| Delivering the Green
This holiday season, as we all get lumps of coal in our financial
stockings, there is more interest than ever in finding out what might be
under the Energy/Carbon Christmas Tree. New carols echo: “Redo the Halls
With Energy Infrastructure,” “Come Bearing Tidings of Climate Change
Control.” There’s no want of things on our wish list: intelligent grids and
sparkling renewables, affordable carbon sequestration, exquisite on-line
efficiency management, energy efficient green buildings and . . . (oh yes):
dollars, the entrepreneurs to execute projects, and an assurance that jobs
will flow from it. In short, everything needed to satisfy the pull and tug
of the three basic policy vectors: infrastructure stimulus (jobs), energy
security (reduced net foreign oil dependency, more reliable power sources),
and climate change control (neutral carbon footprint, cap and trade
regulation). Hence, the reemergence of the notion of a National
Infrastructure Bank, a piggy bank in one place targeted on those projects
which would best incentivize all of the above. Pretty wrapping; wrong
present. What should be under the tree is a box of sturdy
interlocking green lego blocks to form public-private partnerships (P3s) to
create green jobs. Why? Because it makes sense now to focus on how
government institutions can now, or in the future, facilitate the kind of
public-private partnerships which can serve, as “delivery systems” for the
development and operations of the type of specialized environment/energy
initiatives in support of climate change and growth being contemplated.
Unlike an undifferentiated public works program for “crumbling
infrastructures,” these initiatives have certain characteristics in common:
emphasis on technology breakthrough or change; application to sectors where
there is already a major public presence, and a complex of institutionalized
governmental rules and policy issues which must be accommodated, as well as
the new energy job/carbon imperatives; and requirement of a sharing of
risk-taking between the public and private sectors to assure achievement of
these imperatives.
Infrastructure financing always requires a high degree of mitigation of
market and price risks and clear-cut definition of non-market (political)
external economic variables. It needs to be made through delivery channels
designed to meet these requirements. A national infrastructure bank can
certainly review financing variables to determine that they have been dealt
with in a financeable way, and may be equipped with sovereign powers to plug
holes in financing structures, e.g., through loan guarantees, grants, or
collateral financing support. But such a multipurpose bank may suffer brain
damage in choosing among projects, of different sectoral types, subject to
the prerogatives of multiple regulators in different regions of the country,
and subject to lingering uncertainty of what the new Federal schemes will
look like.
Not to say that a pump primer for each type of P3 is not necessary.
Conventional availability of tax credit and depreciation benefits is not
sufficient to cause private investors to otherwise take the lead in pulling
the weight of change which is job productive: The applicable rules for that
market for service must otherwise clearly be laid out through P3
arrangements, so that revenues are assured. Without revenue stability, the
tax credits do little good.
Public-private partnerships (“P3s”) are an old concept, which may be
perceived to have fossilized into a single model: public retention of asset
ownership, contractual delegation to the private sector for a “concession”
price of the right to build facilities and provide services, implicit
government credit support for the ventures through governmental service fees
or lease payments, and explicit assumption of technical risk by the private
sector. In that sense, a “public utility” is the most airtight of P3s. But
the concept can and is becoming more flexible than that in an effort to
align public policy objectives and private long-term ROI objectives.
The P3 model can be adapted to meet the green jobs/infrastructure crisis, in
the near term, by a series of measures built around existing programs and
appropriate funding sources. In particular, this can be done in the field of
energy efficiency/renewables, as applied to the provision of public sector
services and infrastructures. The key elements of P3s which are most
critical for these purposes are the following:
1. Basis for demonstrable measurement/computation of efficiency savings
payback.
2. Clear-cut baseline and methodology for carbon and other environmental
credit benefits.
3. Specific public authority identified and qualified to administer services
even though multiple services crossing functional lines are involved.
4. Support by fragmented legislation in the Federal, state, and local
sectors is both substantial and subject to clear reconciliation mechanisms
and includes, or is consistent with, use of funding available for renewables
and/or innovative infrastructure and/or innovative carbon reduction
practices.
5. Framework for allocation of different levels of technology risk and
governmental risk, to public and private participants in venture, is clearly
laid out and justifiable.
6. Governmental incentives mixing, e.g., purchasing power, technology
development grants/loans, use of public finance bond funding vehicles, e.g.
CREBS, EQCBA, and IDBs may be utilized.
Elements of viable P3s with most of these features are susceptible to a
“component assembly” approach from the bottom up (government and private
sector working together), as well as from the top-down, and thereby side
stepping inter-government and broader policy issues which otherwise could be
roadblocks. This kind of component assembly is a setting where creative
Federalism has something to offer which all-knowing National Infrastructure
Bankism may not. A P3 based on these principles can be a do-it-yourself kit
that can be enhanced over time. Jurisdictions have different resources to
attract new industry development, local institutional development, and
public service cost containment. These may include educational institutions
(with innovation capability), local electric utilities (with efficiency
facilitation capability), and existing centers of entrepreneurship,
Different jurisdictions have different types of financing as well as
institutional mechanisms suitable for blending. Knitting them together has a
distinctly local flavor. The myriad types of public-private partnerships for
specific purposes that are sustainable presently will only be enhanced as
Federal programs become clearer. They may not look, or be, financially
alike, and they may differ in risk profiles for the parties. They may be in
different functional areas, such as water, heating and cooling, or local
power distribution. But they will all produce least-cost solutions to the
particular jobs/public service environment configuration of a particular
jurisdiction. New Federal programs can thus support a diverse program of
public-private delivery systems, which may be funded by the states.
In short, public-private partnership can represent interlocking lego block
assemblies, not the clunky programmatic wooden toys of sometimes
questionable success. They are the best way to assure that in future years
the green goods will be delivered.

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