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REPUBLIC OF KENYATHE NATIONAL TREASURY
PPP FRAMEWORK AND EXPEREINCES IN KENYA
Tuesday 8th March 2016
Eng. Stanley KamauDirector, PPP UnitNational Treasury
OUTLINE OF DISCUSSIONS:1. Rational for PPPs
2. Overview of Kenya’s PPP Legal Framework
3. Financing, budgeting, accounting and reporting of PPPs
4. Kenya’s Past Experience in PPPs
5. Kenya’s PPP Pipeline
6. Unsolicited proposals
7. Benchmarking with other Countries
Rational for PPPs
KENYA
Area: 583,000 sq. km GDP: $69.977 Billion (2015) Population: 45.9 Million (2015) GDP Per Capita: $1,587 (2015) GDP % Growth: 5.3% (2015) – economy is projected to expand by 6.5
to 7.0% in 2016 and to maintain the same pace over the medium term Inflation: 5.97% (Sept, 2015) Debt/GDP: 48% (2015) The Standard and Poor’s rating for Kenya is B+ stable
Gateway to:
East Africa Community (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi):
150 million people, among the fasted growing regions in the world (5.3% growth GDP compared to 3.8% world growth) – 150 million addition (DRC, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Somalia)
The discovery of Oil, Rare Earth, others: A game changer
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Why Kenya?
Overview of Budget FY 2015/16• Economic growth to accelerate to 7% in 2015/16, • Inflation to remain within single digit with upper limit target
of 7.5% in 2015‐16. • Public debt to GDP ratio to decline from 46.1% at the end of
June 2015 to 43.3% in 2016• Total National Government budget KSh 2,209.1 bn (USD 22B)• Energy, Infra-structure & ICT USD4 bn –(SGR USD1.5B)
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Railway, Airport, Seaport
Solid waste management
NAIROBI: COMMUTER RAIL
Infrastructure Funding Gap of USD 2-3 Billion per Year
• .
Thus….Rationale for PPPs in Kenya
Vision 2030 aims to
transform Kenya into a
middle income country by
2030. Heavy infrastructure investment is
thus paramount
Additional funding from
private sector, hence reduction of funding gap
Reduce Government
sovereign borrowings -Debt/GDP: 48% (2015)
Govt. strategy -
reduce debt to GDP (ratio) to
below 45% in the medium
term
Utilize private sector
efficiency, effectiveness,
transfer of significant risk to the
private sector &
innovation to deliver public
services
Increase business
opportunities for the domestic market
Key Principles of PPPs
Risk sharing between private & public sectors
Long term relationship between parties
Contract for services, not procurement of assets
Payments related to service delivery
Whole life approach to design, build and operate
Regulating & Monitoring mainly left with public partner
Overview of Kenya’s PPP Legal Framework
Enabling Framework for PPPs in Kenya:
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Kenya has a New Constitution (2010)
Conducive Regulatory framework to facilitate PPPs (Energy,
ICT, Transport)
There is a strong Contract law (contracts will be honoured)
PPP Policy issued by Government in December, 2011
The Public Private Partnerships Act, No. 27 of 2013 (PPP Act)
Public Finance Management (PFM) Act, 2012
County Governments Act, 2012
National Regulations, Dec 2014 for PPP Act, 2013
Regulations for County PPPs
PPP Toolkit, Procedures and standard documents
Project Facilitation Fund
An contractual arrangementbetween a contracting authority and a private party under which
the private party:
Undertakes to perform a public
function or provide a service on behalf of the contracting
authority
Receives a benefit for performing a public function by way of
compensation from a public fund, charges or fees to consumers or a combination of both
Is generally liable for risks arising from the performance of the
function in the agreement
Definition of PPPs According to the PPP Act, 2013:
PPP is Like a Marriage
Long Term, Trust and Co-operation, Clearly defined Roles, Rights Responsibilities and
Outcomes
PPP Process: Projects can be initiated in two ways:
Solicited Bids(Open &
Competitive)
PIIPs(Unsolicited Proposals)
Successful PPP Projects
The PPP Act, 2013
Procurement of PPP Projects
3 Core tests/principles
in PPP Procurement:
Value for Money;
Affordability; and
Risk Transfer (optimal
allocation).
The PPP process in the country is a sequential one with approval steps built-in at various stages of a project’s lifecycle as highlighted in the figure below:
Default Process: Solicited/Competitive PPP Process
Unsolicited proposalsThe questions: “Shall we accept them?”
