Skip to main content

ASECAP: Cooperation needed for better toll-road risk management

Toll operators must offer a level of service for which drivers are prepared to pay because in many cases, drivers have alternative free-use routes. Incentives to attract drivers onto toll roads must include shorter and reliable journey times as well smooth and trouble free travel – all at an affordable price. Private companies running toll roads face the same difficulties as any other commercial entity, in particular financing construction before any toll revenue can be collected. Hardly surprising that fin
May 31, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Guy Chetrit: PPPs may not be the answer
Toll operators must offer a level of service for which drivers are prepared to pay because in many cases, drivers have alternative free-use routes. Incentives to attract drivers onto toll roads must include shorter and reliable journey times as well smooth and trouble free travel – all at an affordable price.


Private companies running toll roads face the same difficulties as any other commercial entity, in particular financing construction before any toll revenue can be collected. Hardly surprising that financing was one of the major themes at a recent Study and Information Days event put on by 1103 ASECAP, the European association of toll concessionaires.

The stakes are high. ASECAP’s members operate more than 50,000km of tolled highways. Across the Atlantic, members of the International Bridge Tunnel and Turnpike Association (2793 IBTTA), ASECAP’s North American equivalent, operate more than 8,500km of highway.

A client’s tender document for a planned toll road includes all the details including the road’s proposed route and design, land surveys and – importantly - estimates of expected traffic volumes. Potential bidders base their calculations upon this data.

However, should there be significant differences between the details provided and reality, the winning bidder can make a claim for changes to the contract – especially in terms of payment. The construction phase represents one of the biggest risks - particularly as the road may not be open and therefore the concessionaire would not be receiving any toll revenue.

The moment the contract is signed, “the partnership ends and the fighting begins. Once the contract is signed it’s a zero-sum game: my gain is your loss,” said José Viegas, secretary general of the 1102 International Transport Forum.

He urged delegates, which included local authorities, concessionaires and contractors, to cooperate and not let lawyers take control.

One of the biggest changes in the tolling industry working its way through the system is European Union Directive 2014/23/EU which redefines the European model of a concession. In the new regulations, the concessionaire must accept the risk of failure. In tolling that often relates to unexpected difficulties during construction of the volume of traffic that use the new road. This introduces a degree of uncertainly which, Guy Chetrit of the 1054 European Investment bank, told the conference, means “PPPs [public-private partnerships] are not the right vehicle for funding toll road construction as a PPP needs certainty.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road transport must evolve in line with users’ needs
    February 7, 2012
    At its annual plenary meeting held on 25 May 2010, during the 16th IRF World Meeting in Lisbon, the European Road Federation (ERF) elected a new President in the person of Jacobo Díaz Pineda.
  • The new agile world of the construction equipment industry
    June 22, 2015
    while worldwide for 2015 a crystalball would be helpful, in Europe the sector has already listed specific priorities it wants to tackle, and among these are the upcoming emissions regulations (see separate story), external trade and access to foreign markets, and market surveillance.
  • McBains Cooper wins PPP consultancy contract in Medellin, Colombia
    May 18, 2016
    Construction consultants McBains Cooper has won a contract to help improve public-private partnership skill for the Colombian city of Medellin. McBains will train Medellin PPP Agency to help implement PPP procured projects in the city, Colombia’s second largest. Apart from road works that will include a new urban highway, projects will be across the transportation sector as well as in education such as school construction. Santiago Klein, international director at McBains Cooper, said the objective of
  • Kenya rehabilitates, widens, tolls Northern Corridor
    November 8, 2017
    A massive highway project in Kenya will boost transport for the country as well as its neighbours - Shem Oirere reports. Kenya has commenced the process of rehabilitating, expanding and tolling of 657km of East Africa’s Northern Corridor that is anchored on the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa and which links the gateway with landlocked countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).