Title: Public Sector Infrastructure in South Africa
1Public Sector Infrastructurein South Africa
- Presentation to
- Roads Pavement Forum
- 10 May 2006
2Introduction SA infrastructure
- Extensive network of 752000 km of national,
provincial,municipal and access roads and 19700
km of rail, together moving about 700 million
tons a year domestically, - 7 of 16 Southern African major commercial ports -
handling 161 million tons annually. - 3 major international airports and 7 regional
airports handling 500 000 flights, 21
million passengers and 0,5 million tons of
freight a year. - About 250 large dams with a capacity of 30
billion cubic metres - 478 passenger railway stations, and 2,2 million
passenger trips/ day - 29 400 schools accommodating about 12,3 million
learners - Electricity generation capacity of over 40 000 MW
continuous power - 156 million circuit kilometers of telephone line
with 5,5 million installed phones - 3000 km of petroleum and gas pipelines.
3Why focus on infrastructure?
- Although SA is relatively well endowed with a
relatively good infrastructure stock in many
sectors, there are wide disparities and growing
demands, and so we still face many challenges - Apartheid legacy of unequal infrastructure
distribution (backlogs) - Infrastructure in townships - lacking, of poor
quality and in general disrepair roads,
pavements, streetlighting, clinics, schools, etc - Lack access to water, electricity and
communications infrastructure - Housing provision did not meet demandcould not
own land in urban areas - New Demand
- With democratic change and economic growth came
changes in social and economic patterns
increasing urbanisation etc, placing pressures on
various infrastructure sectors, resulting in
higher infrastructure demands, and increased
maintenance and rehabilitation needs - Increased pressure on economic infrastructure eg.
ports, increased traffic at border posts and
urban and provincial roads, aging railway rolling
stock, lines and signalling, airplanes etc. - Increased pressure on social infrastructure
schools, health infrastructure, justice, safety
and security infrastructure, government
facilities etc - Spatial Inequalities
- Urban-rural divide, migration and social
movement, densities and economies of scale
4Broad economic impacts of infrastructure
- Expenditure on infrastructure and the built
environment are regarded as investments, which
imply welfare benefits to individuals and groups
in society and returns to the economy as a
whole in the form of multipliers of economic
growth. -
- Being durable in nature, the capital investments
have an inter-temporal effect in that the savings
of the present generation are harnessed for the
benefit of present and future generations as
well. For the present generation the additional
benefits, besides utility and future returns, are
the immediate jobs created in the building of
infrastructure, and so there is a direct poverty
reduction/ pro-poor element to infrastructure
investment. -
- The roads, pipelines, cables, transmitters etc,
facilitate the access of inputs into our
factories and production facilities, which
produce goods and services, and facilitate the
access to goods and services, distribution
facilities, product and societal information
dissemination, etc. In short, it has been written
that investments in infrastructure support
development by - Creating favourable conditions for production and
consumption - Facilitating economic diversification
- Providing access for people to both government
and private sector services and opportunities
5Infrastructure delivery in the 10 years of
democracy
- 1,6 million subsidised houses constructed.
- 56000 classrooms constructed, 2700 schools
connected to water, 4000 to electricity. - 700 new clinics constructed, 2300 clinics
re-equipped. 141 hospitals rehabilitated and 3
new tertiary hospitals constructed (2000 beds
added) - Water supply to 9 million more people and
sanitation to 6,4 million more. 6 more dams
constructed including the Lesotho Highland
project. - Over 4 million more electricity connections.
- 3000 projects building or improving police
stations - Prison expansion to accommodate 15000 more
prisoners - Renovation and extension of 129 court buildings
- Construction, rehabilitation and maintenance of
6000km of national roads and 15000km of
provincial roads. - About R10 billion private sector investment in
toll road PPPs. - Remodelling and refurbishment of 150 main
commuter rail stations and 7 new stations, with
264 engines and coaches rebuilt. - R38 billion spent by Transnet on freight rolling
stock, port upgrades and aircraft purchases.
6Infrastructure Institutional Arrangements
- National departments 22 of 34 national
departments perform infrastructure functions such
as government buildings, bulk water resources,
police stations, courts and prisons,
electrification etc, as well as make
infrastructure transfers to agencies and public
entities. - Provincial departments mainly schools, health
infrastructure, agricultural infrastructure,
provincial roads and public works. Infrastructure
budgets derived from own revenues, provincial
equitable share, as well as infrastructure grants
allocated by NT and national departments. - Local government municipal roads and stormwater,
water distribution and wastewater collection and
treatment, electricity distribution,
streetlighting, bus and taxi ranks, community
halls, refuse sites etc. Budgets derived from own
revenue and supported by Municipal infrastructure
grant from national - Large number of extra budgetary
institutions/agencies and public entities that
are publicly owned but operate on business
principles and deliver infrastructure eg. 17
water boards, SA Roads Agency, TCTA, SARCC,
Transnet, Eskom, Telkom, Sentech etc. Funding is
obtained from user charge retained earnings,
borrowing, transfers from oversight government
departments, ppps and concessioning, sale of
assets etc.