“How should we procure them?”
• Great potential tool for innovation• Block them, or be ready for addressing them• “no-cost-to-taxpayer” unsolicited proposals• Learn from experience
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Case: Canal du Midi / Garonne
Riquet, a local tax collector, presented to Louis XIV this
unsolicited proposal: building a canal connecting the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean at no cost to the taxpayer or
royal purse
“mettre en risque mon bien et mon honneur à défault de réussite et, par contre‐coup,
acquérant un peu de l'un et un peu de l'autre, en cas que j'en sorte heureusement”
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Case:Canal du Midi / Garonne
Riquet was awardeda perpetuousconcession in 1666, with the right to collect a specialpurpose new tax.The canal, built in 1666‐1683, was a success, but the public partner paid two thirds of its cost.
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An exception to the rule and is to be applied only where:
there is an urgent need for continuity;
costs relating to intellectual property in relation to the project design is substantial;
there exists only one person capable of undertaking the project;
there exists any of the circumstances as the Cabinet Secretary may subscribe.
Privately Initiated Investment Proposals (Section 61)
PPP Models in the PPP Act, 2013 Management contract Output Based Performance contracts Lease: private party pays rent or royalties for exploitation of minerals < 30 yrs Build-Own Operate-Transfer Build-Own Operate: provided service for agreed time Build-Operate-and-Transfer Build-Lease-and-Transfer Build-Transfer-and-Operate Develop-Operate-and-Transfer Rehabilitate-Operate-and-Transfer Rehabilitate-Own-and-Operate Land Swap; any other scheme approved by Cabinet
Structuring, Financing, Budgeting, Accounting and Reporting of PPP Projects
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Traditional Public Finance of Infrastructure
GovernmentLender
“Sovereign Guarantee”
Loan
Repayment
Users/ Taxpayers
Taxes
Infrastructure ProjectPublic Services
Private Contractor
Construction Contract
Construction
Typical PPP Structure
Payment
Operational period
Payment against delivery
ConstructionPeriodNo payment
0 2 10 15Time (years)
PPP Financing…
Note that in PPPs financing and maintenance usually by the private sector
Also known as limited-recourse or non-recourse financing.
The lender looks primarily to the cash flows of the project as the repayment source. The lender has recourse only (or primarily) to the assets of the project. A PPP’s financing structure will depend on risk assessment, affordability limits and the “bankability” of the underlying venture.A Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) is established to clearly define legal limits of entity.
Project Finance
Public Financial Management Framework for PPPs PPP contracts often have financial implications for Governments. Payment
commitments under PPP contracts are often long-term, and can be contingent on one or more risks:
Direct liabilities are payment commitments that are certain and include:
Upfront “viability gap” payments: an up-front capital subsidy
Availability payments - a regular payment or subsidy over the lifetime of the project, usually conditional on the availability of the service or asset at a contractually specified quality.
Shadow tolls, or output-based payments - a payment or subsidy per unit or user of a service, for example, per km driven on a toll road.
Contingent liabilities are payment commitments whose occurrence, timing and magnitude depend on some uncertain future event, outside the control of government. CLs under PPP contracts can include:
Guarantees on particular risk variables: Revenue Guarantee to compensate for loss in revenue should a particular risk variable deviate from a contractually specified level. For example, guarantees on demand remaining above a specified level; or on exchange rates remaining within a certain range
Compensation clauses: e.g., a commitment to compensate the private party for damage or loss due to certain, specified, uninsurable force majeure events
Termination payment commitments: a commitment to pay an agreed amount, should the contract be terminated due to default by the public or private party -the amount may depend on the circumstances of default
Debt guarantees or other credit enhancements: a commitment to repay part or all of the debt used to finance a project. The guarantee could cover a specific risk or event. Guarantees are used to provide more security to a lender that their loan will be repaid
Budgeting for Government Commitments to PPPs
Budgeting for PPPs involves making sure that money is appropriated and available to pay for whatever cost government has agreed to bear under its PPP projects.
Because such cost may be contingentor occur in the future, PPP budgeting can be hard to manage in traditional annual budget cycles.
Nevertheless, credible and practical budgeting approaches are needed for good public financial management, and to assure private partners that they will be paid.
