Title: PROJECT FINANCE WATER AND WASTE WATER SECTOR EXPERIENCE
1 PFI for Waste Management Contracts Financial
Issues
21 November 2003
2Content
- 1. Analysis of financial status of contractors
- 2. Analysis of financial models
- 3. Developing a Payment Mechanism
31. Analysis of financial status of contractors
4The Procurement Process - ELWA
BAFO
ITN Bid Stage
Prequalification/ISOP
5Pre Qualification Stage Analysis of Financial
Status
- Issues for the Authority
- In a consortium which party is doing what?
- Are the operational companies (not the
contracting SPV) a good credit risk? - Are the applicants experienced in raising finance
for similar projects? - Analysis based on
- Review of accounts
- Responses to questionnaire
- EU Directive restrictions
- Invitation to Submit Outline Proposals?
6Typical Limited Recourse Financing Structure
Local Authority
Public sector
Private sector
Project Finance
Equity
SPV
Investors
Construction Company
Operating Company
72. Analysis of Financial Models
8Analysis of Financial Models - ITN Evaluation
- Price
- Base case
- Sensitivities e.g. waste growth
-
- Robustness
- Reliance on third party income?
- Cover Ratios
- Deliverability
- commitment of funders
- consistency of term sheet and model
9Analysis of Financial Models BAFO/Negotiation
Phase
- Negotiation on Risk Issues
- contingencies
- benchmarking
-
- Audit
- form of opinion
- to whom is it addressed?
- Interest Rate Risk
- optimisation
- hedging
103. Developing a Payment Mechanism
11What is the Objective of the Payment Mechanism
A well designed payment mechanism should
- Optimise risk transfer and thereby
- Incentivise the contractor to deliver the
specified services - Allow the Authority to demonstrate Value for
Money - Contribute to an off-balance sheet opinion under
FRS 5
- Design constraints include
- Commercial logic!
- Clarity - principles and drafting
- Resource cost of using the mechanism
12Features of Payment Mechanism in the Waste Sector
(1)
- The Unitary Charge is typically fragmented
between - Fees payable for receiving, handling,
transporting, processing and disposing of waste - Fees payable for managing sites
- Payments in respect of landfill tax
- Deductions for service failures
- Identification of the separate elements of
Unitary Charge raises FRS5 issues but.. - Off balance sheet treatment has been achievable
in the past
13Features of Payment Mechanisms in the Waste
Sector (2)
- For IWM contracts the mechanism typically
incentivises the Contractor to - accept all Contract Waste (within defined limits)
- recycle a defined percentage of contract waste
- divert a defined percentage of contract waste
- make CA sites available during specified opening
hours - Landfill tax - the mechanism typically leave the
majority of the risk re changes in the rate with
the Authority. - Special provisions often apply for non-standard
contract waste which is particularly expensive to
manage
14The Formula
UC (BREN) C L (DMP)
Waste Management Fees
Deductions
C CA Site Payments L Landfill Tax Payment D
Unavailability Deductions M Mileage
Deductions P Performance Deductions
UC Unitary Charge B Baseline Payment R
Recycling Supplement E Diversion Supplement N
Non Standard Waste Supplements
15Baseline Payment Volume Related But Banded
Band 2
Band 1
Band 4
Band 3
Debt Service and unavoidable operating costs
covered
Tonnage
0
Minimum Tonnage
Maximum Tonnage
16Recycling and Diversion - Contractual Targets
of Contract Waste
17Diversion Supplement Related to Achievement of
Targets
Supplement above Target Rate linked to saving on
Landfill Tax
Expected Payment
Diversion Rate ()
0
100
Contracted Target Rate
Termination Trigger Rate
18Non Standard Waste Supplements
UAC (BREN) C L (DMP)
- What is Non Standard Waste ?
- Fridges ?
- Clinical waste ?
- A matter for negotiation but Authorities
generally seek to minimise scope of carve-out - Price and volume risk may be separated and
allocated differently
19Site Payments
UAC (BRDN) C L (DMP)
- Which sites?
- CA sites only is a common approach but
- Could be extended to all sites with Works
- Could be characterised as availability payments
and linked to UD - Payments per period do not vary with volume
- May be subject to step changes (normally up) due
to - trigger dates e.g to manage affordability
- trigger events e.g. to incentivise completion of
works
20Site Payments
Fee may be partially or 100 indexed
Time
0
Contract Expiry
Trigger Event/Date
21Landfill Tax Payment
- Tax paid by Contractor in first instance
- Contractor can re-charge the Council the
prevailing rate of landfill tax on the lower of
- tonnage actually taken to landfill
- tonnage that should have taken to landfill (if
Diversion Target had been met) - Limits contractor exposure to changes in rate of
tax but - ..residual exposure exists as contractor not
reimbursed for tax on waste that should have been
diverted from landfill.
22Deductions
AUC (BRDN) C L (DMP)
Deductions
- Aggregate of
- Unavailability Deductions
- Mileage Deductions
- Performance Deductions
- Impact should be proportionate to nature of
service failure - Contractor given relief from deductions which
arise due to specified events
23Issues Related to Payment Mechanism (1)
- Sharing specific excess revenues/gains
- Recyclate income
- Sale of electricity
- Third party waste
- Landfill permits
- Refinancing gains
- Operating costs e.g. due to technological
innovation - General excess profit or cashflow sharing
arrangements
24Issues Related to the Payment Mechanism (2)
- Adjusting UAC for (unforeseen) variations
- Pre-priced (foreseen) variations
- Indexation
- In year payment arrangements
- Measuring waste flows
25Conclusions
- Consistency with output specification is vital
- Standardisation will not elimination negotiation!
- Landfill Allowances may shift focus
- Keep it simple
26Pwc