THE PUNJAB PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP ACT
2014
(IX OF 2014)
[29th May 2014]
An Act
to foster an enabling
environment for private sector participation in development in the Punjab
through public private partnership.
Whereas it is expedient to expand the
provision of physical and infrastructure services in the Punjab and improve
their reliability and quality for accelerating economic growth and achieving
the social objectives of the Government; to harness the substantive role of public
private partnership as a means of mobilizing private sector resources for
financing, construction, maintenance and operation of projects for delivery of
physical and social infrastructure services; to improve the efficiency of
management, operation and maintenance of infrastructure facilities by
introduction of modern technologies and management techniques; to incorporate
principles of fairness, competition and transparency in the procurement of
public private partnership; and, to provide for ancillary matters;
It is enacted as follows:
CHAPTER I
PRELIMINARY
1.
Short title,
extent and commencement.– (1) This Act may be cited as the Punjab Public
Private Partnership Act 2014.
(2)
It extends to the whole of the Punjab.
(3)
It shall come into force at once.
2.
Applicability.–
Subject to the provisions of section 39, the Act shall apply to all the
projects implemented through public private partnership in the sectors listed
in First Schedule.
3.
Definitions.–
In this Act–
(a)
“bid” means a technical and financial proposal submitted
by a person who is eligible under the Act to undertake a project;
(b)
“Committee” means the PPP Steering Committee
established by the Government;
(c)
“company” means a company registered or deemed to be
registered under the Companies Ordinance, 1984 (XLVII of 1984) or a foreign
company under the Companies Ordinance, 1984 (XLVII of 1984);
(d)
“construction” includes reconstruction, rehabilitation,
renovation, improvement, expansion, addition, alteration and related
activities;
(e)
“consortium” means an association of persons who have
formed the association under a legally enforceable contractual arrangement for
purposes of entering into a PPP agreement;
(f)
“Government” means Government of the Punjab;
(g)
“Government Agency” means a department, attached
department of the Government, a local government, or a body corporate owned or
controlled by the Government or a local government;
(h)
“investment” includes financing, development and
pre-operative capital expenditure made or incurred on services, facilities,
land, construction and equipment;
(i)
“lender” means a financial institution, bank or an
establishment providing financial support with or without security;
(j)
“local government” means a local government as defined
in the Punjab Local Government Act 2013 (XVIII of 2013) or any other law;
(k)
“Member” means a Member of the Committee and includes
its
Chairperson and Vice Chairperson;
(l)
“person” means a company, entity, firm, association of
persons, body of individuals, or a sole proprietor other than a Government
Agency;
(m)
“PPP” means public private partnership;
(n)
“prescribed” means prescribed by the rules or the
regulations;
(o)
“private party” means a person who enters into a PPP
agreement with a Government Agency;
(p)
“project” means a public project implemented on PPP
basis;
(q)
“Province” means Province of the Punjab;
(r)
“public private partnership” means a commercial
agreement between a Government Agency and a private party pursuant to which the
private party–
(i)
undertakes to perform a public function, provides a
public service or develops use of a public property on behalf of a Government
Agency by, amongst other things, designing, constructing, financing, operating,
marketing or maintaining such public property; and
(ii)
assumes substantial financial, technical, operational
or environmental risks in connection with the performance of such a public
function or provision of such public services or use of such a public property;
(s)
“PPP agreement” means a contract between the public
sector represented by a Government Agency and a private party for the provision
of an infrastructure facility or service through a project and includes a
contract described in Second Schedule;
(t)
“PPP Cell” means the Cell established under the Act;
(u)
“PPP node” means a unit established by a Government
Agency responsible for identifying projects suitable for development as PPP
projects, carrying out the initial screening and feasibility studies in
connection with such projects, liaising with the PPP Cell with regard to
development and submission of project proposals, and monitoring related
coordination throughout the project life;
(v)
“risk” means any event or circumstance affecting the
project which can adversely affect performance and costs of any contractual
obligations related thereto including design, construction, financing,
operation or maintenance;
(w)
“regulations” means the regulations framed under the
Act;
(x)
“Risk Management Unit” means the Risk Management Unit
established under the Act;
(y)
“rules” means the rules made under the Act;
(z)
“Schedule” means a Schedule appended to the Act;
(aa)
“user levy” means a levy which may be collected under a
PPP
agreement and includes a tariff,
toll, fee or charge; and
(ab) “viability gap fund” means the fund
established by the Government for purposes of compensating, on the
recommendation of the Committee, the private party to a PPP agreement for any
revenue shortfalls, through grants, subsidies or guarantees.
CHAPTER II
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
4.
PPP Steering
Committee.– (1) There shall be a Steering Committee to promote, facilitate,
coordinate and oversee projects.
(2)
The Committee shall consist of the following:-
(a)
Minister for Planning and Development; Chairperson
(b)
Minister for Finance; Vice
Chairperson
(c)
two members of Provincial Assembly of the Punjab Members
to be nominated by the Speaker
of the Assembly;
(d)
Chairman, Planning and Development Member
Board of the Government;
(e)
Secretary to the Government, Finance Department; Member
(f)
Secretary of the concerned Government Agency; Member
(g)
Secretary to the Government Member
Communications &Works
Department;
(h)
Secretary to the Government, Member
Law and Parliamentary Affairs
Department;
(i)
two experts from private sector to be nominated Member
by the Government for a term of
two years; and
(j)
Member (PPP), Planning and Development Board.
Secretary/Membr
(3)
The Government shall not nominate a person as expert
Member unless he has at least sixteen years academic qualification in the
relevant subject.