Fiscal Accounting and Reporting for PPPs
Governments need to account for and report on their financial commitments, including those under PPP contracts.
When reporting is done well, it encourages the government to scrutinize its own fiscal position.
Making financial reports publicly available enables other interested parties - such as lenders, rating agencies, and the public - to reach an informed opinion on the government’s public financial management performance.
What the IMF says:
“There is not a comprehensive fiscal accounting and reporting standard specifically for PPPs. The accounting profession is taking steps to develop an internationally accepted standard, but the likely features are not yet clear… This is being done for service concession arrangements under the auspices of the International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB).”
Recognizing PPP Liabilities in Government Accounts
International accounting and statistical standards affect how and when contingent liabilities must be “recognized” and “disclosed”
“Recognition”- formal recorded in the financial statements of gov’t as a liability or expense
“Disclosed”- reported in notes or narratives that considered integral parts of the financial statement
Accounting standards are now moving towards recognition of all liabilities on balance sheet regardless of contingent nature of the liability or the probability of the claim, provided that it can be reliably measured.
International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) IPSAS requires that under accrual accounting, contingent liabilities
(guarantees and legal claims) be revealed in notes to the financial statements as long as the possibility of payment is not remote
For cash accounting standards, no disclosure is required.
IPSAS Disclosure of Contingent Liabilities Prudent best practices require that contingent liabilities be disclosed
and reported on a regular basis to the public and legislative bodies, on:
Information on major contingent liabilities above some minimum country specific threshold, including nature an scope and quantification – information about possible losses should be revealed but only if it does not lead to moral hazard.
Significant contract terms and conditions to the extent relevant should be revealed
Information on past calls on the guarantee and their frequency of occurrence
Information regarding reserves and assets set aside to support the contingency.
Three Dimensions of PPP Reporting:
Budgeting:
Are PPPs accounted for in the budget and medium-term fiscal framework? Are fiscal risks properly monitored and reported in the statement of fiscal risks?
Accounting:
Are PPPs accounted for in the public sector financial statements? (i.e., income and cash statement, balance sheet)
Statistics:
Are PPPs reported in headline fiscal indicators? (i.e., public sector overall balance, gross and net debt)
Ideally, all three dimensions should be linked and consistent, but this is not necessarily the case in many countries.
International Standards for PPP Reporting: Budgeting:
IMF’s Fiscal Transparency Code (2012 update) OECD Principles for Public Governance of PPPs, 2012
Accounting: International Public Sector Accounting Standards 32 (IPSAS 32)
Statistics: International statistical standards:
System of National Accounts 2008 (SNA 2008) Government Finance Statistical Manual 2014 (GFSM 2014) Public Sector Debt Guide 2011 (PSDG 2011)
Regional statistical standards: ESA 2010 Eurostat Manual on Government Debt and Deficit (MGDD)
There is no “full” consistency between these standards, but discrepancies have been reduced significantly.
National Norms and PPP Contingent ObligationsAustralia- Victoria:
Accounting Norm: International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) & IPSAS (AASB)
Recognition: All PPPs are reflected in balance sheets (assets and liabilities) of agency exercising “control” of asset i.e.. It is not on SPV balance sheet
Disclosure: Even if not recognized on Gov’t balance sheet, the PPPs are disclosed in notes
Reporting: PPP contracts appear on the website of the agency.
South Africa:
Accounting Norm: Modified Cash Basis
Recognitions of liabilities: PPPs not reported on Gov’t balance sheet.
Disclosure: Disclosure notes required under Treasury Guidelines
Reforms: Considering move to Accrual Accounting and application of IPSAS standards
Chile:
Accounting Norms: Accrual Based Account
Recognition of Liabilities: Some PPPs are on Gov’t Balance sheets (jails & airports) but roads are not
Disclosure: Applies IMF Gov’t Finance Statistics Manual—expenses PPPs over life of project but public investments expensed during construction
Reform: Gov’t considering moving to IFRS and IPSAS.
Reporting: Annual Contingent Liabilities report with NPV of guarantees
1. Ongoing CL assessment and quantification by the FCCL Unit with a view to ensuring continuous risk management and the scheduled disclosure and reporting of all fiscal risks associated with future PPPs. (Target deadline for active projects – End 1st Quarter of 2016)
2. Operationalisation of the PPP Project Facilitation Fund (PFF) - a multi-purpose revolving fund -for which Window 4 of its application is specific to the provision of a source of liquidity to meet any contingent liabilities arising from PPPs.
