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- JORDAN PRESS THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— The man appointed to help advise Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on setting up a new infrastruc­ture financing agency was told it could take on a “significan­t” amount of risk to help projects come to fruition, documents show.

The agency would “help bear a significan­t portion of the risk” in a project if the government took on an equity stake in order to make a project more attractive to private investors, says a confidenti­al briefing package prepared for special adviser Jim Leech.

The Feb. 20 briefing document says the bank could take on debt that allows other debtors to be paid first in order to provide a “loss buffer,” or invest on an equal footing “at concession­ary terms.”

That latter reference could mean giving a private partner exclusive rights to use and receive revenue from a piece of infrastruc­ture like a rail line — like that in place between the U.K., France and the private companies involved in the Channel Tunnel — making the project more attractive to private-sector investment.

The briefing note, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act, says agency officials would look to structure deals that “most effectivel­y crowd-in private sector investment, as well as the expected return on investment” to the government.

The government has said that the bank won’t put taxpayer money into projects that are too risky, and that it plans to move as much risk as possible to the private sector.

The plan for the next 11 years is to infuse the agency with $15 billion in cash and $20 billion in financing such as loans, which officials say wouldn’t hurt the government’s bottom line because the money would be paid back.

The bank will not borrow money; rather, its funding will come from the government on a per-project basis as projects are approved for funding, meaning the agency won’t receive all the funding up front in one lump sum.

The hope is that the funding lures three or four times that amount from the private sector to build bridges, roads and energy networks that cross city, provincial and even national borders.

The department­s overseeing the creation of the bank say funding agreements will include provisions about how revenues that exceed expectatio­ns are shared among all involved, and how the pain is spread around if revenues fall short of expectatio­ns.

During a technical briefing Mon- day, officials said any losses must be balanced among other factors, such as whether the piece of infrastruc­ture would have ever been built, or would have required much more taxpayer funding to do so.

The focus of any funding would be to minimize the amount of public funding required to make the project financiall­y viable, shifting to the private sector any risks from a shortfall in revenues.

The rate of return to private investors from any project will be tied to their share of the risk — the bigger the risk, the bigger the payoff — and negotiated on a project-by-project basis.

The legislatio­n to create the bank is contained within the government’s budget implementa­tion bill, which is nearing Commons approval despite opposition concerns that there hasn’t been enough time to scrutinize the plan.

In recent days, the government has sought to cool concerns about the agency. Last week, Trudeau told a national gathering of municipal officials that use of the bank would be optional and that most infrastruc­ture spending would be delivered through grants.

Cities and provinces may pitch projects directly to the bank.

There is also a section in the document about federal projects for the agency, but officials have blacked out the contents citing it as advice too sensitive to release publicly.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ottawa is trying to attract funding for projects such as the upgrading of the aging Ambassador Bridge that connects Detroit and Windsor.
CARLOS OSORIO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Ottawa is trying to attract funding for projects such as the upgrading of the aging Ambassador Bridge that connects Detroit and Windsor.

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