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Page 1: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Infrastructure Cost Drivers Study The Future of Infrastructure Conference

19 August 2014

MELBOURNE

Joe Branigan, Senior Research Fellow SMART

Page 2: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Outline

(i) Description of Infrastructure Cost Drivers Study

(ii) Progress so far

(iii) Hypothesis “Perfect Storm”

(iv) Top-Down estimate of magnitude of potential reform benefit

(v) The Future of Infrastructure…A wish list

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Page 3: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Study Description

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Page 4: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Project Objectives

• The Need – we can’t learn if we don’t reflect, and we can’t reflect if we don’t have the information

• Understanding rising costs over time (longitudinal) – Ideally would like to test to what extent increasing regulation has

caused rising costs • Environmental regulation • Technical and Design standards • Health and safety standards

– Other relevant factors include: • Economic cycle (mining boom and GFC stimulus spending) • Dealing with increased Complexity (brownfields v greenfields, planning)

• Understanding cost differences between Australian jurisdictions (cross-sectional) – Jurisdictions want to know how they compare with their neighbours – Likely that there will be common drivers as well as drivers unique to

states

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Page 5: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Methodology

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- Attempt to bring regulatory issues into a S-D framework, along with scarcity - Because prices/costs are also affected by regulations that add to the cost of

tendering for projects , designing projects, and building infrastructure - Cyclical Drivers

- Economic cycle - Mining boom - GFC stimulus

- Structural Drivers (more onerous regulation) - Environmental regulations - Planning requirements - Health & Safety - Increased density of cities

- Matched case studies to isolate cost drivers e.g. 10 km road, same terrain, mining boom v non mining boom e.g. 10 km rail, same terrain, different jurisdiction

- Interview to fill in the gaps - Particularly changes in standards and requirements over time

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Project Participants and Data

• Queensland (2007-2013)

– Roads (21 case studies)

– Rail (6 case studies)

– Some previous studies

– Interviews

• NSW (early 1990s – 2013)

– Roads (62 case studies)

– Rail (10 case studies)

– NSW Upper House Inquiry (Rail)

– Interviews

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• Victoria

– Roads (Should receive data by end of August 2014)

– Rail (Should receive data by end of August 2014)

– Interviews

• Wish List (Phase 2)

– Other Australian jurisdictions (esp. WA and NT)

– NZ

– Singapore

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Progress so far

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Page 8: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Early results from the case studies

• Wide variation in costs per km because wide variation in types of infrastructure

– Roads, rail, tunnels, bridges, greenfields, brownfields, rock type etc

– Obviously difficult to get exactly matched case studies and currently seeking a longer time series of data from participating jurisdictions

• Early findings (not full dataset)

– Clear increases in costs per km across time for matched projects; some suspects:

• Property acquisition (increased brownfields development)

• Technical and Project Management (inc. design costs, environmental management, stakeholder engagement) (both increased rates and more work to do)

• Audit and Legal costs

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Page 9: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Wide variation in costs per km (roads example)

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Cost per km ($millions)

Average = $15.2 million per km Standard Deviation = $10.0 million per km

Variation in Road Costs across 17 Case Studies

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Productivity Commission found similar variation in urban passenger rail

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Page 11: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Information from interviews (1)

• Mining construction boom (esp. Queensland)

– Materials shortages

– Engineers/designers shortages

– Cost escalation very common through mid- to late-2000s

• Environmental legislation

– EPBC

– EIS requirements (massive increased workload)

• Planning Approvals delays – Significant increase in waiting times over the 2000s

• Design costs

– Increased complexity (more brownfields, less greenfields)

– Environmental management requirements

– OH&S management requirements

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• Technical standards – Qld had its own standards for road building up until 2012, when it reverted to the

national standard

• Health and Safety standards – More bright lights and witches hats, but where is the trade-off point

• Lack of competition – Esp. during the boom – Alliance model is expensive

• Public projects not cost controlled (scope creep and political interference) • Longer defect liability period and other legal costs • More substantial works to meet increased loads and traffic volumes (ie.

‘benefits’ greater) – See technical standards above

• Fixed/Variable cost trade-offs – Loose fiscal environment (favour capex over opex) (mid-late 2000s) – Very different story now with constrained public finances

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Information from interviews (2)

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“Perfect Storm” hypothesis

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Conceptual Framework

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- Attempt to bring regulatory issues into a S-D framework - Ultimately, costs borne by governments reflect the prices

paid for services - Prices rise and fall depending on resource scarcity (e.g.

mining boom) - But prices are also affected by regulations that add costs to

tendering for projects , designing projects and building infrastructure

- Cyclical Drivers - Mining boom - GFC stimulus

- Structural Drivers - More onerous regulation

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The rise in public investment in Queensland through the mining boom was unprecedented

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Public investment competing with mining boom investment led to resource scarcity and rising costs per unit of infrastructure built

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The mining boom states (Queensland and WA) were more affected than other states…

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Index (Sept 2003 = 100) ABS Road & Bridge Construction Index, Impact of Mining Boom

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By the end of the boom, road construction and maintenance costs were 25% higher than the PPI

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RCMPI

ABS RBCI

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The costs of Road Construction and Maintenance are running significantly ahead of the Producer Price Index.

Index 1989-90 = 100

15-25% higher

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The boom has ended but Engineering Design and Consulting Services wages have remained relatively elevated

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Page 20: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

Another factor – increased complexity

• Higher population density and much higher land values

– Increases disruption associated with major works

– And cost of land resumption

• More brownfields assets needing expanding or ‘decongesting’

• Fewer vacant corridors

– Imposes very costly solutions such as tunnelling

• Greater environmental restrictions and more responsiveness to community concerns

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Magnitude of potential benefits from infrastructure reform

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Page 22: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

“Top-Down” estimate of magnitude of potential benefits – not based on Case Study data

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- SMART has estimated a “top-down” ‘potential benefits’ from infrastructure reform figure

- This estimate is based on publicly available data, including: - ABS National Accounts (State Accounts, Public GFCF) - State Budget Papers - Interviews with stakeholders - Recent PC Inquiry Report on Public Infrastructure

- We find a potential benefit of between $4-$5 billion per year - This is around 12% of current total public new infrastructure investment, which

translates to 6% of current total public investment (new construction + maintenance)

- At 4%, the potential benefit is $2.8 billion per year - At 8%, the potential benefit is $5.7 billion per year

- Clearly, the potential benefits from reform are significant

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The Future of Infrastructure

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Page 24: Joe Branigan - University of Wollongong - Infrastructure cost drivers and financial sustainability – Lessons learned from past projects

A wish list…

• No more bad mega-projects

– Potential for significant welfare losses

– More independent and transparent project prioritisation and selection processes

• Independent review of CBAs

– A counter-weight to short-term political imperatives

• Economic regulation of roads

– Like electricity and water, but (hopefully) without the mistakes

– Improved price signal

• Improved alignment of revenue-raising, spending and service delivery standards between Commonwealth and States

– Remove regulatory duplication

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Thank You

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