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01 August 2003

South Africa's PPP programme is blessed with solid banks that can offer long-dated money and advisory expertise. But lack of third-party equity will make ambitious programmes hard to develop. Marisa Rodrigues reports.

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With a well-developed financial debt market, solid legal and regulatory framework and strong political support, the PPP programme in South Africa has all the potential to address the huge infrastructure and service delivery backlog in the country, estimated at well over R100 billion ($12.2 billion). However, issues such as the lack of equity to support all the proposed projects and high costs in project preparation and implementation, may stymie project development.The Standardised PPP Provisions, a legal document governing the relationship between private and public entities, was released by government for comment in May and will look to address some of the issues.

The South African market was introduced to PPPs through toll road projects, with the first, the Maputo Corridor (N4 East), financed in 1998. The concessionaire Trans-Africa Concessions (TRAC) is in the process of looking to refinance and has appointed SG as advisor. If successful, it would be the first...


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