3. Establishment of the below Governance Framework for future contingent liabilities:
Mitigation Measures for CLs in PPP Projects:
Kenya’s Past Experience in PPPs
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Kenya’s Tested Experience With PPPs
Old Nyali Bridge in Mombasa 1948
Rift Valley Railways Concessionaire (2006)
IPPs
IPP Name Type Capacity MW Remarks
Iberafrica Thermal 108 Operational 1997Tsavo/Kipevu thermal 74 Operational 2000
Rabai Thermal 90 Operational 2009Mumias Cogeneration 34 Operational 2009
Thika Power Thermal 87 Operational 2014Triumph Thermal 82 Operational 2014
Gulf Power Thermal 80 Operational 2014Orpower Geothermal 100 Operational 2000/2008
Lake Turkana Wind 300 Under ConstructionKinangop Wind 60 Under ConstructionKipeto wind 100 Financial Close
GDC (3IPPs) Geothermal 105 Financial Close
TOTAL 1,220
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Independent Power Projects (IPP) Structure
KENYA PPP Pipeline
There are currently 71No. PPP projects in the pipeline worth approx. USD 25.5Bn
Current PPP Projects in Kenya:
25No. - Concept stage 9No. - TA Procurement 26No. - Feasibility Study stage 4No. - Tender stage 4No. - Negotiations ongoing 1No. – Contract Executed
PPP Pipeline (as at Dec 2015):
KU Student Hostel: Accommodation for 10,000 students on a 15
acre piece of land where a Special lease will be issued to the SPV. Undergraduate Ksh. 5,945 (No. 9,350) Post graduate sharing Ksh. 8,990 (No. 500) Post Graduate Bedsitter Ksh.11,963 (No.
150) 20 year BOT concession, 50 year life assets 24 months construction At an estimated investment value of US$52.5
Million to implement, Africa Integras as the project sponsor.
Ground breaking envisaged in April 2016
Active PPP Projects in Kenya:
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2nd Container Terminal in Mombasa Port The CT2 Concession plan was approved in Dec 2014;
Comprising of Phases 1 & 2, with Phase1 currently under construction with completion scheduled for end Feb 2016, the Mombasa Port Development Project (MPDP) is envisaged as a 25 year concession
The procurement process for CT2 commenced in 1st March 2015 through to its bid closure on 20th June 2015
Technical evaluations were conducted and completed in July 2015 Several petitions and court cases filed which has delayed the process. CT2 handed over the KPA on 29th Feb 2016 and has commenced the
process of its operations A decision has been reached to cancel tender for the concession following
the right legal process
1,050MW Lamu CoalOverview of the Project:
The project is proposed to set up a 1,050 MW gross super-critical coal-fired power plant at Manda Bay, Lamu County, along with jetty/coal infrastructure, coal handling facilities, and a 400 kilovolt (kV) switchyard at site under a Build, Own & Operate (BOO) regime.
The plant will incorporate clean coal technology that utilises low sulphur and low ash coal.
Power will be sold to KPLC under a 25-year 'take or pay' arrangement codified in the PPA. Power will be evacuated by a 400 kV, 520 kilometre (km) transmission line to be constructed by KETRACO.
Total estimated cost of USD 2 Billion
PPA negotiations going on together with ESIA plus sourcing of funding.
Civil Servants Housing
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CIVIL SERVICE HOUSING 10,000 units – Starehe -6,036 units at a capex of Ksh 9.3 Billion (Ksh 33,00/sqm): Starehe -1,856 units at Ksh 4.7 B, Ksh 33,627/sqmNegotiations ongoing
Civil service housing
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Since the coming into effect of the PPP Act 2013, all IPPs have been classified as PPPs in Kenya, and the PPA treated as a PPP project agreement.
55No. IPPs: 9No. IPPs in Operation 28 No. PPAs finalized/signed/ initialed
(solar, wind, hydro, Biogas) 8No. PPAs under Negotiation 10No. PPAs approved for negotiation
Alignment of the FiT process: Of the current 300 FiT project
applications, 82 are currently active, 18 of which have been approved by the ERC, and PPAs negotiated. 1,116MW
Feed in Tariff for Renewable Energy
Other on‐going PPP procurements1. Nairobi Multilevel Car Park at Sunken 3800 parking, 13
floors, Equity IRR -21% - RFQ2. Kisumu Sea Port Development – Estimated at USD 200M, a
consultant preparing a feasibility study.
