Infrastructure and Public-Private Partnerships in Canada Embassy
Transcription
Infrastructure and Public-Private Partnerships in Canada Embassy
Infrastructure and Public-Private Partnerships in Canada Embassy of Canada Tokyo, 2015 Blair Cowper-Smith Chief Corporate Affairs Officer Not for re-publication, citing or external use We are OMERS: One of Canada’s Largest Pension Plans 451,000 Members 81 Members over 100 974 Employers in municipalities 35 Unions and associations • Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System – Serves Municipal Workers in Ontario • Ontario is the largest province in Canada and comprises approximately 1 million square kilometers • OMERS was created in 1962 and is a jointly sponsored and jointly managed pension plan 2 Investor in Infrastructure, Private Equity, Real Estate & Capital Markets Private Markets Public Markets 2014 gross return of 11.1% 2014 gross return of 13.4% Net assets $40.7B Net assets $12.7B 2014 gross return of 16.0% Net assets $6.7B 2014 gross return of 8.7% Net assets $11.8B 3 We Build Strong Community Partnerships Teranet Bruce Power LifeLabs Serves more than 81,000 end users, 34 real estate boards and over 250 municipalities/ institutions Provides ~30 % of Ontario’s energy (2014) Critical service delivered across Ontario: - 240 collection centres - 17 sessional locations - 8 testing facilities - 60 hospitals supported - 6,800 physician offices Powers more than 1 in 4 hospitals, homes, schools, businesses with clean, affordable energy High quality jobs in Bruce County Hospitals William Osler Health System Royal Ottawa Health Centre St Catharine's − Niagara Health System Facilities providing healthcare to over 1.5 million Ontarians 2.5M square feet with over 1,000 beds Husky Leading supplier of injection molding equipment and services Over 40 service and sales offices MTCC North Convention Centre 255 Front St W Toronto Fully accessible, barrier-free Green-awarded building Over 4,000 employees Significant expected economic benefit to the City of Toronto in 2014/15 Supports customers in over 100 countries Creates thousands of jobs per year 4 Global Investment – London, New York, Sydney Offices NET4GAS Czech Republic Gas transmission operator Network of more than 3,800 km of highpressure pipelines Joint ownership with Allianz Caruna Finland Ellevio Sweden Leadenhall London Vue Cinemas across Europe More than 1,350 screens across 150 multiplex cinemas Regulated electricity distribution utility serving southern, south-western, western and northern Finland Most recent infrastructure acquisition by OMERS Office tower in downtown London Serves Nordic and Baltic countries 610,000 square feet 47 floors The country’s largest electricity distribution network Joint ownership with GSIA, Folksam, and Swedish Pension plans AP1 and AP3 Joint ownership with British Lands Joint ownership with AIMCo Joint Ownership with GSIA, Keva, and Elo 5 Building for the Future We invest globally Total Assets $72B* Rest of the World 10% We have a significant appetite for Infrastructure looking ahead We are growing $100B+ $72B Canada 45% Europe 25% US 20% 2014 Typical private markets leverage 50% + *Total Assets includes the four divisions on the previous slide plus third-party assets we manage and other divisions not labeled here 2019 target 6 P3 in Canada Background and History • • • • Highly developed P3 market in Canada since 1990 Canadian jurisdictions leveraged UK experience with PFI Alternate form of procurement based on a contractual long-term arrangement with private sector investors and suppliers Fundamental principles • • • • 7 Comprehensive fixed price solution in the hands of one party Transfer risk to party best able to manage the risk Create strong accountability environment Competitive procurement brings innovation and strong focus on price P3 in Canada – Key Principles Importance of public/government champions • • • • • • • • • • 8 Private sector DBFOM responsibilities – whole life Government retains ownership Transportation, hospitals, schools, court houses, bridges, power, environmental Private sector provides finance and equity 90/10 Fixed price turn key Long duration – often 30 years Retained risks – contamination, land acquisitions, artifacts, force majeure Right to terminate for supervening events Specified turnover standards at completion independent certification Lender step in rights RFQ/RFP Process “A recent survey by KPMG found that, in projects procured since 2007, the time from release of tenders to financial close has fallen to approximately 16 months.” KPMG. PPP Procurement. Review of Barriers to Competition and Efficiency in the Procurement of PPP Projects. May 2010. 