7Infrastructure Budgeting Reporting
- Independent budgeting by different spheres of
government and entities based on their needs and
priorities however, reporting to NT is a
requirement. - National department infrastructure budgeting is
integrated within the main budgeting process 3
year MTEF - Requirements specific to infrastructure are
published in the Treasury guidelines to
departments annually and departments present
motivations at MTEC hearings ensures capex
alignment with operational capability and budget,
feasibility etc. - National policy departments make
requests/representations on behalf of agencies
and spheres that they fund. - Reporting on infrastructure is currently done per
dept in the Estimates of National Expenditure
(ENE). Currently only mega and large projects
are reported individually with small projects
aggregated. Also reported are transfers to
agencies and other spheres, transfers to
households, and maintenance. - NT also publishes aggregate public sector
estimates in the Budget Review. - National and Provincial Infrastructure Project
Registers requires individual project detail
and tracks project delivery quarterly.
8Budgeting Framework(source Afrec)
9Broad Treasury capital budgeting role
- MONITORING AND EVALUATION ROLE
- -spending and output performance feedback
- -evaluation wrt efficiency, economy,
effectiveness - -Infrastructure Project Registers delivery and
expenditure - POLICY, PLANNING AND DECISION SUPPORT ROLE
- -strategic big picture on infrastructure
delivery sectoral profiles, - GDP multipliers etc, and better targeting of
infrastructure portfolio - -Development of appraisal guidelines suited to
SA, and refinement of decision processes,
capacity building in departments for appraisal - -buy/lease, dispose/maintain/reinvest trade-offs
and decisions - -backlogs/demand assessment, macro GFCF targets
- RESOURCE INPUT/ BUDGETING ROLE
- -strategic level are we making the right
capital decisions as a country - -portfolio level do we have the correct mix
and spread of projects in any one year, given
capital constraints etc - -project level appraisal benefit to cost
- -institutional/industry issues-
delivery/spending capacity etc - COORDINATION, COLLABORATION, INTERVENTION ROLE
- -potential proactive role in delivery,
stakeholders, implementers, research etc.
10Capital Budgets Committee
- ROLE
- Initiated within the 2005 MTEC process
- MTEC sub-committee - Interdepartmental in nature,
Treasury lead - Act as a filter to the main budget process
- Undertake the review of individual
capital/infrastructure project and programme bids
made by departments to Treasury for funding - Prioritisation and Selection of projects -capital
rationing situation - Make recommendations to MTEC, Mincombud
- Further role develop and improve appraisal
process in future - COMPOSITION
- Major infrastructure oversight departments, and
the development and grant distribution
departments the Presidency - Transport, DWAF, Housing, DPLG, Public Works,
DTI, DME, Presidency, National Treasury (various
sections)
11National and Provincial Infrastructure Project
Registers
- Over 15000 projects valued at R111,7 billion
currently on the National Project Register, - 6 500 of which are currently under construction
- Over 10000 projects currently on the Provincial
Project Register - PROJECT REGISTER OBJECTIVES
- Enable the departments as well as Treasury to
give full account of progress made with spending
on a regular basis - Track infrastructure delivery progress with the
utilisation of budgeted funds and physical
implementation of projects - Track spending on both capital and maintenance
projects - Track project progress from project
identification to completion - Support Treasurys budget allocation process for
infrastructure projects - Communicate progress and achievement to relevant
stakeholders and the public PROJECT REGISTER
INFORMATION - Project information from department as well as
entities submitted on quarterly basis - Financial Data budget, cash flow and
expenditure with expenditure measured against
budget and cash flow - Non-Financial Data - project details, type of
project, name, nature of investment, location of
the project etc. - Physical progress quarterly progress measured
(this include outputs achieved, project stage
etc.) - Data on Expanded Public Works Programme (in
case where the project is labour intensive) - Auditable information - payment certificate
number, responsible official for the project
12Budget Review Infrastructure related estimates
2006 MTEF
132006 ENE departmental infrastructure summary
14Provincial Government Capex-2006 MTEF
15Municipal Grants(Budget Review 2006)
16ESKOM Capex
- 5 year plan revised to R98 bn, nominal.