5. Student Accommodation Hostels for Universities i.e. Moi University, Egerton, SEKU, KTTC and Embu University –
USD 150M- Consultant recruited (50,000 students) More other Universities preparing their PPPs\
6. Energy Sector projects– 400MW Menengai:
100MW (Financial Close), 60MW RFQ – USD 480m– 800MW LNG, Dongo Kundu – CANCELLED– 560MW Geothermal Project at Olkaria:
140MW under TA phase – USD 500M
Other On‐going PPP procurements/…
7. Mombasa Convention Centre –TFC under feasibility by IFC8 Sports Stadium in Nairobi (Ngong Rd), Mombasa (Shimo La Tewa) and Eldoret – TA is in place.9. Cancer Centres – IFC in place and feasibility study to be completed in 2 months10. Leasing of Hospital Equipment USD 400million ‐8 years11. Police & Prisons Service Housing 85,000 Units:
Phase 1 of 10,000 Units -
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PwC28 July 2015
NAIROBI – MOMBASA ROAD EXPANSION
The National Treasury/PPP Unit •
Project: Involves upgrading and capacity expansion andsubsequent operation and maintenance of the Nairobi‐Mombasa Highway
Profile of Highway: Mombasa–Nairobi Highway (A109)forms part of the Trans‐African Highway (NorthernCorridor)
Options: New alignment/ old
Project Length : 482 Km , pny about 30km dualledwhile the rest is a single carrieageway
Estimated Capex: USD 1 BILLION
Feasibility study report to be submitted 0n 22nd Dec2015 by TA (PWC)
Proposed Project Funding Options:
Tolls, auxiliary revenues (advertising rights, RSS, betterment levies etc.)
Technical solution : 4lane to 6lanes
O&M of Nairobi – Thika Road (A2) Nairobi – Thika (50.4 kms) Upgrading of road completed in Nov
2012 at a cost of USD 350million. Project cost: CAPEX (minor
improvements), OPEX (10years), and original development cost (debt to GOK)
No alternative road Traffic at 135,000 vehicles a day.
Challege Project Funding Options: Tolls,
auxiliary revenues (advertising rights, RSS, betterment levies etc.)
Tolling technologies – difficulties of tolling an urban area
Feasibility study report submitted and under review
u7
Slide 62
u7 Please remove all toll rates and i would suggest also capex - these details are far from agreed and do not be in the public domain prior.user, 24/10/2015
M25 IN UK – CONGESTION – Sept. 2010.
Aug 2, 2011 Biennial Amb Conference 63
O&M of Nairobi Southern Bypass
Launched in early 2012, the 28.6Kms dual carriageway (excluding 12Kms of slip roads and 8.5Kms service roads), traversing the southern suburbs of Nairobi, is presently under construction and set for completion by the end of 2015 with the objective of diverting transit traffic from the CBD.
The Greenfield road is an additional link between the Mombasa and Nakuru Highways and will provide accessibility to both Langata Road and Ngong Road.
Proposed technical solution:
A PPP O&M contract with a possibility of capacity augmentation based on the projected saturation levels.
Timeline: FS reports – Dec 2015
Dualling of Nairobi – Nakuru – Mau Summit (A104) The existing highway is primarily a 2-
lane 176 km road with paved shoulders from Rironi junction, at outskirts of Nairobi, to Mau Summit
Proposed PPP structure:
Proposed up-gradation of the highway (to 4, 6 & 8 lanes, as appropriate, to accommodate traffic capacity till 2045)
Project Funding Options:
Tolls, auxiliary revenues (advertising rights, RSS, betterment levies etc.)
Estimated cost USD 1.1 billion
Timeline: FS reports – Dec 2015
2nd Nyali Bridge
Development, operation and maintenance of a Second Nyali Bridge and associated access roads connecting the Mombasa Island with the North mainland to ease congestion on the existing Nyali Bridge
8 crossing options analyzed and one selected jointly with stakeholders. Detailed engineering, environmental, social and financial analysis on-going
Due to the high land acquisition and resettlement costs & time process envisaged in the preferred bridge location and size (Option 6a), the idea of staggering the development of the expanded 2nd Nyali Bridge was discussed
Key Issues to be Addressed in Tolling
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Trade Mark East Africa assisting GoK with a Tolling policy and strategy (CEPA). Issues identified:Do we toll a road without an alternative?Do we have fix one toll charge for all toll roads?Do we have one tolling system?Do we engage one toll operator for all the toll roads?Do we cross subsidize revenues?Do we only toll a road where revenues are sufficient to cover the investments?Do we recover capital costs incurred by Govt on some of the roads?
