Table of Contents
- What Is a Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contract?
- Key Takeaways
- How Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contracts Work
- Variations on the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contract
- Example of a Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contract
- What Is the Basic Framework of a BOT Contract?
- What Are the Risks of BOT Contracts?
- What Is the Difference Between BOT and PPP?
- The Bottom Line
What Is a Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contract?
Let me explain what a build-operate-transfer (BOT) contract really is—it's a model we use to finance big projects, especially infrastructure ones, through public-private partnerships.
In this BOT scheme, a public entity like a local government gives a concession to a private firm to build and operate the project. After a fixed period, usually two or three decades, control goes back to the public entity.
Key Takeaways
You should know that a BOT contract finances large projects, often infrastructure developed via public-private partnerships.
These are typically large-scale, greenfield infrastructure projects that governments would otherwise handle alone.
Under a BOT contract, a government grants a concession to a private company to finance, build, and operate the project for 20 to 30 years, aiming for profit.
After that, the project returns to the original public entity.
How Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contracts Work
Under a BOT contract, a government grants a concession to a private company to finance, build, and operate a project. The company runs it for typically 20 or 30 years to recover its investment, then transfers control back to the public entity.
BOT projects are usually large-scale, greenfield infrastructure that governments would finance, build, and operate themselves. Think of a highway in Pakistan, a wastewater treatment plant in China, or a power plant in the Philippines.
Generally, BOT contractors are special-purpose companies created just for that project. During operation, revenues come from a single source, like an offtake purchaser with a binding agreement, often a government or state-owned enterprise.
For instance, power purchase agreements have a government utility buying electricity from a private plant. Unlike traditional concessions, here the company doesn't sell directly to consumers without government involvement.
Importantly, BOT agreements often set minimum prices that the offtaker must pay.
Variations on the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contract
There are several variations on the basic BOT model you should be aware of.
In build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) contracts, the contractor owns the project during the period. In build-lease-transfer (BLT) contracts, the government leases it from the contractor and handles operations.
Other variations include the contractor designing as well as building, like in a design-build-operate-transfer (DBOT) contract.
As a fast fact, the BOT approach emerged in the late 1970s due to budget constraints in developing countries and less work for international construction firms.
Example of a Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Contract
Take the elevated train system in Bangkok, Thailand, called the Bangkok Mass Transit System (BTS) or BTS Skytrain. It came from a 30-year BOT concession between the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and Thai transport firm Bangkok Mass Transit System (BMTS) Public Company Limited.
Under the agreement, BMTS designed, financed, built, and operated the system at its own expense, in exchange for collecting fares and advertising revenue once it launched.
BMTS projected recouping costs in a decade with at least 16% return, but it didn't work out—ridership fell short, leading to financial issues.
Here's a tip: BOT contracts are more common in developing economies, allowing cash-strapped governments to fund complex infrastructure they couldn't otherwise afford.
What Is the Basic Framework of a BOT Contract?
You can break a BOT down into three phases: Build, where a private company agrees to construct a public infrastructure project for the government; Operate, where it manages the facility for an agreed period to recoup costs and profit; and Transfer, where ownership goes back to the public entity after the concession.
What Are the Risks of BOT Contracts?
One major risk is that the contract loses money. For success, it needs to provide enough return for the private entity while benefiting the public and outperforming alternatives. But big projects carry big risks, and finances can be miscalculated.
What Is the Difference Between BOT and PPP?
A public-private partnership (PPP) involves a private entity taking over, financing, and operating large government projects like transportation, parks, or hospitals. A BOT contract is just one type of PPP agreement.
The Bottom Line
BOT contracts can make sense—they let governments shift the cost and risk of major infrastructure to a private specialist who might profit before handing it back. It seems like a win-win, but variables can turn it into a nightmare, especially for the private company bearing the risk.
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