- Return to service of Camden (R1,5bn), Grootvlei
(R3bn), Komati (R3,6bn) refurbishment of Kriel
(R1,1bn) - OCGT plants in Atlantis and Mossel Bay, (R2bn)
completion in 2007 2010 CCGT plants at Saldanha
and Coega (R4bn) - Hydro pumped storage schemes Braamhoek (R5bn)
and Steelpoort (R1,5bn) - Partner on Inga hydro project (R1,6bn) in DRC
- Transmission capacity strengthening (incl. Cape
lines)
17Transnet Capex
- MTBPS estimates Transnet revising its capital
programme - All major projects have commenced
- Capacity expansion on Orex and Coalink lines
- Multi-purpose terminal at RB, Durban Pier 1
conversion for containers, Island View
reconstruction, Cape Town container expansion,
port superstructure - Multi-products petroleum pipeline - coast to reef
18Focus on key infrastructure sectors (table under
construction not a complete breakdown)
19Breakdown of Road Sector Expenditure Estimates
Roads infrastructure expenditure estimates Roads infrastructure expenditure estimates Roads infrastructure expenditure estimates Roads infrastructure expenditure estimates Roads infrastructure expenditure estimates
Sector 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 Total MTEF
National Roads National Roads 1,846 2,374 1,657 2,399 3,894 7,943 10,083 21,920
Provincial Roads Provincial Roads 5,333 5,878 6,353 7,265 8,012 9,520 9,885 27,417
Municipal Roads Municipal Roads 1,900 2,923 2,800 4,187 4,404 4,616 4,823 13,843
Total Roads Total Roads 9,079 11,175 10,810 13,851 16,310 22,079 24,791 63,180
20Gross Fixed Capital Formation Public Sector
(Reserve Bank)
21Gross Fixed Capital Formation Public and
Private Sector ( GDP) (Reserve Bank)
22Broad indicators of success
- A broad measure of success in the general
direction, is that government (across departments
and spheres) -
- Is now prioritising infrastructure and capital
investment - Beginning to re-build capacity after shedding
many built environment professionals over the
years - Starting to plan earlier and more effectively in
many cases - Indicators that lead us to conclude that we are
moving forward in the right direction are - increases in gross fixed capital formation trend
in the government and public sector as a whole,
and more importantly, private sector GFCF. - increases in government capital expenditure and
number of projects appearing on our project
registers - improved confidence and outlook assessments in
construction industry reviews - increased demand for engineers and other built
environment professionals - More PPPs and mega-projects identified and
pursued - Overall upward trend in GDP
23Issues needing attention
- The planning, generation and management of
projects - Since democracy much skills have been shed -
these need to be renewed through targeted efforts
ensuring transformation - Restructuring resulted not only in skill loss,
but loss of systems, process and organizational
knowledge resulting in confusion at planning and
delivery level Too many projects of all sizes are
not managed and monitored by suitably qualified
people. - project appraisals and approval pathways even on
large projects needs attention. - Re-engineering the business processes of project
planning, approval and management - The construction/delivery environment
- - constraints and shortcomings both in
workmanship and material shortages. - - some contractors taking on bigger jobs they can
handle and abandoning jobs resulting in expensive
project delays, at the same time we need to
nurture small contractors to get bigger, better
and more in number in order to prepare for
greater infrastructure expenditure in future - - material shortages and the booming tender
environment in many cases result in higher tender
prices, rendering original estimates and budgets
too low. - - rationalisation of contract docs and specs so
as not to burden small contactors - -profiteering
-
-
24Issues needing attention (cont)
- Quality, standards, and maintenance
- - With increasing work in the industry, coupled
with skills/learning curve constraints, and lower
monitoring/quality control capability from
authorities, the quality of construction is in
many sectors in decline. - - same applies in the planning and development
approvals/town planning environment in especially
the smaller munis, where development proceeds
regardless of whether the existing infrastructure
has the capacity to cater for additional loads - - far more thinking should be done by the built
environment research and development community on
better though cheaper /quicker housing and other
infrastructure - - much attention needs to given to the
prioritisation of maintenance of assets,
especially systems that schedule planned
maintenance and the budgeting for this. - Coordination, cooperation and collaboration
- -Misaligned, unbridled and uncoordinated
investment in infrastructure results in weakened
benefits relative to costs, diminished multiplier
effects on growth, and reduced returns on
investment. There is therefore a need to - Target investments towards needs and areas of
higher growth potential - Coordinate efforts of different
agencies/authorities and their respective
infrastructure types towards these targeted
developments and large multidisciplinary projects - Cooperation between approval authorities in
different spheres to remove red-tape approval
bottlenecks is essential to accelerating delivery
on investments - Collaboration between the planning sections of
departments and even the private sector in order
to create sustainable living spaces and a viable
built environment. - The plethora of high level plans need to be
aggregated, and assimilated at national level and
inform and align consolidated national planning.
25Thanks!