Government earmarks £50bn of infrastructure projects for private investors

by

19 Mar 2014

The government has set aside a target of £50bn for privately investable infrastructure projects before 2020.

News & Analysis

Web Share

The government has set aside a target of £50bn for privately investable infrastructure projects before 2020.

The government has set aside a target of £50bn for privately investable infrastructure projects before 2020.

In a National Infrastructure Plan Finance Update published alongside today’s Budget, the Treasury said there may be £52bn of potential privately funded project-finance opportunities available to investors before 2020.

It said this represents around 14% of the overall £375bn pipeline of public and private investment identified by the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, in December 2013.

It said: “The main opportunities for project-specific investment (both debt and equity) are currently likely to be in the electricity generation sector. Together with a handful of potential opportunities that have been identified in other sectors, this may represent up to c. £52bn of investment before 2020.”

Elsewhere the update said: “In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, new regulations (Basel III) and a greater drive towards recapitalisation meant that commercial banks, previously a key source of long-term debt for infrastructure projects, were less willing or able to lend. The government recognised that new and diverse sources of finance would be required – both in terms of new forms of debt to replace bank lending, and measures to stimulate demand for infrastructure projects from equity investors.

“In addition to directly financing projects through a strong public funding commitment and supporting a world – class regulatory regime, the government has therefore taken a number of steps to stimulate a range of different types of private investment.”

These have included the creation of the £40bn UK Guarantees Scheme; the Green Investment Bank; the European Investment Bank; the Pensions Infrastructure Platform (PIP), and the Insurers’ Infrastructure Investment Platform.

In addition, the government has dedicated additional resources in UK Trade & Investment to the relationship management of major overseas financial institutions and has developed relationships with key investors holding combined global assets of more than $5trn. Since 2010, it said, the UK had attracted more than £15bn of foreign capital investment into infrastructure.

Allianz Global Investors CIO infrastructure debt Deborah Zurkow said: “The earmarking of around £50bn of infrastructure projects open to private investment, detailed alongside today’s Budget, underlines the critical role that private capital is set to play in modernising the UK’s infrastructure.

“With infrastructure a priority but the public purse strings still tight, additional sources of investment will help ensure major infrastructure projects become a reality. As understanding of the attractiveness of infrastructure as a long-term asset class continues to grow among investment managers, we expect private investors to play an increasingly important part in the capital mix backing big infrastructure”.

 

Comments

More Articles

Subscribe

Subscribe to Our Newsletter and Magazine

Sign up to the portfolio institutional newsletter to receive a weekly update with our latest features, interviews, ESG content, opinion, roundtables and event invites. Institutional investors also qualify for a free-of-charge magazine subscription.

×