Public-Private Partnerships – From Potential to Progress
3 Articles
3 Articles
Public-private partnerships (PPPs) can represent a strategic alternative to meet various needs of the water sector. However, since they are generally contracts for large-scale works, which require large investments and long periods of time for repayment — 15, 20 or even 30 years — their design and structuring must be carried out with maximum technical and professional rigour. Beyond the contribution of private capital, the true strength of this …
Public-Private Partnerships – from potential to progress
Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) are often cited as the solution to Africa’s infrastructure financing deficit, which, according to the African Development Bank, remains stubbornly high at US$130 – US$170 billion annually. The usefulness of PPPs in addressing this deficit lies in their ability to mobilise private sector capital and business innovation while sharing the risks with …
Kenya, Zambia, and Tanzania revamp public-private partnership laws to bridge infrastructure finance gap - Africa Sustainability Matters
East Africa’s ambition to narrow its infrastructure gap through public-private partnerships (PPPs) is gaining measurable traction, as recent legal and policy shifts across Kenya, Tanzania, and Zambia begin to translate legislative intentions into tangible projects. Nevertheless, the journey from potential to progress hinges on bolstering technical capacity, ensuring regulatory consistency, and fostering public trust. Zambia […]
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