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| ![]() Turkey: Yet To Fulfil Its AmbitionIn the wake of its elections early June, will Turkey be able to fulfil its ambitions for infrastructure?
By: InfraNews It will not be plain sailing, however. Many of these schemes could well just become pipe dreams. None, so far, have got off the ground and doing so may well prove difficult, particularly as in last week’s elections the AKP did not obtain sufficient votes to allow it to establish a new constitution by itself. It will have to bring its three opposition parties into the constitutional discussions to get the charter through parliament. The other problem Erdogan faces is that finding the money for the country’s current $15bn (EUR10.25bn) “Infrastructure projects have suffered from a number of false starts,” says Alexander Jan, associate director at Arup, which is acting for the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality on the privatization of the Istanbul Seabuses and Fast Ferries (IDO). “Not only have deals been around for quite a while but there are questions about whether Turkey – and the Turkish banks – can absorb the financing and risks requirements of the current programme of deals without foreign banks’ involvement.” The USD861m (EUR590.7m) IDO sale (awarded to a Tepe-Akfen-Souter- “It is all very well and good drawing up these plans for major projects but the amount of finance need is immense,” said one banker. “The biggest challenge is actually getting these projects financed.” Finding Funds The 5.4km Bosphorus Tunnel, as an example, has been in development for over a decade. The tender opened in 2004 and a team led by SKEC was awarded the concession in 2008. Over two years down the line, the sponsor and financial adviser, UniCredit, has yet to reach financial close. The key, it seems, is less about tendering and awarding projects and more about commercial banks’ appetite to fund a crowded and expensive projects pipeline. “The real problem is less political and more logistical in terms of the sheer size of the debt needed to get these projects financed,” the local banker said. Such a logjam will likely mean just one of two of the projects being financed in the short-term. Ender Özeke, a partner with Hergüner Bilgen Özeke, a law firm, believes that Turkish banks must play a “bigger role” because they have more liquidity than international banks. “Turkish banks are getting more and more comfortable with non-recourse debt, which has been deployed before in the power sector but less so for the infrastructure market.” he added. However, infrastructure assets, like roads and ports, operate on a different model to power projects. The core problem for the present projects is that the length of the concession contracts does not match the tenors that Turkish banks are comfortable with. “Previous infrastructure assets were financed by 10 to 12-year loans but since the concessions periods for the big projects are longer than 15 years, usually around 25 years, the major infrastructure investors are all looking for tenors of 18 to 20 years,” the banker explained. “Turkish banks do not like such long tenors.” This puts more emphasis on the sponsor to increase equity contributions and find mezzanine tranches to attract financing. Alternatively, they can base their feasibility studies on pricier 15-year loans. Either way, this makes project financing less favourable for sponsors as the risk is placed mainly on them. Jan claims that one solution would be for sponsors to take on refinancing risk. “Once the project is operational and all sides are comfortable, a refinancing would be a good option but there are no guarantees,” Sponsors, however, seem resultant to expose themselves to such a model. Shorter tenors mean that the terms of negotiating a refinancing though would also be less favourable to borrowers. To read the full article, click here: http://www.infra- For more information about InfraNews (www.infra-news.com) # # # InfraNews is the most relevant, timely & accurate provider of news, analysis & research about the latest greenfield & brownfield infrastructure projects & deals across the European and global infrastructure communities. End
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