(4)
Six Members including Chairperson or Vice Chairperson
shall constitute the quorum for a meeting of the Committee but a Secretary to
the Government may be represented in the meeting by an officer of the
Department not being below the rank of an Additional Secretary.
(5)
The Committee may co-opt an expert in the relevant
field for a project.
(6)
The Committee shall–
(a)
formulate the policies relating to the projects for approval
of the Government;
(b)
supervise and coordinate the implementation of the Act,
rules and regulations;
(c)
approve, reject or send back for reconsideration any
project proposal submitted by a Government Agency;
(d)
decide on any direct or contingent support for a
project requested by a Government Agency;
(e)
approve, reject or send back for reconsideration the
recommendation submitted by a Government Agency for a PPP agreement to be
awarded to a private party on the rates or terms
and conditions different from
the original approval;
(f)
assist the Government Agencies in solving major
problems
impeding project preparation and implementation;
(g)
be the final deciding authority for all the projects;
(h)
notify, with the approval of the Provincial Cabinet,
critical sectors as also the duration or window of opportunity during which the
Government shall undertake to extend preferential facilitation to projects
falling under critical sectors;
(i)
determine the maximum limit of government support
referred to in section 19 for any project; and
(j)
take all other steps necessary for giving effect to the
provisions of this Act.
(7)
The Committee may change
any timeline provided in the Act except the timelines mentioned in sections 14
and 18.
5.
PPP Cell.–
(1) The Government shall, by notification published in the official Gazette,
establish the PPP Cell in the Planning and Development Department of the
Government to promote and facilitate projects in the Province.
(2)
The composition of the PPP Cell shall be as prescribed
and until so prescribed, as the Government may determine.
(3)
The PPP Cell shall–
(a)
facilitate the preparation of a project by a Government
Agency;
(b)
act as a PPP catalyst and advocate, knowledge manager,
and policy and project advisor in the Province.
(c)
provide technical support to the Committee and act as
its
secretariat;
(d)
develop operating guidelines, procedures and model
documents for projects for approval by the Committee;
(e)
provide support and advice to any Government Agency
regarding PPP projects throughout the public private partnership process;
(f)
assist the Committee to evaluate and prioritize project
proposals submitted by the Government Agencies;
(g)
evaluate, in close consultation with the Risk
Management Unit, the type and amount of Government support that may be made
available for a project and make recommendations to the Committee for
appropriate decision;
(h)
prepare and regularly update a pipeline of the projects
in consultation with the Government Agencies and make available updated lists
of the said PPP projects to the Government Agencies; and
(i)
perform such other functions as may be prescribed or
assigned by the Committee.
6.
Risk
Management Unit.– (1) The Government shall, by notification published in
the Gazette, establish a Risk Management Unit in the Finance Department to act
as a fiscal guardian for the projects.
(2)
The Risk Management Unit shall–
(a)
develop risk management guidelines for approval by the
Committee;
(b)
provide support and advice
to any Government Agency with regard to risk management in a project throughout
the public private partnership process;
(c)
examine, in consultation with the PPP Cell, whether
requests for Government support and the proposed risk sharing arrangements are
consistent with the Act, rules and regulations, and are fiscally sustainable;
(d)
make recommendations to the Committee through the PPP
Cell;
(e)
recommend the inclusion of approved Government support
in the annual budget of the Province;
(f)
monitor direct and contingent liabilities of the
Government incurred through the projects; and
(g)
perform such other functions as may be prescribed or as
the Committee may assign.
7.
Government
Agency.–(1) A Government Agency shall manage the project throughout its
life cycle consisting of project identification, project proposal preparation
including feasibility, tendering, supervising the implementation and operation
of the project, and if applicable taking over the project under a PPP
agreement.
(2)
The Government Agency shall–
(a)
form a PPP node if it intends to undertake a project;
(b)
identify suitable projects and prioritize them within
its sector or geographical area of responsibility;
(c)
submit a project concept
paper in the form of pre-feasibility study through the PPP Cell to the
Committee for its consideration and approval, if it intends to avail itself of
a project development facility from the Government for transaction advisory
services;
(d)
where necessary, hire transaction advisors for the
preparation of project proposal and tendering;
(e)
prepare a feasibility for the project and, if its
outcome is positive, submit a project proposal along with estimated cost of the
project, type of PPP agreement and the details of Government support, if
required, to the Committee;
(f)
conduct a competitive tendering process for a project
approved by the Committee, including a pre-qualification process and bidding by
the pre-qualified bidders to select the suitable private party;
(g)
carry out bid evaluation;
(h)
negotiate and sign the PPP agreement with the selected
private
party;
(i)
monitor and evaluate implementation and operation of
the project; and
(j)
establish a complaint cell for speedy redressal of
complaints of general public relating to the project and a system of
acknowledgment of complaints within fifteen days from the date of receipt of a
complaint along with stipulated timeline for disposal of the complaint.
CHAPTER III
PROJECT DELIVERY PROCESS
8.
PPP
arrangements.–Subject to the Act, a Government Agency may–
(a)
enter into a PPP agreement with a private party for the
performance of functions in relation to the design and construction of a
project, or provision of services relating to a project, or management of a
project, or the provision of finance or technology for the design and
construction of a project, or the operation of a project, or for any one or
more of the said functions;
(b)
arrange or provide for any applicable payment to the
private party in accordance with the terms and conditions of the PPP agreement;
(c)
subject to the approval of the Committee, transfer an
interest in a project or part of a project to a private party or a nominee of
the private party, by transfer, assignment, conveyance, lease, license or
otherwise; and
(d)
subject to the PPP agreement, accept the transfer of an
interest of the private party or a nominee of the private party, in a project
or part of a project, by transfer, assignment, conveyance, lease, grant or
surrender.
