My name is Matti Siemiatycki, and I am an associate professor of geography and planning at the University of Toronto. I've spent the last 15 years studying infrastructure, with a focus on public-private partnerships. Over the last year, I've been delving into this idea of an infrastructure bank.
I've written two reports on the infrastructure bank, which go into some detail about the role and structure of this institution. Since I've been studying the infrastructure bank, the role of the bank has shifted. From low-cost financing to municipalities, this role has moved to attracting private capital and investing in revenue-generating infrastructure.
In my studies one of the questions I keep returning to is this: what is the value of this bank? When you read the public commentary and debate around the bank, there is this question of establishing the public value, assessing the benefit of proceeding with this type of institution. In particular, we want to find out what types of projects are going to be invested in. From my vantage point, let me spend a few minutes talking about these ideas, both the public value and the types of projects.
I think the place to start is by understanding a few fundamentals of the infrastructure sector in Canada. The first point is that most infrastructure assets in key sectors that Canadians are concerned about, sectors that the government has prioritized, do not support their operating costs, let alone their capital costs, through user fees. This includes public transit, most roads that have no tolls on them, many of our water systems, and our affordable housing stock. Most of those assets do not cover their revenues through user fees, and that also includes VIA Rail.
What this means is that the bank is not going to be providing new money in those sectors. This is not additional money. Any money invested through the bank is going to have to be paid back somehow, and that money is going to come either from user fees that don't exist on those asset classes, or from some other government source. With the exception of projects that generate user fees, this is not new money to expand the pie. This is a financing technique, not new funding. We have to be clear about that.
If the bank is going to be focused on revenue-generating projects, that narrows the scope of the types of projects that are really going to be viable and of interest. Keep in mind, we've been talking a lot about institutional investors. The reason institutional investors have not so far invested in Canada to a significant extent is that there's not the project deal flow. These are not the types of assets they are interested in. They are interested in very large projects, typically with a minimum value of $500 million, and often up to a billion dollars in value. They want very large projects that they can take an equity stake in. To this point, those types of projects have not often existed in Canada.
The third point to raise is that the provinces and municipalities provide most of the infrastructure in Canada. The federal infrastructure bank is going to have to be a collaborative organization. It is not going to be bringing forward projects on its own. It's going to have to work with both private investors and governments at the provincial and municipal levels, which are ultimately responsible, in many cases, for approvals and for operating and maintaining these assets.
The fourth point is that there are existing institutions across the country that provide many of these services. Provincial and first nations financing authorities already provide low-cost financing to municipalities. There are also public-private partnership agencies across the country that provide expertise and support, keeping in mind that most of the public-private partnership projects in Canada are provincial, not federal. We have to understand these organizational overlaps and make sure we're getting the collaboration right with this institution.
Finally, as Mark mentioned, we have been using P3 models widely across the country, so we already have private capital in play in infrastructure.
With that survey of the landscape, the question is this: what role can the infrastructure bank play? From my vantage point, the real opportunity is to go for unconventional projects that are innovative and of national significance. I'm talking about real big projects, the game-changers, the moon shots, the projects that are going to launch Canada in a different direction, the projects that are unconventional in the way they are financed and paid for by user fees.
This is not going to be for your typical road or transit project, from my vantage point. This is going to be for projects that are very large and long term; for projects that often involve multiple partners, and so there's a risk and requirement to bring these partners together. They will have revenues from multiple sources, not only from user fees, but, perhaps, also from a combination of sources that then together pay for both the capital and operating of the infrastructure. Finally, these are going to be high-risk projects that are high-risk for all the partners, both the private sector and, potentially, for the government, but then also have a potential for major rewards for all the parties involved.
I can give you a few examples of the types of projects I'm thinking about in order to really zero in here. One project is waterfront regeneration. We can think about a project like the Port Lands redevelopment in Toronto. By investing in the flood protection of that area in the eastern part of the downtown of Toronto, we unlock billions of dollars in land redevelopment potential. No investor will be able to come to the fore and invest in the flood protection, but they might and will become involved in the real estate, transportation, and the business opportunities once that land is in place. The bank could provide a role in catalyzing that type of development.
Transit projects are another area where we could see the bundling of transportation and land use into the same type of deal. Typically, we've seen transportation and land use done separately. There's an opportunity to bring those together to generate revenues, not only from the transit fares but also from the redevelopment potential around the stations, and potential rents that can be accrued from those developments. These are creative types of transit projects.
Community hubs are another opportunity where we're bringing together multiple uses of land into areas where we can bring together public schools or recreation centres, and try to fund and finance some of that through development. In our fast-growing communities, there are real opportunities to leverage development to pay for some of the infrastructure and build stronger and smarter communities.
In green energy, there's opportunity for waste and water. There's an opportunity for district energy type of systems in some of these fast-growing areas. There was a project in Toronto where they were going to bring forward a district energy plant, and they just couldn't get the capital to put the project in place. It would have been paid for by the redevelopment of the land and the condo units over time, but they couldn't get the money together to pay the upfront costs.
Finally, there is social infrastructure. There are some incredible examples of projects that are bringing together uses that are very creative and that you wouldn't think of. There's a project bringing together a condominium with a homeless shelter in the same building, using the condo revenue in part to pay for some of the land costs of that development.
These are the types of opportunities I think the bank can play a part in. I want to echo what everyone on this panel has said, which is that evidence-based planning has to be at the core of this. How do we prioritize and select between the different options and different projects? I ask because there will be a lot of calls on this revenue and the money in the bank. How do we pay for it?
The other point is that the bank is the centre of excellence role that's in the legislation. This could be a real opportunity.
Thank you.