Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and committee members.
Thank you for the opportunity to be with you to contribute to your study of the Canada Infrastructure Bank.
Concert Infrastructure is an independent long-term investor, developer and manager of public infrastructure. Our foundation and strength include the backing of Canadians represented by the 10 unions, including building trades and management pension plans that are our shareholders.
Concert Infrastructure was created to invest in Canadian public-private partnership, P3, infrastructure projects, strengthening communities while providing stable and predictable financial returns for our shareholders.
This Canadian-centric infrastructure investment model seeks to secure the long-term financial future or retirement income of Canadians, while partnering with Canadian companies and employing Canadian building trade workers to deliver critical public infrastructure.
Through 10 direct infrastructure investments with an aggregate capitalization of almost $3 billion, including the Iqaluit International Airport, several school bundles and the BC Children's and BC Women's hospital projects, Concert has been a successful vehicle enabling pension plans access to Canadian infrastructure investments.
Infrastructure investment is critical to strengthening the economic and social fabric of Canadian communities. It is well understood that Canada, like most nations, faces a massive infrastructure deficit. Concert supports the government initiative to address this deficit through the Investing in Canada plan and its $180-billion financial commitment. We also agree with the government and CIB objective to leverage private sector investment in infrastructure to deliver more projects more quickly.
In late 2016 and early 2017, Concert engaged directly with the government on its CIB initiative. At the time, we were assured that the initiative would not impact the well-established, competitive and successful Canadian P3 model and sector.
Today our position and message to the committee on the CIB remains consistent. P3s have been successfully implemented across Canada for almost 20 years, including in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, Quebec and Nunavut. It is a model that delivers infrastructure in partnership with all levels of government and agencies on time and on budget. The Canadian P3 model is widely viewed as best in class, and many Canadian companies are now exporting the model to other countries.
Canada continues to underutilize the model and expertise, particularly the federal government. Too few federal government-led projects are brought to market. There is an abundance of private capital available for infrastructure investment in Canada but an undersupply of project opportunities. Canadian capital is available and waiting to invest in our infrastructure.
Canadian institutional investors, such as pension plans, have the experience, track record of success, as well as the capital available to invest in these projects. Similarly, the First Nations Finance Authority exists in Canada to provide third party financing to indigenous infrastructure projects.
The Canadian P3 market is competitive and mature, resulting in efficient pricing, development, delivery and management of public infrastructure projects, often led by Canadian institutional investors such as Concert.
A primary role of the CIB should be to expedite and package the wide range of sizable infrastructure projects in a way that is accessible and relies on these pools of private sector capital.
The activity of the CIB to date appears to crowd out opportunity for private sector equity and debt investment in infrastructure projects. The November 2020 “CIB Corporate Plan”, appendix I, page 80, lays out various infrastructure delivery models and structures, making it clear that the CIB intends to finance design-build-finance-maintain, DBFM, projects or design-build-finance-operate-maintain, DBFOM, projects that have been previously financed by Canadian institutional investors.
There are three main CIB priorities that Concert recommends this committee include in its final report.
First, leverage private sector investment, structuring projects to maximize private sector equity and debt. CIB should not be financing P3 DBFM or DBFOM projects. It should respect its mandate of supporting revenue/usage risk infrastructure projects.
Second, the CIB should be mandated to take a leadership role in the identification and implementation of major federal government infrastructure projects, while seeking to maximize private sector equity and debt investment. This activity will produce a greater pipeline of investable projects. An inventory of CIB projects and opportunities for private investment should be maintained and be transparent to the Canadian infrastructure market. A mandatory federal P3 screen of projects should be reinstated, supporting greater private sector investment in infrastructure.
Finally, the CIB should be separated from routine government decision-making, giving it a clear mandate to support the implementation and delivery of infrastructure projects. As you work to develop your report, we urge you to be mindful of the existing successful Canadian infrastructure investment market and how the CIB is impacting this market and ultimately the effective and efficient delivery of infrastructure in Canadian communities.
Thank you.