9.
Project
identification and preparation.– (1) A Government Agency shall identify and
prepare a project proposal, obtain
approval of the Committee and shall complete this phase before tendering.
(2)
The Government Agency shall identify and conceptualize
potential projects which relate to development activities falling within its
sector or geographical area.
(3)
The Government Agency shall prioritize the projects and
prepare project proposals, using criteria such as supply and demand gaps,
social and economic benefits, financial attractiveness, risks and uncertainties
involved, and readiness for implementation.
(4)
A project proposal shall consist of, amongst other
things, an analysis of feasibility and sustainability of the project including
detailed business case and financial model justifying project’s financial and
economic viability over the expected duration of the project, initial
environmental examination or environmental impact assessment, risk analysis,
analysis of the need for Government support, the affordability of the project,
determination of the public private partnership modality, and preparation of
bid documents including a draft PPP agreement.
(5)
The Government Agency shall submit a project proposal
to the Committee through the PPP Cell.
10. Project prioritization and
approval.– (1) The
PPP Cell shall–
(a)
prioritize the projects that pass the review across
sectors and the Province by taking into account the policy and the development
objectives of the Government and submit them, within thirty days, to the Committee
for its consideration and approval; and
(b)
maintain a list of approved projects and publicize the
list by publishing it on the web.
(2) The PPP Cell may–
(a)
exercise quality control of project proposals received
from Government Agencies by reviewing the viability of a project and the
completeness of the proposal in terms of documentation; and
(b)
make observations and recommendations to the Government
Agency with regard to the project
proposal before submitting it to the Committee for its consideration and approval.
11.
Approval of
government support.– (1) A Government Agency shall include all requests for
Government support as an integral part of a project proposal.
(2)
The PPP Cell shall forward all requests for Government
support to the Risk Management Unit, which shall review their justification and
eligibility, and analyze the fiscal impact of the related direct and contingent
liabilities.
(3)
The Risk Management Unit shall, within fifteen days,
make, through the PPP Cell, appropriate recommendation to the Committee for
approval, rejection or reconsideration of the proposed Government support.
(4)
If approved by the Committee, the Government shall make
necessary arrangements for the availability of funds during project life cycle
through its inclusion in the annual budgetary process.
12.
Consideration
by the Committee.– (1) The Committee shall, by taking into account the
recommendations of the PPP Cell and the Risk Management Unit, consider a
project proposal submitted by a Government Agency and may, within thirty days
from the receipt of such proposal, approve the proposal with or without
modification, or reject it or return it to the Government Agency for amendment
and resubmission.
(2)
In case a project proposal is returned for amendment,
restructuring and resubmission, the Government Agency shall take suitable
action to amend the project proposal and resubmit the proposal through the PPP
Cell for consideration and approval by the Committee and any decision
concerning such resubmitted proposal shall be taken by the Committee within
thirty days of such resubmission.
13.
Selection of
the private party.– (1) After the approval of the project proposal by the
Committee, the Government Agency shall select a private party for the project
through competitive public tendering, using a process of prequalification and
bidding.
(2)
The Government Agency shall not enter into direct
negotiations with any person without competitive public tendering.
14.
Pre-qualification.–
The Government Agency shall conduct prequalification, where necessary, in the
following manner:-
(a)
a public notice, inviting participation in
pre-qualification for undertaking a project shall be published on the websites
of the Government Agency, PPP Cell and Public Procurement and Regulatory
Authority, and also in at least two national newspapers for national
competitive bidding and additionally in one international paper for
international competitive bidding providing at least fifteen days for national
competitive bidding and thirty
days for international
competitive bidding for preparation of prequalification application;
(b)
for a project with a total cost equal to or exceeding
four billion rupees, the pre-qualification notice shall also be published in at
least one international newspaper;
(c)
a person who intends to participate in the pre-qualification
shall provide information with regard to his legal, technical, managerial and
financial capacity to undertake the project in such form along with such
particulars as
may be specified by the
Government Agency;
(d)
in case the person is a consortium, its members and
their roles and proposed shareholding shall be disclosed at the
pre-qualification stage, and the consortium shall provide a written and legally
enforceable undertaking from its members to be jointly and severally liable if
awarded
the contract, for the
obligations of the private party;
(e)
the Government Agency shall examine the information and
other particulars submitted by the person and shall, within thirty days, decide
as to whether such person fulfills the criteria for prequalification as laid
down by the Government Agency;
(f)
a person who fulfills the criteria shall be a
pre-qualified person;
(g)
if less than three persons are pre-qualified, the
Government Agency may analyze the reasons for such response and either proceed
for bidding after recording the reasons, or revise project structuring, and
reinitiate the prequalification process for additional participants;
(h)
if a consortium is a pre-qualified person, the lead
consortium member shall not be replaced earlier than four years after the
commissioning of the project without the approval of the Government Agency and
no such approval shall be given unless the consortium finds a suitable
replacement with equal or better qualifications for replacing the withdrawing
member;
(i)
subject to approval by the Government Agency, any other
member of a consortium may, prior to execution of the PPP agreement or during
the term of the PPP agreement, withdraw, provided that the remaining members
are still legally, technically and financially capable of successfully carrying
out the implementation and operation of the project, or that an acceptable
substitute with equal or better qualifications is available to replace the
withdrawing member; and
(j)
any change in the shareholding of the consortium shall
also be subject to approval of the Government Agency; and
(k)
if the consortium fails to comply with the requirement
of clause (h), clause ( i) or clause (j), the consortium shall cease to be a
prequalified person.
15.
