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FHWA 14-08
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Contact: Ian Grossman
Tel.: (202) 366-0660
Transportation Public-Private Partnerships Soar to Record Levels
The number of public-private partnerships in the U.S. transportation sector has
soared to record levels in recent years and continues to climb, according to a
new Department study, announced today by U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E.
Peters.
“This nationwide trend on the part of state and local governments is further
proof that innovative approaches to financing and managing transportation are
increasingly attractive compared to traditional tax and spend methods,”
Secretary Peters said. “States and local governments across the country are
recognizing public-private partnerships are an effective means to deliver
transportation projects.”
The new report found that more transportation public-private partnerships were
completed over the last three years than in any other compatible time period in
history. According to the report, more than 20 major highway and transit
projects are currently being conducted in partnership with the private sector at
various stages of development in the United States.
The report also found that the use of public-private partnerships is increasing
at record pace due to their proven track record of relieving congestion and
encouraging infrastructure development, Secretary Peters said. They do this by
substituting or adding private capital for fuel tax revenue and helping leaders
tap into the more than $400 billion of private capital available globally today
for investment in infrastructure. Another find shows that states and localities
can reduce project costs, accelerate project delivery, and transfer risks to the
private sector while also protecting public sector interests through
well-balanced concession agreements, she said.
“Together, we can make more of these projects happen throughout Virginia and
across America,” Deputy Secretary Thomas J. Barrett said today in announcing the
study at a groundbreaking for new High Occupancy Toll lanes on the Capital
Beltway in Virginia.
A full copy of the report, “Innovation Wave: An Update on the Burgeoning Private
Sector Role in U.S. Highway and Transit Infrastructure,” can be found at
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ppp/dotpppreport071808.doc
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