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Objective was to build new 10,000km of roads in 5yrs to add to current 14,000km
Contractors will design, finance, construct and maintain the roads for 10 years.
contracts awarded on the basis of the lowest annuity payments. Contractors will complete works within 2yrs.
PWC hired by Treasury to assist in financial advisory• 45 contracts for 3000km were tendered and bids received for 435 km of
Phase 1 Group 1 bids (5 Lots) have been approved PPP Committee, 1,163 kmin 13 Lots under contracts negotiations; and 1,100 km in 9 lots are under bid evaluation review
THE PROCESS HAS TEMPORARILY STALLED????
Road Annuity Programme
Unsolicited PPPs
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Cable Car Across Likoni – Capex USD 41m, Equity- USD 26m, Debt – USD 15m, Ksh 20 per trip
Dongo Kundu SEZ– The total estimated cost is USD 1.1 billion, excluding the cost of land (Port USD 295M, SEZ USD 775M). The target financial closure date is December 31 2016.
– Gearing 70% debt, 30% equity. – Proposed GoK equity 20%, (3000 acres of land)– 30 Yr Concession– Project’s IRR post tax is estimated at 13.3%, while post tax IRR is estimated at 13%.
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Lake Turkana Wind Power Project
• Aims to produce 300 MW of wind power. Largest single wind power plant located 500km away from Nairobi
• Started in 2009 by a Mr Carlo Van Wageningen after visiting the site as a tourist.
• Implemented as an unsolicited proposal following Feed in Tariff guidelines.
• Negotiated tariff of US 10 cents.• Construction of 428Km of Transmission Line at a cost of USD
150 Million.• Capital cost of USD 875 Million (excluding transmission)
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Lake Turkana Wind Power Project• 365 Vesta Turbines to be installed on a 40,000 hectares of
land• Best winds with a Load factor of 63% compared to average of
27% for wind power. It is therefore very reliable power.• Wind speed very high and in some areas beyond 11m/sec,
therefore no turbines can be installed as this may be damaged.
• Construction of 150 tarmac roads to connect the 365 turbines.
• Construction of a town of 10,000 persons (workers for the power plant about 5,000)
• Farming food for 10,000 people• GOOGLE taken 15 of equity
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Benchmarking with other Countries
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SHAH ALAM EXPRESSWAY (35 KM) TOLL PLAZAS (OPEN) - 3 NOS.
CON. PERIOD - 28 YEARS & 9 MONTHS (11/93 - 8/2022)
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NORTH-SOUTH EXPRESS’Y CENTRAL LINK ( 48 KM)TOLL PLAZAS (CLOSED) - 7 NUMBERS
CON. PERIOD - 24 YEARS & 1 MONTH (4/94 - 5/2018)
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MALAYSIAN - SINGAPORE SECOND CROSSING BRIDGELENGTH OF EXPRESSWAY - 44 KM, BRIDGE - 2.0 KM
TOLL PLAZAS (OPEN) - 4 NUMBERSCONCESSION PERIOD - 30 YEARS(7/93 - 7/2023)
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DAMANSARA - PUCHONG HIGHWAY ( 40 KM)
CABLE STAYED BRIDGETOLL PLAZAS (OPEN) –
4 NUMBERSCON. PERIOD - 33 YEARS
(8/96 - 8/2029)
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AMPANG ELEVATED HIGHWAY
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WESTERN KL TRAFFIC DISPERSAL SCHEME
(KERINCHI LINK)
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WESTERN KL TRAFFIC DISPERSAL SCHEME
(PENCHALA LINK)
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INNOVATIVE PRODUCTSKL Tower Lighting & Laser Show
• See the tower changing colours in the night
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Kenya - Tourism
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CHM and CEOs of MoI Retreat, Msa
CONTACTSPublic Private Partnership (PPP) UnitNational TreasuryP.O BOX 30007 – 00100,Nairobi, KENYA. Tel: +254 20 ‐ 2252299
Email: [email protected]: www.pppunit.go.ke
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