Financing the Hong Kong-Macau-Zhuhai Bridge:
The Public Authority Option
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article
appeared in AToL
on March 4, 2008
On Thursday, February 28,
after more
than six years of deliberation, the governments of Hong Kong, Guangdong,
and Macau at long last endorsed in principle a financial
scheme for a sea
bridge linking the three sub-regions. The project will accelerate the
economic
integration of the Pearl River Delta to bring further economic growth
and prosperity
to all in a region that now houses close to 50 million people, about
the size
of New York and California combined.
The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge will be 36
kilometers long
with six traffic lanes designed for a speed of 100 kilometers per hour,
including
a 6.7-kilometer seabed tunnel at 40 meters under the South
China Sea
at the mouth of the Pearl River to facilitate
unobstructed ocean shipping lanes. Two artificial islands measuring one
kilometer
each will be built to house the two ends of the tunnel to join the
bridge
segments. The destination landing points of the bridge will be in the
reclaimed land of Macau’s
north-eastern district known as “The Pearl”, Shek San Shek Wan in Hong
Kong’s Lantau Island,
and Zhuhai’s Gongbei. At completion, travel from Hong Kong to Macau
or Zhuhai can be accomplished in 30 minutes.
Under the
agreement, Hong Kong will assume
slightly over half the project’s estimated total cost of up to US$5
billion, at
50.2 percent, with Guangdong province assuming 35.1 percent and Macau
14.7
percent, proportional to anticipated macroeconomic benefits to each
participating
entity, such as reduction in transport costs and time, less the costs
to each
in building separate connecting roads to the main bridge.
A plan for financing the Hong
Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge has
been proposed by the Transport Planning and Research Institute of
Ministry of Communications
of the Central Government of the People’s Republic of China
and delivered to the local governments. According to press reports, all
three
local governments have agreed to undertake construction within their
separate jurisdictions
to link up to the main bridge.
It is reported that investors will be selected
by public
bidding. Domestic investors from state-owned companies will be selected
through
conditional build-operate-transfer (BOT) bidding with a 50-year
operation
period to collect tolls to pay off the investment with adequate
returns. The
successful bidders are expected will form joint ventures with foreign
companies. The investment funds will be raised by those joint ventured
partnerships
and by the three local governments. The final cost of the undertaking
will be
known when the bidding process has been completed. Preliminary
estimates on the
projects total cost come to about US$5 billion.
In an August 30, 2002
article in
AtoL I
wrote:
“A
proposal for a 15 billion yuan
(US$1.83 billion) bridge linking Hong Kong, Macau and the mainland
Chinese city
of Zhuhai, which neighbors Macau, has sparked bickering among Hong Kong
tycoons
over their special interests. …
“Hong
Kong
tirelessly promotes itself as the New York of Asia. In New
York, the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey, established in 1921, operates
transportation
facilities serving both states. It is a financially self-supporting
public
agency that receives no tax revenue from any state or local
jurisdiction and
has no power to tax. It relies almost entirely on revenue generated by
its
facilities' users - tolls, fees, and rents - to finance revenue bonds.
“The governor of each state appoints six members to the Port
Authority's board
of commissioners, subject to state senate approval. Board members serve
as
public officials without pay for overlapping six-year terms. The
governors
retain the right to veto the actions of commissioners from that
governor's own
state. Board meetings are public. The board of commissioners appoints
an
executive director to carry out the agency's policies and manage
day-to-day
operations. … …
“It seems natural that the governor of Guangdong province and the chief
executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region should put
their heads
together and create a “Port Authority of Guangdong and Hong Kong” to
plan,
finance and operate the proposed Zhuhai-Macau-Hong Kong bridge as
expediently
as possible and to undertake other regional plans and coordination,
such as a
regional air-traffic and airports plan and a regional
water-transportation,
rail and highway plan.
“Such an important regional project should not be left to the bickering
of local
special interests. There is no need to rely on the private sector to
develop
and finance public infrastructure. Privatization of public monopolies
would
only permit unnecessary private profit to keep users fees high and sap
the
region's cost-competitiveness.”
The reported BOT scheme (Buy, Operate and Transfer) by
private tender is only appropriate for underdeveloped economies
suffering from
capital shortage. BOT is generally a more costly way to finance
infrastructure
and only used by desperate governments which do not possess sufficient
credit
ratings to access international capital markets on their own. The Pearl
River Delta, Hong Kong and Macau
regional
economies, being part of the larger Chinese economy, are not faced with
such
problems.
China
is now the biggest creditor nation in the world. It is a puzzle why
this
important and much needed regional infrastructure project that will
yield
economic benefits many folds over its cost needs to be financed with
costly private
sector BOT arrangements, with 50 years to collect lucrative high tolls,
which
will act as a drag on the regional economies. Details of the final
terms from
private investors on development rights of related real estate have not
yet been
made public at this time, but it is reasonable to expect that the
public
interest
will be better served via the path of public authority financing.
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