bidders estimate of:

Fixed price of construction


Interest During Construction (IDC)
O&M costs during the concession period on:
Routine Maintenance
Periodic Maintenance (Renewal and Overlay)
Toll Systems
Toll Augmentation

Selected Contractor/Operator

VHTRL through a transparent International


Competitive Bid (ICB) process selected a Joint
Venture of Punj Lloyd and IRCON to

construct

operate and

maintain the project facilities

15

VHTRL Project Financing

Project Financing

The project was appraised and syndicated by


IL&FS
The financial plan was structured based on
the following:

Traffic forecast and revenues


Acceptable gearing
Status of financial markets and appetite
Terms of financing
Risk profile

Anticipating low levels of traffic in the initial


years, significant financial engineering was
undertaken to increase the robustness of the
project

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Financial Structuring

The Project financial structure included:

Obtention of Section 10(23G) status payment of


interest on equity during construction
Approval from Company Law Board for Sinking
Fund Method of depreciation

Innovative treatment of GoG debt

Subordinate debt by IL&FS

Deep Discount Bonds with Take-out Financing

Long Tenor funding with moratoriums extending


beyond the construction period

Financial Engineering
Rs. mn
1800
1600

Cumulative Cas h Flo ws

1400
1200
1000

Cumulative Debt
(Pre Struct uring )

800
600
400

Cumulative Debt
(Po s t Struct uring )

200
0
1

10

11

12

Years

17

Sources of Finance

Equity (Rs. 679 million) was raised from

Debt (Rs. 932 million) was raised from

GoG
IL&FS
American Insurance Group (AIG)
Consortium of Contractors
IDBI
IDFC
IFCI
IL&FS
SBI
CBI
BoB GIIC

Subordinate debt was provided by IL&FS

Post Construction in VHTRL

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Project Commissioning

Completed 4 months ahead of schedule and


within budgeted cost (Rs. 1611 million at
prices 2000 ~ USD 35 mn at current prices)

Public Interest Litigation (PIL) during construction


Removal
of
trees

applicability
of
environmental law
Compensation for Land acquisition, demolition
of Structures
Resettlement
& Rehabilitation of Project
Affected Persons
PIL rejected by the Court due to excellent
environmental and social mitigation

Commissioned in October 2000 and fully


operational since then

New Road1

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New Road2

2 Lane with Central Green Median

Bridge over Narmada river

Toll plaza

Toll Management

Transplantation of Trees
Typical
transplanted
tree

Enabled Public Interest Litigation (PIL) on


environmental grounds being dismissed by the court

20

Structures Affected by Project


Alignment

Resettlement Colony

21

Religious Structures: Pre-Project

Rehabilitation of Religious
Structures: Post-implementation

22

VHTRL Experience

Strengths

GoGs support and involvement key to


success
World Bank involvement - comfort to GoG and
investors
Project documentation replicable framework
(Environmental Assessment acknowledged as
best in India as reviewed by The World Bank)

Project contracts bankable proposition

Procurement internationally acceptable

SPV - A risk sharing example

IL&FS - Strong project development support

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Issues of Concern

Equity investment
returns

risks high and delayed

Lenders - varying levels of comprehension of


technical and hence assessed at top of band
risk profile
Govt. of India fiscal incentives - benefits
passed on to the project in varying degrees
Access to long term funds - need to open up
insurance and PF sectors for direct access
Project recourse financing a long way to go

Current Government Perspective

It has taken 10 years, but there is evidence of


progress being made in infrastructure
development and financing in India
Telecom sector is mature: financing is more
akin to conventional corporate finance as
compared to the
physical and practical
constraints that are common in other sectors
Due to the Indian PMs Golden Quadrilateral
Programme, the road sector is very active
Given operational difficulties, the move is now
to have specific regulatory and provisioning
regimes on risk assessment framework for the
infrastructure sector

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Govt. of India Scheme (2006)

Finance Minister, Govt. of India announced the


incorporation of an SPV The India
Infrastructure Finance Company Ltd. (IIFCL)
to fund infrastructure projects in India

Incorporated on January 5, 2006 with a paid up


capital of Rs.100 million (USD 2.2 mn) and an
authorized capital of Rs. 10 billion (USD 222 mn),
with a borrowing limit of Rs.100 bn (USD 2.2 bn) for
the current fiscal

Objective:

The company will funds projects in roads, power,


railways, ports, airports and tourism.
IIFC will also fund projects that need viability gap
funding under a government scheme

Way Forward in Vietnam

25

Emerging Trends1

Private finance, as required, can be mobilised


for infrastructure projects by structuring them
to meet the investors requirement
Private financing and management can deliver
better service performance than public sector
management and provide rapid response and
innovative solutions
Capital market is a critical link to infrastructure
financing
Steps need to be taken to ensure access to
domestic and international capital markets

Emerging Trends2

Better environmental risk management could be


a source of competitive advantage
First private projects are important to create
replicable models
BOT or its variants need not be the only
solution
Annuity model adopted in India where project
viability is weak

Private sector bids and gets paid an annual sum for


design, construction, operation and maintenance
over an agreed concession time
Govt. assumes traffic risk and retains toll revenue
Applicable to Vietnam and GMS countries
having low traffic volumes

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Principal Prerequisites

Governments active support and involvement


throughout project cycle
The need across sectors:

Extensive project preparation

Evaluation of techno-economic factors

Willingness to pay surveys

Mitigation of adverse environmental and social


impacts

Robust project documentation replicable


framework
Project contracts Bankable

Key Recommendations

Govt. should do project development

Identify project deliverables and performance stds.


Allows informed decision-making in competitive bids
Facilitates provision of services at optimal cost
Can hold project company accountable for
performance and penalize it for the lack of it
Lastly leverages budgetary resources so more
projects can be done through Public Private
Partnership (PPP) approach
It takes time but is sustainable in long run as
govt. gets best Value For Money

Create enabling framework for PPP:

Define PPP Policy, Enact PPP Laws, Set up Project


Development Fund and Viability Gap Support Fund

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Thank you

www.ilfsindia.com

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