Public private partnerships (PPPs) have become a
viable and innovative scheme for developing
infrastructure assets throughout the world in recent
years. After PPPs being implemented predominantly in
Western European regions, at present project
sponsors, banks, investors, insurances and
governments start tapping the growing Eastern
European region with this promising scheme for
infrastructure development. The potential for road
infrastructure investments is enormous. How does the
PPP scheme work? How are PPPs structured in road
projects and which risks can be shared? What is the
market potential in figures? What makes road as asset
class special and which investment opportunities
arise? For answering these questions the author Lukas
Strauch leads the reader from explanatory theory over
analysis of facts and figures towards praxis and
implementation. The author analyses the M6 motorway
project in Hungary as a state of the art PPP road
project in Eastern European transition countries. The
book targets people interested in project finance and
infrastructure topics, students of business studies
and professionals in infrastructure related business
across private and public sectors.
viable and innovative scheme for developing
infrastructure assets throughout the world in recent
years. After PPPs being implemented predominantly in
Western European regions, at present project
sponsors, banks, investors, insurances and
governments start tapping the growing Eastern
European region with this promising scheme for
infrastructure development. The potential for road
infrastructure investments is enormous. How does the
PPP scheme work? How are PPPs structured in road
projects and which risks can be shared? What is the
market potential in figures? What makes road as asset
class special and which investment opportunities
arise? For answering these questions the author Lukas
Strauch leads the reader from explanatory theory over
analysis of facts and figures towards praxis and
implementation. The author analyses the M6 motorway
project in Hungary as a state of the art PPP road
project in Eastern European transition countries. The
book targets people interested in project finance and
infrastructure topics, students of business studies
and professionals in infrastructure related business
across private and public sectors.