Methodology used in a recent highway construction in Portugal

Costel Botezatu, Hugo Silva, Joel Oliveira

Abstract


During the last years, Central and Eastern European countries aimed to increase the participation of the private sector in the construction of new highways and in the development of the transportation network. Presently, public funds are scarce to support the call for transportation infrastructures and the network development in the new EU countries, since projects and the construction of highways involve a high capital investment and an extremely long amortization. So, a possible solution for an adequate risk management of the public funds is the private-public partnerships (PPP), namely through the use of concessions (i.e. construction and exploitation of the public highways network by private entities). One of the European countries which is widely using the concession model in its Road National Strategic Plan is Portugal. This paper is based on the work carried out at the Department of Civil Engineering of the University of Minho, within the Highways group, in the frame of “Leonardo da Vinci†Student Mobility Program, Contract RO/2004/PL93209/S, and the main objective is to study the Portuguese experience on the use of the concession model, in order determinate its main advantages and disadvantages. A case study on the use of the concession model was followed for four months during the construction of some new stretches of highways located near Oporto city.

Full Text:

PDF

References


TEN-T (2003). High Level Group on the Trans-European Transport Network Report, retrieved from http://ec.europa.eu/internal_ market/publicprocurement/docs/ppp/2003_report_kvm_en.pdf

L.N. Shaw, K.M. Gwilliam and L.S. Thompson (1996). Concessions in Transport, TWU Papers, Environmentally Sustainable Development, The World Bank, Discussion Paper, retrieved from http://www.worldbank.org/transport/publicat/twu_27.pdf

FHWA (2002). Contract Administration: Technology and Practice in Europe, Federal Highway Administration. International Technology Exchange Program, Washington D.C., retrieved from http://international.fhwa.dot.gov/contractadmin/

J.Y. Perrot and G. Chatelus, eds. (2000). Financing of Major Infrastructure and Public Service Projects: Public-Private Partnership, Lessons from French Experience throughout the World. French Ministry of Public Works, Transport and Housing, Economic and International Affairs Division, Paris, France.

A. Lamas (1999). Public Private Partnerships. MES Intervenção Operacional dos Transportes, Lisbon, Portugal.

Louis Berger SA (2002). Transport Infrastructure Regional Study (TIRS) in the Balkans. Appendix 9. Concession Experience in the Road Transportation Sector in Central Europe, retrieved from http://www.cemt.org/topics/tirs/TIRSann9.pdf

A. Brenck, T. Beckers, M. Heinrich and C. von Hirschhausen (2005). Public-Private Partnerships in New EU Member Countries of Central and Eastern Europe: An Economic Analysis with Case Studies from the Highway Sector, Public Sector Management and Regulation Working Papers, WP-PSM-08, Reprint from EIB Papers, Vol. 10, No. 2, 82-112, retrieved from http://www.tu-dresden.de/wwbwleeg/publications/wp_psm_08_brenck_beckers_heinrich_hirschhausen_2005_ppp_eastern_europe.pdf

B. Despiney and W. Karp (2006). Why It Is So Hard? A History of Highway Concession Contracts in Poland, 5th Conference on Applied Infrastructure Research, Berlin, retrieved from http://www. infraday.tu-berlin.de/fileadmin/documents/infraday/2006/papers/ karpa_despiney-coair2006-paper-Why_It_Is_So_Hard-v01-14_09_2006.pdf

Portuscale (2006). Scut do Grande Porto. Apresentação dos Lotes em construção, Internal Report, Oporto. (in Portuguese)

Portuscale (2006). Concessões Norte, Costa da Prata, Beira Litoral e Alta e Grande Porto, Internal Report, Oporto. (in Portuguese)


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2015 INTERSECTII / INTERSECTIONS

Indexed

Google Scholar    Directory of Research Journals Indexing