 
     Tolling may be the way forward for paying for the roads of the future - but where will concessionaires find the money and do they need funding or financing?     
     
Increasingly, governments around the world are concluding that they can no longer pay for new roads and are turning to the private sector for help. This can be in the form of a Public Finance Initiative (PFI), a Public Private Partnership (PPP) or some other variant. But the catchy acronyms and sound bites politicians like to use can mask a quagmire of ill-defined thinking and lead to the use of inappropriate schemes which impose unexpected undertakings and obligations that may be ill-suited to the project in hand. 
     
According to Stephen Glaister, emeritus professor of transport and infrastructure at Imperial College London and director of the UK’s 
     
“Funding is who pays in the end - in the case of a tolling concession this is the road user. On the other hand, financing is who lends the capital in order to get the road, bridge or tunnel built in the first place. In order to lend the money, the banks or financing companies have to be confident that the capital will be repaid along with the interest accrued, within the period of the concession.” 
     
According to the professor the understanding of the difference between funding and finance is becoming more widespread but the terms are still confused in much of the commentary surrounding major projects. 
     
“In the UK, the Blair government built a number of hospitals relatively quickly using PFI but, contrary to much of the rhetoric at the time, the private sector did not pay for the hospitals - they financed them. The private sector did lend the money but those investors need paying back - with interest - over a thirty-year period, so British taxpayers will face a pile of annual bills for decades to come.”  
He says such confusion exists  globally and in many areas the authorities are still adopting PFI models  without being entirely clear or open about who will pay in the end.  “Ultimately governments have to decide if roads are to be funded by  motorists and commercial vehicles - the ‘user pays’ principal - or from  general taxation.
     
“With  road building the PFI model is fine provided the road is to be tolled  (either directly or by means of ’shadow tolls’ paid by government) to  produce funding against which it is possible to raise finance. But  unless there is a mechanism to produce funding, the PFI route will  produce results quickly but is not financially advantageous over the  longer term.”
     
At the  recent 
     
He  highlighted the division of European countries where the likes of  Spain, Portugal, France, Ireland, Greece and Italy have what he calls a  ‘tolling culture’ and motorists are accustomed to paying to use the  road. Conversely, in the UK, Belgium and the Netherlands motorists are  not in the habit of paying to use the roads. 
     
“What  is interesting is that the countries with a ‘tolling culture’ have been  the ones very seriously impacted by the financial, economic and  sovereign debt crisis and many of the toll road projects financed in the  last 10 years have gone wrong. More projects have gone wrong in the  toll road sector than any other sector and much of this is due to  overoptimistic traffic projections, cost unpredictability, too  aggressive debt/equity ratios and uncertainty regarding competing  infrastructures,” he said.
 
The  Basle III regulations introduced in the wake of the  financial crisis  requires banks to hold more capital (effectively  meaning cutting back on  lending) and reducing their risk-taking. And  with the tolling sector  having such a poor recent history, commercial  banks are unlikely to be  rushing to offer concessionaires project  funding. “If they do it will be  expensive, on very demanding terms and  for relatively short periods,”  said Chetrit. He predicts that raising  financing for greenfield toll  roads will remain a challenge for many  years to come and believes  institutional investors such as pension  funds are more likely to be the  source of future funding. 
 
Professor   Glaister agrees saying: “If you have the correct funding arrangements   in place then roads are a very good asset for pension funds to invest  in  because they have the right kind of asset life - in other words very   long. And unless there are major changes in policy around the world,   then the growth in demand for roads is one of the certainties in life -   so of all the assets you might invest in, this is one of the better   ones.” 
     
Despite his   enthusiasm he stresses that both the governance and charging   arrangements must be correct for the road to perform financially and   that the likes of pension funds may not be able to carry the full risk   of any failure. That potential for failure can be mitigated to some   degree by contractual agreements with the relevant authority regarding   the development of competing infrastructure. He points to the UK’s only   toll road concession, the Birmingham Northern Relief Road, as an   example: “One of the problems it faces is that after the toll road   opened, the government greatly improved the existing, M6 motorway. So   much of the traffic which might have used the toll road stays on the   upgraded free-to-use M6.” 
     
In   areas with a high density of roads, drivers have many alternative   routes they can take to their destination and so can easily avoid tolled   roads. “The only real answer is to charge a network and not a single   road and there is a debate to be had about how you achieve that.   Governments across the globe are already considering alternative methods   of raising revenue because vehicles have become more efficient and   therefore fuel duty is declining.”
     
As   it is the wealthier among the population that can afford to buy the  new  and more fuel efficient vehicles, fuel duty is rapidly becoming  viewed  as a regressive tax - giving additional impetus to the political  will to  find a replacement. 
 
 “The   big prize is to get to a ‘pay as you go’ system  and it is likely this   will be tied in with motor insurance because the  industry is moving   quite rapidly in that direction,” adds Professor  Glaister.  
     
   
Long-term
Even    projects that start out as being economically sound can be blown off    course by external factors such as the global economic turmoil, the    Eurozone crisis and sovereign debt.  The fallout of such events can    render the long-term forecasting and planning required for major    infrastructure projects such as motorways as wildly inaccurate. While    the variable traffic volumes are a risk concessionaires may have to    carry , they should ensure reasonable recourse to    alterations in the contract partway through the concession period to    reflect changes created by the national or regional authority.  Recently    many such changes have been introduced to counter economic downturns or promote employment in particular regions and can also    be used to encourage less polluting vehicles or influence traffic  flows   for safety and/or political reasons. 
     
One    example where this has been successfully achieved is in addressing    government-required changes affecting the concession on 150km of the    Autopista de la Mediterrania running from Videres in Spain northwards to    the French border. It is managed by 
     
In this case an    agreement was reached with Spain’s government to halve the cost of the    tolls for trucks with four or more axles making short trips, and to    reduce by 35% the charge for heavy trucks travelling longer distances.    In return, the government agreed to ban trucks with four or more axles    from using the local roads. This forced the trucks to use the tolled    route which not only improved the situation on the local road but also    compensated the concessionaire.
     
Bonet    concluded by saying: “Mature concessions are alive and need to be    reinvented to fulfil stakeholders objectives,” adding that any    alterations to the contractual arrangements need to be win-win    agreements that can be quickly put in place to promote mobility and    satisfy local requirements.
 
     
         
         
        