Bidding.–(1)
After selecting pre-qualified persons, the Government Agency shall, within
fifteen days from the completion of the pre-qualification process, issue bid
documents to the prequalified persons and shall give adequate time to
pre-qualified persons for preparation and submission of bids.
(2)
The Government Agency may adopt single stage two
envelop or two stage two envelop bidding process in the prescribed manner.
(3)
The bid documents shall include– (a) instructions for bidders;
(b)
minimum design and performance standards and
specifications;
(c)
draft PPP agreement;
(d)
bid form, specifying the information required to
evaluate the bid and the bid evaluation criteria;
(e)
bid security form and performance bond form; and
(f)
any other document relevant to the project, such as the
feasibility study and environmental impact assessment.
(4)
To provide clarifications to bidders and to discuss the
terms and conditions of the PPP agreement, the Government Agency shall, within
such period as is deemed reasonable, conduct a pre-bid meeting with the bidder
sand may, if necessary, issue addendum to the bidding documents.
(5)
If only one valid bid is received up to the last date
for submission of bids, the Government Agency may evaluate it, and depending on
the results of such evaluation and after recording reasons–
(a)
negotiate or enter into the PPP agreement or negotiate
and enter into the PPP agreement with the said single bidder; or
(b)
after a market research to ascertain the reasons for
the poor response to the call for bids, restructure the project proposal and
the proposed Government support and submit the revised proposal to the
Committee.
(6)
The Committee shall deal with the revised proposal in
the same manner as is prescribed for a new proposal for a project.
16.
Single stage
three envelope bidding.– (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section
14 and 15, the Government Agency may, with prior approval of the Committee,
combine the processes of pre-qualification and bidding through single stage
three envelope process in the prescribed manner.
(2)
In case of single stage three envelope bidding process–
(a)
the Government Agency shall first open the envelope
relating to pre-qualification of a person, and if the person is not
prequalified, the other two envelopes submitted by such person shall not be
opened at any stage; and
(b)
the Government Agency, PPP Cell and Risk Management Unit
shall observe such timelines as may be prescribed.
17.
Bid
evaluation.– (1) The Government Agency shall, within fifteen days from the
receipt of the bids, evaluate the bids.
(2)
On receipts of bids, the Government Agency shall assess
the technical, operational, and environmental responsiveness of the bids
received, according to the requirements, criteria, minimum standards, and basic
parameters specified in the bid documents, and shall reject non-responsive
bids.
(3)
After the technical evaluation of the bids, the Government
Agency shall conduct a financial evaluation of the responsive bids; and,
depending on the type of the project, it may use one or more of the following
parameters for the evaluation:-
(a)
lowest proposed tariff, toll, fee or charge at the
start of operation of the project if a parametric formula for periodical tariff
adjustment is specified in the bid documents;
(b)
lowest present value of the proposed tariffs, tolls,
fees and charges for the period covered under the PPP agreement if there is no
such formula;
(c)
lowest present value of payments from the Government;
(d)
lowest present value of Government subsidy to be
provided for the period covered under the PPP agreement;
(e)
highest present value of the proposed payments to the
Government, such as concession fees, lease or rental payments, fixed or
guaranteed payments or variable payments and percentage shares of revenues for
the period covered by the PPP agreement; or
(f)
such other parameters as are determined by the
Committee on the recommendation of the Government Agency, the PPP Cell, or the
Risk Management Unit.
(4)
The Government Agency may, for reasons to be recorded
in writing, reject a speculative or unrealistic bid as non-responsive but such
rejection of a bid shall not lead to the termination of the bidding process.
(5)
If the result of bidding process leads to a bid
conforming to the project estimate, type of PPP agreement and Government
support if approved by the Committee, the Government Agency may proceed with
execution of the PPP agreement.
(6)
If the lowest bid is higher than project estimate or in
case there is a need to restructure the project or type of PPP agreement, the
same shall be submitted to the Committee for approval.
(7)
The Government Agency shall announce the result of the
bidding process and issue a notice for execution of PPP agreement to the
selected private party within ten days of the bid evaluation or approval of the
Committee, if applicable.
18.
Bid security.–
(1) A pre-qualified person shall deposit with the Government Agency the bid
security amount as determined by the Government Agency based on the project
cost.
(2)
The Government Agency shall, within thirty days after
the award, return the bid security amount to all unsuccessful bidders in the
prescribed manner.
19.
Government
support.– (1) The Government Agency shall indicate the
Government support, if any, approved by the Committee for a
project.
(2)
The Government support may take the following forms:-
(a)
administrative support to the private party in
obtaining licenses and other statutory and non-statutory clearances from the
Federal Government, any public sector organization or a Government Agency for
purposes of the project on such terms and conditions as may be prescribed: such
support shall be available for all types of projects;
(b)
provision of utility connections for power, gas and
water at project site; clearance of right of way or acquisition of land
necessary for the project; and, rehabilitation and resettlement necessitated
because of the execution of the project: such support shall be available for
all types of projects;
(c)
Government equity, in the form of land or
infrastructure facilities owned by the Government or a Government Agency, to be
calculated with reference to the current market value of land or infrastructure
or future value of discounted cash flows accruing or arising from asset to be
offered, with reference to the project cost and its capital structure or debt
equity ratio: such support on first come first served basis shall be available
for the projects where the bidding competition is not instantly expected;
(d)
the Committee may, with the approval of the Provincial
Cabinet, identify projects of critical sector in the areas where there appears
to be a supply side constraint, leading to no competition or little room for
competition and standard terms and rates are to be offered to all private
parties: the projects falling under such sector, requiring Government support
as specified in this section including Government equity participation, direct
financial assistance through viability gap fund or other asset based
facilitation, may be presented by the Government Agency to the Committee for
decision and in such projects, the Committee may extend Government support on
first come first served basis, for specific duration or window of opportunity;
(e)
direct financial assistance from the viability gap
fund: such support may be offered for projects which, in the opinion of the
Committee, are economically and socially viable, but may not be financially
attractive enough for investment;
(f)
Government guarantees for political risks under the
Government’s control such as changes in the law, delay of agreed user levy
adjustments, early termination of the PPP agreement owing to no fault of the
private party, and expropriation: such of support shall be available for all
projects; and
(g)
Government guarantees for other risks such as demand
risk, and default by a Government Agency on payments due under a PPP agreement:
the need for this type of support shall be determined on case to case basis as
part of the risk sharing analysis undertaken during project negotiations.
