Skip to main content

Spanish government reduces motorway rescue cost

The Spanish government has calculated the cost of rescuing Spain's nine bankrupt motorways at €1.8 billion. This is about 10% less than previously estimated, according to a report in the Spanish financial newspaper Expansión. The government has been trying for the past three years to facilitate a deal with banks to get the motorways out of debt and so to not add to the state’s own debt. Many of the nine projects were built prior to the financial crisis and traffic volumes were optimistically high.
May 8, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

The Spanish government has calculated the cost of rescuing Spain's nine bankrupt motorways at €1.8 billion.

This is about 10% less than previously estimated, according to a report in the Spanish financial newspaper Expansión.

The government has been trying for the past three years to facilitate a deal with banks to get the motorways out of debt and so to not add to the state’s own debt.

Many of the nine projects were built prior to the financial crisis and traffic volumes were optimistically high. Logistically, many of the roads or sections of the highways are competing with high-grade free roads close by, and in some instances parallel to, the tolled road.

Last summer, the government agreed that the state-owned transport infrastructure firm Seittsa would manage the nine bankrupt motorways. Seittsa is to prepare the terms for their retender to private companies by the end of this year.

The rescue cost was likely to be lower than the €3.5 billion previously estimated by some analysts at the time.

The arrangement with Seittsa came after three years of failed attempts by the government to facilitate debt restructuring between the investment banks and nine toll road operators.

Among the nine distressed operators are Aeropistas M-12 (Madrid-Barajas airport) and Madrid Levante (AP-36 Ocaña-La Roda).

In 2015, construction lobby group Seopan estimated the cost of a nationalisation could reach around €5.5 billion.

Related Content

  • Trump loses key infrastructure adviser DJ Gribbin
    April 5, 2018
    The key infrastructure policy adviser to US president Donald Trump has resigned, according to US media reports. DJ Gribbin is "moving on" to pursue unspecified opportunities, a White House official told the Washington Examiner newspaper. Gribbin joined the White House staff in February 2017 to advise Trump on how he could fulfil his election promise to boost infrastructure spending with around US$200 billion. Gribbin previously worked as chief counsel for the Federal Highway Administration and general
  • Spanish toll road refinancing plan announced
    June 30, 2017
    A tolled highway refinancing programme is being established in Spain to address the problem of tolled routes that are now bankrupt.
  • ACE/AECOM report: private sector and user-pay for English roads
    May 14, 2018
    It’s one minute to midnight for funding England’s roads, according to a timely new report, and the clock’s big hand is pointing to some form of user-pay solution, reports David Arminas Is there any way out of future user-pay funding for England’s highway infrastructure? The answer is a resounding ‘no’, according to the recently published report: Funding Roads for the Future. The brief 25-page document by the London-based Association for Consultancy and Engineering, ACE**, sums up the state of England’s ro
  • BrisConnections puts its AirportlinkM7 toll road up for sale
    September 1, 2015
    Bankrupt Australian highway management firm BrisConnections is selling its 6.7km AirportlinkM7 toll road in Brisbane three years after the highway opened, according to a report by the Financial Review. Macquarie Capital and Fort Street are acting as financial advisers and PBB Advisory is the receiver. Transurban, which paid A$7.05 billion for Brisbane's five other toll roads last year, is seen as the likeliest buyer, with indicative bidding starting early this month for closure of a deal early next year, ac