First of all, I don't think it's appropriate to say that there are only a small proportion of projects that are worthy of being P3s. What I said in my remarks is that 10% to 15% of all infrastructure projects in Canada are procured using the P3 methodology. Frankly, there's great opportunity to increase that percentage. Again, for that few number of projects, it gets incredible scrutiny at all levels, and not least of all in the media. In fact, if the more traditional approach to procurement were subject to the same kind of scrutiny, all project procurements would improve. That's just a comment on context.
With respect to whether a project should be procured as a P3 or in another way, it comes again to a few considerations.
The first one is being able to demonstrate value for money. This would be the overarching principle within P3 Canada, for sure. When assessing a project, they and government members of our association are always looking to ensure that you can get better value for taxpayers, better value for money, by going ahead with the project as a P3. That's one condition that we believe is critically important.
Second, no risk transfer, no real value to the model.... The key here is to be able to identify the risks in play and then allocate the risk to the party best able to assume it. Clearly in the case of political risk, that rests with government. In many cases, environmental risk also rests with government, but at the same time, design risk, construction risk, should clearly rest with the private sector.
One of the features of the P3 approach is that when you do transfer those risks and enter into a fixed price contract, if those projects go over budget, either because of a design fault or construction challenges, they are the responsibility of the private sector consortium. There are many examples of that. The challenge is that those examples aren't made public because the private sector isn't prepared to say that they said it would cost $10 million and it cost them $11 million. The most important feature is that government isn't responsible for assuming that extra $1 million. That's what really differentiates those projects.
It's really important that those kinds of considerations are in play, first and foremost.
Some also believe there is a minimum threshold that needs to be met in order for a project to go ahead as a P3. Traditionally, that has been the case. They tend to be more substantive in cost or estimated cost in order to lend themselves to that model. That's often driven by the financial community, which wants to ensure the project is of sufficient size that they can make a fair return on their equity investment.
The reality is that with municipalities, particularly small and medium-sized municipalities, many of their infrastructure challenges don't tend to have price tags as large as building a new hospital. I think what is beginning to happen now is a rethink by the P3 community about how they can be a little more innovative themselves with the P3 model, in order to see how it can be calibrated in a way to respond more effectively to projects of smaller value. There are some traditional ways. You'd be aware that oftentimes these projects are bundled, but again that's intended to get them up to a sufficient enough size that it will attract the private sector.
The reality is there are ways to rethink the P3 model to respond more effectively to smaller projects, and that's the approach now being adopted.