(3)
Where the Government Agency decides to offer Government
support on first come first serve basis, it shall invite proposals through wide
publicity.
20.
Unsolicited
proposals.– (1) A project proposal submitted by a person to a Government
Agency for a project not included in the priority list mentioned in section 10,
together with a written confirmation that it is economically viable, shall be
considered as an unsolicited proposal.
(2)
An unsolicited proposal shall be accompanied by a
feasibility study, environmental impact statement, and a draft PPP agreement,
need for Government support and determination of the public private partnership
modalities.
(3)
The Government Agency shall consider an unsolicited
proposal from all aspects including technical, environmental and financial
aspects, and in case of requirement of additional information, the Government
Agency may request for the submission of an amended or modified proposal.
(4)
Within ten days from the receipt of an unsolicited
proposal, the Government Agency shall require the person to submit details
about legal, technical, managerial and financial capability of the person, as
well as the cost of preparing the unsolicited bid with relevant supporting
evidence for its consideration and such information shall be submitted to the
Government Agency within fifteen days from the receipt of such requirement.
(5)
Within fifteen days from the receipt of information
required under subsection (4), the Government Agency shall evaluate the
unsolicited proposal and, if it is found to be economically, technically and
environmentally feasible and the information submitted by the person about his
own legal, technical, managerial and financial capability is satisfactory, the
Government Agency may submit the unsolicited proposal together with its
recommendations to the PPP Cell which shall seek the input of the Risk
Management Unit before submission of the proposal to the Committee for
decision.
(6)
The decision of the Committee with regard to an
unsolicited proposal shall be communicated in writing by the Government Agency
to the person who submitted such proposal within seven days from the receipt of
the decision of the Committee.
(7)
If the Committee approves the unsolicited proposal, the
Government Agency shall invite competitive bids for the project identified in
such proposal by following the bid procedure described in sections 13 to 18
and, if prequalification is conducted, the person submitting the unsolicited
proposal shall not be required to be pre-qualified and may directly participate
in the bidding process.
(8)
The Government Agency shall give the person who made
the unsolicited proposal five percent additional weight age in technical
scoring and first right to match or improve the best bid received in response to
the call for bids, if his bid is not the best bid.
(9)
If the person who submitted the unsolicited bid fails
to match the best bid, the Government Agency shall direct the successful bidder
to reimburse to the person who submitted the unsolicited proposal the amount
specified in the bid documents as the cost of preparing the unsolicited bid but
the reasonability of the cost of preparation of unsolicited proposal shall be
determined by the Government Agency.
(10)
If other valid competitive bids, except the bid of the
person who submitted the unsolicited proposal, are not received, the Government
Agency may negotiate the PPP agreement with the person who submitted the
unsolicited proposal or decide to under take the bidding process afresh.
21.
Non-Observance
of the timelines.–Subject to section 4, if the PPP Cell or the Risk
Management Unit fails to observe the timelines mentioned in this Act or the
rules, the Government Agency may request the PPP Cell to place the proposal
before the Committee and the Committee may consider the proposal assuming that
the PPP Cell and Risk Management Unit have no objection to the project
proposal.
22.
Preparation
and negotiation of PPP agreement.–(1)The draft PPP agreement which forms
part of the bid documents shall clearly define the legal relationship between
the Government Agency and the selected private party, their rights and
responsibilities including the specific Government support for the project.
(2)
The draft PPP agreement shall contain the following
provisions, as
applicable:-
(a)
type of the project;
(b)
general terms and conditions of contract;
(c)
special conditions of contract;
(d)
scope of works and services to be provided under the
project;
(e)
main technical specifications and performance
standards;
(f)
environmental and safety requirements;
(g)
implementation milestones and completion date of the
project;
(h)
cost recovery scheme through user levies, including
mechanism for their periodical adjustment;
(i)
performance bonds for construction works and operation;
(j)
minimum insurance coverage;
(k)
acceptance tests and procedures;
(l)
rights and obligations of the parties including risk
sharing;
(m)
type and amount of Government support;
(n)
transfer of assets, if any, at the conclusion of the
term of the PPP agreement;
(o)
warranty period and procedures after the transfer;
(p)
requirements and procedure for variations of the PPP
agreement;
(q)
grounds for and effects of termination of the PPP
agreement including force majeure;
(r)
procedures and venue for disputes resolution; (s) financial reporting by the private
party; and
(t) supervision mechanism of the Government Agency.
(3)
A Government Agency shall not enter into a PPP
agreement except in accordance with the procedure mentioned in this Act and the
rules.
(4)
The Government Agency shall ensure conclusion of
contract negotiations with the selected private party within sixty days.
(5)
The negotiations shall focus on the terms and
conditions not specified in the bid documents but no post-bid changes in the
terms and conditions mentioned in the bid documents as binding and which formed
part of the bid evaluation shall be allowed as a consequence of contract
negotiations.
23.
