Business Standard

Kelkar panel on PPP might push to revive 3P India plans

Committee to also suggest showcasing success stories, better dispute redressal

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY For full report, visit www.business-standard.com

A panel, headed by former finance secretary Vijay Kelkar, and tasked with examining and suggesting reforms for the public-private partnershi­p (PPP) model in infrastruc­ture projects, might recommend the reviving of plans to launch a permanent advisory body called 3P India, Business Standard has learnt.

The 10-member committee, constitute­d on May 26, has till end-August to submit its report. It is also likely to recommend the need for better pitching to private sector investors of the success stories in PPP, especially in roadways and ports. It might also recommend ways to improve dispute redressal mechanisms through better exit models for investors.

Senior officials who are aware of the deliberati­ons of the Kelkar committee on PPP, said if 3P India is set up as proposed in the 201415 Budget by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, it can serve as an advisory body with a longer-term mandate to review, examine, and suggest reforms and changes in the PPP model, as compared to panels with short-term terms of reference like the committee itself.

“Discussion­s in the panel have, among other topics, centred on the need for 3P India. It could be a ‘centre for excellence’ for PPP projects which could hire the best talent from finance, infrastruc­ture, government, private sector and academia to study global-best practices, review current contractua­l arrangemen­ts of such partnershi­ps, and work upon improving the PPP model for infrastruc­ture financing,” a senior official said.

Presenting his first Budget, Jaitley had said last year: “PPPs have delivered some of the iconic infrastruc­ture like airports, ports and highways, which are seen as models for developmen­t globally. But we have also seen the weaknesses of the PPP framework, the rigidities in contractua­l arrangemen­ts, the need to develop more nuanced and sophistica­ted models of contractin­g and develop quick dispute redressal mechanism. An institutio­n to provide support to mainstream­ing PPPs called 3P India will be set up with a corpus of ~500 crore.”

According to reports, 3P India was likely to be a non-profit company on the lines of the National Skill Developmen­t Corporatio­n, without regulatory power, but with the mandate to look at a whole gamut of issues obstructin­g the growth of PPPs in India such as model concession­aire agreements, bidding process, dispute resolution mechanism. It was said the government would have a 49 per cent stake in the body.

A National Investment and Infrastruc­ture Fund (NIIF), with a similar stake by the Centre, was notified last week but with the intention of funding projects rather than advising on these.

For 3P India, a Cabinet note was prepared and sent for the Union Cabinet’s approval. But for reasons unknown to them, it was never taken up at the top level and hence, the proposed ~500 crore was not released, officials say.

The Kelkar panel, officially called the Committee on Revisiting & Revitalisi­ng the PPP Model of Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t, was tasked with reviewing PPP policy, analysing the risks involved in PPP projects in different sectors and the existing framework of sharing of such risks, suggesting an optimal risk-sharing mechanism between private investors and the government, and suggesting measures to improve capacity building in government for effective implementa­tion of the PPP projects.

According to reports, 3P India was likely to be a non-profit company on the lines of the National Skill Developmen­t Corporatio­n, without regulatory power

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India