Thanks for that. This is a classic problem with public-private partnerships. When essential infrastructure or services are privately operated, there is also this incentive to bring in or increase user fees over time to create profit. As you mentioned, plans for user fees have been confirmed by the CIB itself in its last annual report.
To give you one example, a Food and Water Watch report showed that, in the U.S., private sector providers charged 59% more for drinking water and 63% more for sewage services than public water services. Rising user fees affect the most vulnerable communities first, and in the case of water, could violate the human right to water. I could go on in terms of other sectors, but I think that highlights the seriousness, when it comes to user fees, of just one of the many problems with P3s.