Skip to main content

Study in Finland shows infrastructure is a good investment

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, the University of Oulu and Aalto University in Finland have analysed the financial statements for 2002-2009 of companies, public utilities, and municipal units that own infrastructure, including water services, as well as road, port, airport, railway and electricity networks. Owning infrastructure is relatively risk-free. The most profitable is the energy sector where the return on investment was about 13%. The average annual return on investment of ports was 10%. T
March 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSS814 VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, the University of Oulu and Aalto University in Finland have analysed the financial statements for 2002-2009 of companies, public utilities, and municipal units that own infrastructure, including water services, as well as road, port, airport, railway and electricity networks. Owning infrastructure is relatively risk-free. The most profitable is the energy sector where the return on investment was about 13%. The average annual return on investment of ports was 10%. These figures are explained by the stable demand for energy and the local monopoly position of ports. Also water and traffic networks are good investments, but these are starting to deteriorate for lack of investments in renovation and repair.

According to researcher Pekka Leviäkangas, there is no need to change the ownership of basic infrastructure in Finland as service networks are generally natural monopolies, and thus well suited for public ownership.

Meanwhile, Finland’s government has announced it will, for the first time, provide higher funds for railways than roads. The Government will grant US$1.33 billion for transport investments, half of which will go in rail traffic.

According to Finland's minister of transport, Merja Kyllönen, the package will secure the development of rail traffic and decrease the sensitivity to disturbances. Moreover, the Government has also made a decision on the implementation of the Pisara railway loop in Helsinki. The most extensive rail projects will primarily concern the main railway in the South.

In road infrastructure, investments will target the vicinity of the eastern border. For instance, more than US$330 million will be invested in the motorway section to be built from Hamina to the Vaalimaa border crossing point.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Finland prepares ‘fossil-free transport’ roadmap
    November 12, 2019
    Finland is aiming to go green in a big way by cutting road transport emissions. The country’s minister of transport and communications, Sanna Marin, has appointed a working group to prepare the country’s roadmap for fossil-free transport. Marin says: “The aim is to create a range of means for cutting transport emissions by half over the next decade. The solutions must be ecologically, financially and socially sustainable.” The government says transport emissions accounted for one fifth of Finland’
  • Remote remedies help US authorities identify bridge deficiencies
    September 6, 2017
    Every day 185 million vehicles – cars, trucks, school buses, emergency response units - cross one or more of America’s 55,710 'structurally compromised' steel and concrete road bridges, the highest concentration of which are in Iowa (nearly 5,000), Pennsylvania and Oklahoma. Nearly 2,000 of these crossings are located on interstate highways, according to the American Road and Transportation Builders Association's recent analysis of the US Department of Transportation's 2016 National Bridge Inventory.
  • Finland and Estonia link on transport projects 
    May 7, 2021
    MoU expected to create improved environment for applying European Union funding
  • ‘Free’ power for signs, shelters and so much more
    March 17, 2016
    David Crawford looks at the sunny side of the street. Solar power has been relatively slow in entering the transport sector, but a current blossoming of activity bodes well for the large-scale harnessing of an alternative energy that is zero-emission at source and, in practical terms, infinitely renewable. Traffic management and traveller information systems, and actual vehicles, are all emerging as areas for deployment. Meanwhile roads themselves are being viewed as new-style, fossil fuel-free ‘power stati