Project
implementation and operation.– (1) Before signing the PPP agreement with
the Government Agency, the private party may establish, without changing its
shareholding, a special purpose vehicle for implementation and operation of the
project and such special purpose vehicle shall assume all the rights and
obligations of the private party under the PPP agreement.
(2)
The private party shall prepare a detailed design and
implementation plan in accordance with the technical specifications contained
in the PPP agreement, and shall submit these to the Government Agency for
consent prior to the start of the work.
(3)
The private party shall execute the project in
accordance with the performance standards and technical specifications
contained in the PPP agreement and the design and implementation plans approved
in accordance with the PPP agreement.
(4)
To guarantee its performance in the construction works,
the private party shall post a bond or furnish a bank guarantee, which shall be
valid up to the acceptance of the completed works by the Government Agency and
for projects which include operation by the private party, the private party
shall also post or furnish another performance bond or bank guarantee upon the acceptance
of the completed works to guarantee compliance with the operating parameters
and standards specified in the PPP agreement.
(5)
Within three hundred and sixty five days of the signing
of the PPP agreement or such other period as is specified in the PPP agreement,
the private party shall achieve financial closure for the project.
(6)
The Government Agency shall not allow variations in the
PPP agreement during the implementation and operation of the project unless the
following requirements are met:-
(a)
there is no increase in the agreed tariffs except the
periodic formula-based tariff adjustments, unless the scope of works or
performance standards are increased;
(b)
there is no reduction in the scope of works or
performance standards, fundamental change in the contractual arrangement or
extension of the term of the PPP agreement, except in cases of breach by the
Government Agency of its obligations;
(c)
there is no additional government guarantee or increase
in the financial exposure of the Government; and
(d)
the variation in the PPP agreement is necessary due to
an unforeseeable event beyond the control of the Government Agency or the
private party.
(7)
The Government Agency shall monitor and evaluate the
project during its implementation and operation to ensure its conformity with
the plans, specifications, performance standards and user levies set forth in
the PPP agreement, and to assess its actual outcomes.
(8)
The Government Agency shall submit biannual reports on
project performance to the Committee.
24.
Setting and
adjustment of user levies.– (1) The Government Agency shall set the user
levies at levels that ensure financial viability of the project by fully
covering the capital, operation and maintenance costs plus a reasonable rate of
return to the private party or the Government Agency.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law,
the private party shall have the right to receive or collect tariffs or
payments in accordance with and at the rates set forth in the PPP agreement,
either from end users or from the Government Agency.
(3)
Unless specified in the bid documents, the Government
Agency shall determine the user levies through bidding and the user levies
shall be adjusted periodically during the term of the PPP agreement in
accordance with the terms and conditions of the PPP agreement.
(4)
If the Government Agency keeps the user levies at lower
levels to make the services provided by the project affordable to the end
users, the Government Agency shall compensate the private party for the
difference by making appropriate payments as agreed in the PPP agreement
through viability gap fund.
25.
Dispute
resolution.– (1) In case of any dispute between a Government Agency and a
private party in relation to or arising out of the PPP agreement, the parties
shall resolve the dispute in the following manner:-
(a)
the parties shall first deliberate to achieve a
consensus;
(b)
if no consensus is achieved, the parties shall settle
the dispute in an amicable manner by mediation by an independent and impartial
person appointed by the Committee; and
(c)
if no amicable settlement of the dispute has been
reached by mediation, the parties shall resolve the dispute by arbitration in
the city of Lahore or any other place agreed to by the parties in Pakistan or
abroad in accordance with the arbitration clause contained in the PPP agreement
and the arbitral award may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction.
(2)
The disputes shall be decided in accordance with the
laws of Pakistan or under any other law as may be specified in the PPP
agreement.
26.
Termination
of the PPP agreement.– A party to the PPP agreement may terminate the
agreement in the following cases:-
(a)
if the Government Agency fails to comply with any major
obligation in the PPP agreement, and such failure is not remediable or, if
remediable, remains un-remedied for an unreasonable period of time, the private
party may terminate the agreement with written notice to the Government Agency
as provided in the PPP agreement and, in the event of such termination, the
project shall be transferred to the Government Agency and the private party
shall be entitled to compensation by the Government
Agency as provided in the PPP
agreement; or
(b)
if the private party fails to perform the agreement, or
fails to achieve the prescribed technical and performance standards, or fails
to comply with any major obligations in the PPP agreement, and such failure is
not remediable or, if remediable, remains un-remedied for an unreasonable
period of time, the Government Agency may terminate the agreement with written
notice to the private party as provided in the PPP agreement and, in such a
case, the Government Agency may either take over the project and assume all
related liabilities or allow lenders of the private party to exercise their
rights and interests as specified in the loan agreements relating to the
project.
27.
Vesting of
the project in the private party.– Subject to the PPP agreement and except
for the build-own-and-operate and rehabilitate-own-and-operate PPP arrangements
described in Second Schedule, the completed project may vest in the private
party for a period not exceeding thirty years as agreed in the PPP agreement
and on expiry of such period, the project shall vest in the Government Agency.
28.
Transfer of
the project.– If a project is transferred to the Government Agency in
accordance with the provisions of the PPP agreement or this Act, all the rights
granted under the PPP agreement to the private party in respect of the project
shall stand transferred to the Government Agency.
CHAPTER IV
MISCELLANEOUS
29.
Conflict of
interest.__
(1) A Member shall not, directly or indirectly, receive any profit from his
position as a Member except the reasonable expenses incurred by him in the
performance of his duties.
(2)
The pecuniary interests of immediate family members or
close personal or business associates of a Member shall also be considered the
pecuniary interests of the Member.
