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What is BOT?

October 01, 1998

The acronym BOT stands for "build, operate, and transfer," or sometimes "build, own, and transfer." Whichever formulation is preferred, however, the underlying concept is the same. A private company, or a consortium of companies, wins the right to build a facility and operate it at a profit for a number of years, after which it must transfer the project to the government that commissioned it. Such programs normally involve very large construction projects that only a state could underwrite.

The private company or consortium is responsible for financing and designing the project. At the heart of the BOT approach is the concept of "project finance"--in other words, lenders are invited to look to the project's underlying assets and projected revenues for repayment, rather than to government guarantees or charges over the assets of the contractor.

A number of criteria for successful BOT projects have emerged over the years, and these are now enshrined in a booklet published by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization. The guidelines are summarized below.

· The project must be financially sound, feasible, and affordable.

· The host country's risk factors must be manageable.

· There must be strong government support.

· The project must rank high on the host government's list of infrastructure projects.

· The legal framework must be stable.

· The administrative framework must be efficient.

· Bidding procedures must be fair and transparent.

· BOT transactions should be structured in such a way that they can be finished within a reasonable time and at reasonable cost.

· Bidders must be experienced and reliable.

· Contractors must have sufficient experience and resources.

· Project risks must be allocated among the parties on a reasonable basis.

· The project's financial structure must provide lenders with adequate security.

· Currency, foreign exchange, and inflation issues must be addressed and resolved.

· The contractual framework must be coordinated and must reflect the basic economics of the project.

· The public and the private sectors need to cooperate on "a win-win basis."

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