1 / 20

World Bank Webinar on 28 th June 2016

Communication and Social License Issues in Kenyan PPPs: Emerging Trends& Precedents. World Bank Webinar on 28 th June 2016 Presented by: Kaara Wainaina, External Affairs Expert, PPP Unit Kenya. Presentation Outline. Introduction& context of Stakeholder Engagement.

darnellr
Download Presentation

World Bank Webinar on 28 th June 2016

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Communication and Social License Issues in Kenyan PPPs: Emerging Trends& Precedents World Bank Webinar on 28th June 2016 Presented by: Kaara Wainaina, External Affairs Expert, PPP Unit Kenya

  2. Presentation Outline Introduction& context of Stakeholder Engagement Notable Infrastructure Projects in Kenya’s Infrastructure Leading PPP Projects& Feasibility Findings Social License Trends& Lessons learnt Conclusion

  3. Introduction& Background • Kenya became a British Colony in 1920- 1963 • Government decisions on infrastructure largely by fiat. • In 1964 Kenya became a republic, the trend continuing. • Economic growth was main thrust for projects, now more awareness& clamor for sustainable development. • Starting in 80’s towards 90’s democratic space expanded. • In the first 25 years of the country, little consultation with hosts/users of various infrastructure projects. 1

  4. Introduction& Background: Continued • Currently Kenyans have great influence on investment in the country& infrastructure projects in particular. • The current constitution promulgated in 2010 that gives citizens many rights& strong protection of property. • Kenya Constitution 2010, provides many rights as regards, information, movement& residence, property, environment, consumer rights, land etc. • With a more progressive constitution citizenry& corporate world now highly sensitive to granting/earning social legitimacy in projects. 2

  5. Notable Investment in Kenya’s Infrastructure • A floating pontoon bridge connecting Mombasa with Mainland in 1931-1980. • Olkaria 1 Geothermal plant in 1981 (Public Funding) – Minimal Stakeholder Engagement • Many Independent Power Producers since mid 90’s. Most operational today. • In 1997, Safaricom formed as mobile subsidiary of Telkom Kenya. In 2000 Vodafone Plc acquires 40% in Safaricom • 2006, Kenya-Uganda Railways Concessionaire signed • In 2007, France Telecom acquired 51% of Telkom Kenya • In 2012 construction of 280MW Olkaria geothermal plant (Publicly funded) • In 2014, Kinangop Wind Plant project commences, cancelled early 2016 due to conflicts 3

  6. Case Study One: Rift Valley Railways Concessionaire • Construction of ‘lunatic express’ by British between 1896-1896. • At its height employed 25,000 employees. • Between 80’s and 90’s huge decline due to multiple factors. • In early 2000’s various attempts to reform, saw large staff retrenchment • Concession signed in 2006 marked with high public expectations after years of under-performance. • Staff rationalization continued in phases, with many legal battles for years, some yet to be concluded. • Protracted legal battles with former staff& sub optimal operations, continue to evoke great disappointment with the concession. 4

  7. Case Study Two: Olkaria 280MW Geothermal Plant • Olkaria I in 1981 with minimal local community engagement. Olkaria II saw improvement in local community engagement. • Project to construct largest geothermal plant (280MW) planned in 2009. • RAP prepared in 2010, 2 years ahead of ground breaking. • Project site affecting 3 villages& a cultural centre of Masaai pastoral community in Naivasha. • Project further complex as it involved an environmentally sensitive site, next to a park. • Communal land ownership customs difficult to navigate. • A couple of industrial disputes between contractors and local casual laborers. 5

  8. Case Study Two: Olkaria 280MW Geothermal Plant • Quite often protests from neighboring communities who felt they should share the benefits package. • Local communities at times petitioning financiers, well aware many highly sensitive to reputational risks. • Despite several back steps, PAPs successfully resettled, Olkaria 280MW plant commissioned last year in 2015. • PAPs resettlement concluded a few days to the plant commissioning in August 2015. 6

  9. Case Study Three: Lamu Coal Plant • In 2014, Kenya invited bids for BOO of first coal plant in the country for 960 MW. • Petition on procurement which was dismissed in court. • Lamu town is a UNESCO World Heritage site as the oldest Swahili settlement in East African coast. • ESIA Currently being undertaken in line with Kenya’s environmental protection law. • Save Lamu, a lobby of 30 local NGO’s oppose the project due to environmental concerns. • Fortunately project land already identified , of key interest is whether environmental concerns can be overcome. • RAP being implemented in a multi-agency approach. 7

  10. Case Study Four: Kinangop Wind Project • 60 MW Greenfield Wind Power Project • Initially started as JV of KenGen& EcoGen Wind Farms in 2004. • Project located in Nyandarua, a rich agricultural zone in central region of Kenya. • In 2008 Aeolus Kenya acquired rights to develop the project. • Operation& Maintenance Outsourced to GE (US). • In 2013, Africa Infrastructure Investment Fund& Norfund took over ownership. 8