(3)
A Member shall be in conflict of interest if he:
(a)
is an employee, or a paid consultant of a private party
or a consortium or lender of the private party or consortium;
(b)
owns, controls, or has direct or indirect interest in a
business venture of a private party or a member of a consortium;
(c)
receives any income from a business venture of a
private party or a member of a consortium; or
(d)
himself, or one or more members of his family, business
partners or close personal associates, may personally benefit either directly
or indirectly, financially or otherwise, from his position on the Committee.
(4)
A Member shall disclose a potential, real or perceived
conflict of interest as soon as he becomes aware of the potential conflict to
the Committee or its Chairperson and Vice Chairperson, if the meeting of the
Committee has not been convened.
(5)
If a Member is not certain about the conflict of
interest situation, he shall bring the matter before the Committee for advice.
(6)
The decision of the Committee on conflict of interest
shall be final.
(7)
A Member shall not take part in the proceedings of the
Committee in which any question of his conflict of interest is on the agenda.
(8)
The disclosure of conflict of interest and the decision
of the Committee shall be recorded in the minutes of the meeting of the
Committee.
30.
Disclosure
of generic risks.– (1) A Government Agency shall, as far as possible,
provide in the PPP agreement, or any other ancillary or additional agreement, a
list of generic risks involved in the project along with allocation and
treatment of such generic risks.
(2)
The Government or the Government Agency shall not be
liable to any claim of the private party for a generic risk which is not
specified in the PPP agreement or any other ancillary or additional agreement.
31.
Integrity
pact.–The Government Agency shall, for every project, enter into an
integrity pact with the private party along with the PPP agreement.
32.
Public
disclosure.– (1) A PPP agreement or any other ancillary or additional
agreement shall be a public document.
(2)
The Government Agency shall make arrangements for
inspection or provision of copies of a PPP agreement or any other ancillary or
additional agreement.
(3)
Any person may, subject to the payment of the
prescribed fee and any other reasonable restriction, inspect or obtain copies
of a PPP agreement or any other ancillary or additional agreement.
(4)
The Committee may, by recording reasons in writing,
declare the complete or part of a document not to be a public document.
33. Prescribing and enforcing
standards.– The Government may–
(a)
prescribe and enforce performance standards for a
project including standards of performance of the private party in regard to
the services to be rendered by it to the end users;
(b)
prescribe quality standards including standards of
materials, equipment and other resources or processes relevant to
infrastructure projects including planning criteria, construction practices and
standards of such facilities, operating standards and maintenance schedules for
regulating the working of the private party to ensure efficiency and adherence
to the prescribed quality standards;
(c)
prescribe the mode of output-based contracting,
performance-based payment systems and output-based procurement procedures;
(d)
establish a uniform system of accounts to be followed
by the private party;
(e)
take steps to promote effective competition and
efficiency in projects using the public private partnership approach;
(f)
prescribe the mode of conducting public hearing and
consultation with stakeholders; and
(g)
prescribe any other standards for regulating the
infrastructure development through public private partnership.
34.
Indemnity by
the private party.–The private party shall indemnify the Government Agency
against any defect in design, construction, maintenance or operation of the
project and be liable to reimburse all costs, charges, expenses, losses and
damages suffered by the Government Agency or an end user due to any such
defect.
35.
Recovery of
costs, dues and fees.– (1) The Government Agency may recover the sum due
from the private party as ascertained through the dispute resolution procedure
under this Act as arrears of land revenue under the Punjab Land Revenue Act,
1967 (XVII of 1967).
(2)
The Government Agency shall designate an officer as
Collector to exercise the powers of the Collector under the Punjab Land Revenue
Act, 1967 (XVII of 1967) for recovery of
arrears under subsection (1).
36.
Protection
of action taken in good faith.–No suit, claim or other legal proceedings
shall lie against the Committee, a Government Agency or any member, officer,
servant, adviser or a representative of the Committee in respect of anything
done or intended to be done in good faith under this Act or under any rules or
regulations made under the Act.
37.
Power to
make rules.–The Government may, by notification in official Gazette, make
rules for carrying out the purposes of this Act.
38.
Power to
frame regulations.–Subject to this Act and the rules, the Committee may,
with the prior approval of the Government and by notification in the official
Gazette, frame regulations to give effect to the provisions of this Act.
39.
Applicability
to Government Agencies– (1) The provisions of this Act shall apply to a
project of any Government Agency if the estimated total cost of such project
exceeds twenty million rupees.
(2)
A Government Agency may request the Committee to
process a project with an estimated total cost of twenty million rupees or
less, and the Committee shall proceed with the project in the manner as if it
falls within its jurisdiction.
40.
Power to
amend a Schedule.–The Government may, by notification in the official
Gazette, amend a Schedule.
41.
Overriding
provision.– Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law, the
provisions in this Act shall have effect to the extent of the project under
this Act.
42.
Transition
provision.–A PPP agreement signed with a private party prior to the coming
into force of this Act, shall be valid until the end of the term established in
such agreement.
43.
Repeal and
savings.– (1) The Punjab Public Private Partnership for
Infrastructure Act 2010 (IX of 2010) is hereby repealed.
(2)
Notwithstanding repeal of the Punjab Public Private
Partnership for Infrastructure Act 2010 (IX of 2010), anything done or any
action taken or purported to have been done or taken under that Act shall, in
so far as it is not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, be deemed to
have been done or taken under the corresponding provisions of the Act.
44.
Repeal.–
The Punjab Public Private Partnership Ordinance 2014 (II of 2014) is hereby
repealed.