9 • • • • • • Typically three teams in the final round post RFQ Highly detailed specifications Teams must provide committed financing and a fully developed solution Decisions reflect NPV Standardized contracts and terms Bidding costs in the range of 0.5-1.5% including subsidies (Canadian Council for Public-Private Partnerships “What the World Can Learn From Canada” pg. 16) P3 in Canada – Financing • • • • • • Royal Ottawa 10 • • Equity components 8% range – slightly less for operating phase; debt 90% + Minimum debt service coverage before distributions Credit ratings A- or BBB Secured privately placed fully underwritten amortizing bonds with reserves Issued for lifecycle term into institutional market Insurance companies, pension plans and some asset management firms Recent pricing 180-200 bps spread Bank construction financing New Issue Spread Trends P3 new issue spreads tightened considerably over the last 5 years; however, spreads widened this summer on the back of multi-billion issuance as well as general market conditions 11 Source: Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets, Canadian P3 Primer, September 2015. Purchasing P3 Debt – OMERS Analysis • • • • • 12 • • • • • • • • Jurisdiction stability Functioning legal system Importance of the P3 project Demographics Contractor/builders experience – union contracts expiry dates, experience Construction complexity Complexity of the corporate structure Use of leverage Coverage ratio and reserves Topography, seismic, weather Return sufficient to accept risks Duration, credit ratings and spreads Alternatives for fixed income portfolio Canada’s Largest Public-Private Partnership – Bruce Power1 • Bruce Power is largest operating nuclear facility in the world at 6300 MW • Joint venture between Province of Ontario and Bruce Power underpinned by long-term lease enabling operation and refurbishment by Bruce Power • OMERS, TransCanada, Power Workers’ Union and Society of Energy Professionals own Bruce Power • Up front payment to government from private sector • Transfer of operational risk and capex requirements to Bruce Power • Candu technology − 2 Stations A and B and 8 units • Independent safety regulator 13 1Bruce Power joint case study – August 2015 – Canadian Council for Public-Private Partnerships and Bruce Power Key Attributes of this Public–Private Partnership “In 2002, the first full year of operations for Bruce Power, the Bruce Power site produced just over 20 TWh of electricity, in 2012 35TWh and in 2013 just over 45 TWh” 15 • Investing in publicly owned assets through a joint venture • Funding of long-term liabilities including decommissioning • Opportunity to strengthen operational and related performance • Provincial policy goals met • Economic impact significant • Competitively priced electricity generated for the people of Ontario • Public confidence and support • People and jobs positively impacted Ongoing Improvements, Upgrades & Investment by Bruce Power • Since 2001, Bruce Power has invested $10B in site improvements which has gone straight into the Ontario economy including restarting 4 units removed from service in the 1990s • Units 3 and 4 restarted in 2003/04 • 2005 agreement to refurbish Units 1 and 2 and sell generation to Ontario • 2007 first steam generator ever to be replaced in Candu reactor • 2010 – employees achieve 22 million injury free hours • 2013 all eight units operating – largest operating facility in the world • 2014 producing 30% of Ontario’s power (6300 MW carbon free) • 2400 MW of flexible generation 16 People and the Community • • • • In 2001 there were a total of 3,130 employees By 2014 employment had risen to 4,091 employees Rejuvenation of younger employee segment with 33% now under 35 Numerous awards for being a top employer including being named as “Most Admired Corporate Culture” by Waterstone Human Capital • Support and alignment with neighboring communities 17 18 Further Renewal at Bruce Power after 2015 • Provincial policy goal to phase out coal which is now complete • Affordable power with long-term price stability well below the average price in Ontario • Next stage of refurbishment as contemplated by the Ontario Long-Term Energy Plan will see significant positive economic impact through jobs and capital expenditures stretching over many years • Price of electricity from Bruce Power is $64 MW under the generation contract with OPA (which compares to solar in Ontario of $498 MW) 19 Bruce Power – a successful long-term P3 arrangement in the Province of Ontario serving the interests of the public 20