  11. Kinangop Wind Project, Continued…. • Problem began with the onset of negotiations with affected land owners • There were agreements with most individual land owners -38 had signed 60 year leasehold • Wider Local community also claimed there were no discernible benefits for them • Change of hands of the project ownership also affected trust in land negotiations. 9

  12. Kinangop Wind Project, Continued…. • Other allegations unfounded such as fear of ‘radiation’ ‘humming turbines causing miscarriages’ ‘making livestock infertile’. • Upcoming local politicians seizing on the crisis to gain political mileage ahead of 2017 general election. • Non state actors, local& international complicating the discussion. • Project collapsed early in the year, project movers citing Force Majeure. • Some of local leadership opposing the project, attempted to re-engage the investors. 10

  13. Leading PPP Projects in Kenyan Pipeline • DBFO of 482 km Mombasa-Nairobi Highway (A109) • DBFO of 174 km Nairobi-Nakuru Highway (A104) • DBFO of approx 800 metres 2nd Nyali Bridge in Coastal Port City of Mombasa. • O&M of 50 km Nairobi-Thika Highway (A2) recently built • O&M of 28.6 km of Nairobi Southern Bypass, newly built • The projects just concluded or concluding feasibility studies • The DBFO’s will require substantial land acquisition, hence PAPs resettlement. • Feasibility studies both revealing and encouraging to implement the projects as PPPs 11

  14. Feasibility Findings on Nairobi- Mombasa Road (A109) • DBFO of 482 highway between Port City Mombasa& Capital Nairobi • Willingness to pay strong for all projects, for A109 75% responded “Yes” or “Maybe” • 55% in A109 able to afford US$ 0.065/PCU/km. The lower the toll the higher the willingness and vice versa • Key to paying tolls being improved level of service& attendant low vehicle maintenance costs& saved man hours • Open System tolling preferred as opposed to Closed System Tolling, Electronic Tolling which is seamless preferred 12

  15. Feasibility Findings on Nairobi- Nakuru Road (A104) • DBFO 174 road connecting Nairobi to Nakuru, part of Northern Corridor. • Tolling rates proposed $6 cents/km (Ksh 6/km) for cars and using multiplier effect with international practices and PCU factor (A104). • Savings from vehicle operating costs& time approx twice. • Net scenario for freight raising cost by US$0.24 from US$ 2.15/km to US$ 2.39. • Discounts for frequent& local traffic as well as exemption for emergency services • Land should be acquired ahead of the project. 13

  16. General Sentiment on Road Tolling • Acceptable where clear benefits are visible, especially clogged road. • Media supportive but questioning key elements, such as provision of free alternatives on tolled roads& prudent use of tolls raised. • Civil& consumer right lobbies also calling for care not to infringe on any rights, especially movement& non-discriminatory. • The government has been strategic& firm. Underlining the process will be inclusive, participatory and well thought out. • There is need for more discourse on benefit of road tolling to avoid seeing toll roads as ‘new tax’ but ‘quality roads with a cost’. • More discussion needed on sticky elements especially the Roads Maintenance Levy (A levy to maintain the entire road network& which has just been revised upwards). 14

  17. Land Acquisition& Resettlement: Trends • The most important issue in project implementation& as attains attaining social license • Profiteering by some communities. In one extreme a community rooted for approach with most PAP displacement • In many cases local communities not opposed to projects, using concerns, real& imagined as bargaining chips • NGO’s exploiting acquisition disputes to build profile. • Neighboring communities not affected by project also demanding benefits accruing to immediate PAPs • Projects located in remote areas, locals demanding essentially all govt. services missing 15

  18. Land Acquisition& Resettlement Reflections • Should be handled by state • State should plan& budget early • Its ideal to acquire all land prior to • project commencement • Comprehensive& Broad consultations • with PAPs critical • Acquisition should neither be hasty • nor prolonged- organic growth of PAPs alter the game plan significantly over time. • Effective grievance resolution mechanism an important tool • Where all acquisition is not practical, phasing the project may assist. • Through Land Commissioning, government standardizing approach to ease process 16

  19. Managing User Fee (Toll) Trends& Precedents • For PPP with end user fee element, social license assumes very significant proportions. • Thorough and comprehensive engagement on improved service is key • Critical to explain how fees are determined& reviewed • Explaining the ‘how to’ pay the fees/tolls applicable key. • Emphasizing improved service as opposed to the fee, wins • Strong political will fundamental 17

  20. Conclusion: Thank You All for your Attention “You don’t get your social license by going to a government ministry& making an application or simply paying a fee…It requires far more that money to truly become part of the communities in which you operate” Pierre Lassonde, President of Newmont Mining Corporation Contact Information: kaara.wainaina@pppunit.go.ke @KaaraWainaina 19

More Related