Public - Private Partnerships and Solid Waste Management Infrastructure
Public - Private Partnerships and Solid Waste Management Infrastructure
Public - Private Partnerships and Solid Waste Management Infrastructure
1. The problem
2. Key factors affecting PPPs in SWM
3. Changes in project preparation (design,
risks, feasibility)
4. Case study
5. Conclusions
2
The view
3
The problem
To deliver WM infrastructure
To ensure the service for certain years
To achieve specific recycling targets
To interact with market conditions and
other uncertainties
4
Project cycle
5
PPP as a WM tool
6
Key factors
7
1. The status of managing bodies
2. Increase in WM costs
3. Legal gaps and problems
4. Need for a new public role: from control of
procedures to control of the results
8
Key factors Effect
1. EU policy Positive
2,7
2020
0,9
1,9
2013
1,3
1,1
2010
1,95
10
A new approach to design
11
Feasibility
Alternative funding
Affordability
12
Case Study: WMR
300,000 citizens
120,000 tons of mixed MSW
Lignite mines and power plants -
Extensive lignite excavations
Regional SL at old lignite mine
Well established WMA
(DIADYMA S.A)
First (and sole) Regional SL in Greece -20 y life expectancy
9 Transfer
stations
1 SW
treatment
unit
1 landfill
1 closure –
rehab.
14
Technologies - results
3 million tons of waste
25 years
Residue < 65% by weight
Recycling: according EU targets
MBT – RDF
Anaerobic digestion
15
Cost barrier – landfill
dependence
COUNTRY COST (€/TN) COUNTRY COST (€/TN
IRELAND 120-240 UK 21
16
WMR case
LANDFILL: 13 Euros/tn
17
Total expenses: 267 m. Euros
25 YEARS EXPENSES
140,000,000 59.68%
1.20% 50.00%
% EXPENSES
120,000,000
1.00% 0.89%
180
EUROS
10.00%
20,000,000 0.00% 14.24%
0
ACHAIA WMR
18
Final modeling
GATE FEES COMPOSITION
90.00
WESTERN MACEDONIA PPP MODEL
80.00
16,000,000.00
14,000,000.00
70.00
12,000,000.00
10,000,000.00 60.00
EUROS
8,000,000.00
50.00
6,000,000.00
4,000,000.00 40.00
2,000,000.00
0.00 30.00
20 1
20 2
3
4
17 15
1 8 16
19 7
20 2018
20 019
20 20
20 1
20 2
23
4
26025
27 26
28 7
29 8
20 029
20 030
20 31
20 2
20 2 3
4
5
01
1
1501
1601
20 202
03
3403
20 201
02
2502
20 202
3503
1420
20 20
20
2320
2420
0
2 0 20
2 0 20
3320
132
2
20 2
222
20 2
20 2
2
312
20 2
11
12
20
21
30
32
20
20
20
19
Emphasis to results
20
21
Risk allocation
Risk transfer and allocation
Risk
23
Why PPP?
24
The concept
25
Key issues for success
• Build local capacity to develop technical
specifications and to tender competitively.
• Create a level playing field by means of a
regulatory framework.
• Specify worker safety and environmental
requirements.
• Provide mechanisms to assure flow control.
• Define sanctions and enforcement mechanisms
that discourage non-performance.
26
• Prepare for agreements that are
long enough to allow full
depreciation of investment.
• Prepare agreements that are large
enough in scope to allow economies
of scale.
• Include price indexing to allow
adequate cash flow and continuous
profitability.
• Include public consensus in all key
decisions. 27
• Quantify outputs to enable
comparative performance
monitoring.
• Enlist public cooperation.
• License and control all private
sector involvement.
• Monitor performance to compare
service providers.
28