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Road Pricing as Innovative Finance An Assessment

Road Pricing as Innovative Finance An Assessment. Genevieve Giuliano International Symposium on Road Pricing November 2003. Presentation Overview. What is innovative finance? What explains changing perspective on finance? Road pricing as innovative finance: some examples Conclusions.

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Road Pricing as Innovative Finance An Assessment

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  1. Road Pricing as Innovative FinanceAn Assessment Genevieve Giuliano International Symposium on Road Pricing November 2003

  2. Presentation Overview • What is innovative finance? • What explains changing perspective on finance? • Road pricing as innovative finance: some examples • Conclusions

  3. What is Innovative Finance? • Everything that is not traditional finance • Grant-based, pay-as-you-go, no risk (?) • Innovative Finance • Accelerated use of traditional funding sources • Use of non-traditional funding sources, public and private • Use of new institutions for infrastructure provision, ownership, management • Privatization

  4. Innovation Continuum Private funds, ownership, mgmt PPP finance, build, operate Private Public/private finance partnerships (TIFIA) Leveraged debt (Garvees, SIBs) Funding Conventional debt (bonds, loan programs) Public Public funds, pay-as-you-go Public Private Ownership/mgmt

  5. The Problem: California Capital Outlays (1998 dollars) Relative to Population Growth Source: Center for Continued Study of the California Economy (CCSCE)

  6. More of the Problem: California Travel and Infrastructure Growth

  7. Conventional Explanation • Declining productivity of the fuel tax • Rising costs of maintaining an aging system • 80% of state transportation expenditures in Calif. • Rising construction costs • Planning and environmental review • Public sector inefficiencies • Politics and delays • I-105: 34 years, $3 billion • Budget crises, tax revolts

  8. A Closer Look…. • Shift in perceptions re role of government • Public sector as provider of last resort • Benefits of competition, profit motive • Shift in understanding industry structure • Contestability as sufficient condition for competition • Deregulation of rail, trucking, air transport • Lack of evidence re productivity benefits • 1990s productivity studies

  9. A Closer Look, con’t • Increasing concern with environmental costs of transportation • Air pollution, habitats, endangered species, open space, urban runoff • “You can’t build your way out”

  10. Bottom Line • Less consensus on adding capacity, accommodating growth • Public net (social) benefits of infrastructure may not be positive • If benefits are mainly private, those who benefit should pay (….as long as I don’t have to pay)

  11. Risks and Project Feasibility(It’s all about risk) • Risk related to project scale • Long time horizon, uniqueness, uncertainty • Construction • Management, uncertainty, Robert Moses problem • Operations • Costs, revenues and debt financing • Planning and politics • Environmental review, visibility, conflicts, payoffs

  12. Big Dig ? The Risk Continuum Channel Tunnel £10B Alameda Corridor $2.4B NJ LRT $1.1B G. Bush Turnpike $700M Project Scale Dulles Greenway $350M AK I-state Rec. $360M Butler Highway $150M SR 91 $130M Extent of Innovation

  13. Some Examples:Payoffs and Pitfalls AB 680 Projects Toll Roads AB 680 Projects Toll Roads

  14. 1989 California AB 680 • Promote privately funded, built operated facilities • 4 Demos • PPP • State DOT project sponsor: manage environmental review, provide access to financing • Private entity builds, operates • BTO; state DOT retains tort liability • 35 year lease • 1990 RFQ; 13 qualified consortia; 4 projects chosen

  15. Observations on Project Outcomes

  16. Observations, con’t

  17. Examples of Suburban Toll Roads • SR 241/261 • Suburbs of Orange County, CA • SR 73 • Suburbs of Orange County, CA • SR 125 • Suburbs of San Diego, CA • Dulles Greenway • Suburbs of Washington D.C.

  18. Risk Assessment 1 • Scale • All projects have long payback period • All projects highly visible • Unexpected changes in conditions • SR 73 downzoning, restrictions on development, lead to reduced toll revenues • SR 125 changes in route due to endangered species, local opposition • SR 91 increased demand, congestion make non-compete clause untenable, yet revenues not sufficient to expand capacity

  19. Risk Assessment 2 • Construction • All projects had underestimated costs, unexpected construction problems • SR 91 was least complicated, with existing ROW • Delays, environmental problems • Operations risk • Revenue shortfalls for SR 73 lead to downgrade of debt and possibility of default • Additional problems for SR 73 – drainage control system, wildlife corridors • Revenue shortfalls for Dulles result in default • SR 241/261, SR 73 multiple revenue sources reduces dependence on tolls

  20. Risk Assessment 3 • Planning risk • All projects had delays related to environmental review SR 73, SR 125 have environmental problems • Endangered species • Wildlife habitat • Water quality • SR 241/261, SR 73 were well advanced in review process before 1986 • Dulles consortium responsible for clearances and ROW, but no eminent domain • SR 57 a regional priority, but a local problem

  21. Risk Assessment 4 • Politics • I-80, SR 57 had strong local public opposition • SR 241/261, SR 73 located in sparsely populated area, under control of single landowner/developer; similar situation for Dulles • SR 241/261, SR 73 had strong support of County gov’t, and County took lead in EIR process • SR 125 did not have strong local support; Caltrans as lead agency • SR 91 non-compete clause became major problem, despite favorable performance

  22. Conclusions • Necessary conditions for any major infrastructure project • Strong local public support, public sector support • Toll revenues will likely not cover long-term costs – except in the very long run • Most highways are “free” • Toll roads built in mostly undeveloped areas – demand develops over long time • High enough tolls to support long-term facility expansion politically unacceptable or impossible with competition from untolled facilities

  23. Conclusions, con’t • Success stories • Some toll roads have exceeded revenue expectations (SR 241/261, SR 91) • Financing packages, institutional arrangements • Public $$ leverage • Roads would not have been built otherwise • No toll roads have closed • Public sector retains residual risk • SR 91 bought by public agency • No toll roads have closed

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