FIRST SCHEDULE
[see section 2]
SECTORS
(1)
Canals or dams;
(2)
Education facilities;
(3)
Health facilities;
(4)
Housing;
(5)
Industrial estates;
(6)
Information technology;
(7)
Land reclamation;
(8)
Power generation facilities;
(9)
Roads (provincial highways, district roads, bridges or
bypasses);
(10)
Sewerage or drainage;
(11)
Solid waste management;
(12)
Sports or recreational infrastructure, public gardens
or parks;
(13)
Trade fairs, conventions, exhibitions or cultural
centers;
(14)
Urban transport including mass transit or bus
terminals;
(15)
Water supply or sanitation, treatment or distribution;
and
(16)
Wholesale markets, warehouses, slaughter houses or cold
storages, grain silos and street lights etc.
(17)
Mining
SECOND SCHEDULE
[see sections 3(s)
& 27]
TYPES OF PPP AGREEMENTS INCLUDE
1.
Build-and-Transfer
(BT): A contractual arrangement whereby the private party undertakes the
financing and construction of an infrastructure project and after its
completion hands it over to the Government Agency. The Government Agency will
reimburse the total project investment, on the basis of an agreed schedule.
This arrangement may be employed in the construction of any infrastructure
project, including critical facilities, which for security or strategic reasons
must be operated directly by the Government Agency.
2.
Build-Lease-and-Transfer
(BLT): A contractual arrangement whereby the private party undertakes the
financing and construction of an infrastructure project and upon its completion
hands it over to the Government Agency on a lease arrangement for a fixed
period, after the expiry of which ownership of the project is automatically
transferred to the Government Agency.
3.
Build-Operate-and-Transfer
(BOT): A contractual arrangement whereby the private party undertakes the
financing and construction of an infrastructure project, and the operation and
maintenance thereof. The private party operates the facility over a fixed term
during which it is allowed to collect from project users’ appropriate tariffs,
tolls, fees, rentals, or charges not exceeding those proposed in the bid or
negotiated and incorporated in the PPP agreement, to enable the private party
to recover its investment and operating and maintenance expenses for the
project. The private party transfers the facility to the Government Agency at
the end of the fixed term that shall be specified in the PPP agreement. This
shall include a supply-and-operate situation, which is a contractual
arrangement whereby the supplier of equipment and machinery for an
infrastructure project operates it, providing in the process technology
transfer and training of the nominated individuals of the Government Agency.
4.
Build-Own-and-Operate
(BOO): A contractual arrangement whereby the private party is authorized to
finance, construct, own, operate and maintain an infrastructure project, from
which the private party is allowed to recover its investment and operating and
maintenance expenses by collecting user levies from project users. The private
party owns the project and may choose to assign its operation and maintenance
to a project operator. The transfer of the project to the Government Agency is
not envisaged in this arrangement. However, the Government Agency may terminate
its obligations after the specified time period.
5.
Build-Own-Operate-Transfer
(BOOT): A contractual arrangement similar to the BOT agreement, except that
the private party owns the infrastructure project during the fixed term before
its transfer to the Government Agency.
6.
Build-Transfer-and-Operate
(BTO): A contractual arrangement whereby the Government Agency contracts
out an infrastructure project to the private party to construct it on a
turn-key basis, assuming cost overruns, delays and specified performance risks.
Once the project is commissioned, the private party is given the right to
operate the facility and collect user levies under the PPP agreement. The title
of the project always vests in the Government Agency in this arrangement.
7.
Contract-Add-and-Operate
(CAO): A contractual arrangement whereby the private party expands an
existing infrastructure facility, which it leases from the Government Agency.
The private party operates the expanded project and collects user levies, to
recover the investment over an agreed period. There may or may not be a
transfer arrangement with regard to the added facility provided by the private
party.
8.
Develop-Operate-and-Transfer
(DOT): A contractual arrangement whereby favorable conditions external to
an infrastructure project, which is to be built by the private party, are
integrated into the PPP agreement by giving it the right to develop adjoining
property and thus enjoy some of the benefits the investment creates such as
higher property or rent values.
9.
Rehabilitate-Operate-and-Transfer
(ROT): A contractual arrangement whereby an existing infrastructure
facility is handed over to the private party to refurbish, operate and maintain
it for a specified period, during which the private party collects user levies
to recover its investment and operation and maintenance expenses. At the expiry
of this period, the facility is returned to the Government Agency. The term is
also used to describe the purchase of an existing facility from abroad,
importing, refurbishing, erecting and operating it.
10.
Rehabilitate-Own-and-Operate
(ROO): A contractual arrangement whereby an existing infrastructure
facility is handed over to the private party to refurbish, operate and maintain
with no time limitation imposed on ownership. The private party is allowed to
collect user levies to recover its investment and operation and maintenance
expenses in perpetuity.
11.
Management
Contract (MC): A contractual arrangement whereby the Government Agency
entrusts the operation and management of an infrastructure project to the
private party for an agreed period on payment of specified consideration. The
Government Agency may charge the user levies and collect the same either itself
or entrust the collection for consideration to any person who shall pay the
same to the Government Agency.
12.
Service
Contract (SC): A contractual arrangement whereby the private party
undertakes to provide services to the Government Agency for a specified period
with respect to an infrastructure facility. The Government Agency will pay the
private party an amount according to the agreed schedule.
13.
Joint Venture (JV): Joint
venture is a form of public private partnership in which both the Government
Agency and the private party make equity contributions and pool their resources
towards the project development and implements the project by forming a new
company (joint venture company) or assuming joint ownership of an existing
company through the purchase of shares. When the joint venture company is
established, it will have a separate legal identity and it is through this
company that the common enterprise of the public and private partners will be
carried out. The Government Agency and the private party will own the shares of
the joint venture company and there will be a board of directors, usually made
up of representatives of the shareholders.
____________________________
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