5.3 OVERVIEW OF TYPES OF FINANCING MODELS
There are a number of different funding vehicles that are available that can be used to fund local municipal networks. The scale of funding required has a great deal of implications for the type of financial instruments used. The deployment of a relatively inexpensive wireless system to provide essential municipal services with a payback period of two years can often be covered out of city revenues. In contrast, a multi-million dollar fibre system with a payback period of 10 years requires long-term financial commitments.
The main sources to fund these types of capital-intensive projects
are bonds, loans, grants and private equity financing. The approach to financing these networks and
the established mechanisms that are in use varies quite considerably country by
country. There are very marked contrasts
between the financing of municipal networks in the U.S. and
those in Europe. The U.S.
tends to use financial instruments that are normally used for funding municipal
infrastructure projects and there is very little reliance on government
grants. In Europe, there tends to be a
higher reliance on government grants and financing through public-private
partnerships.
In the U.S., the principal source of financing of infrastructure projects by
state and local governments and their agencies is through the use of municipal
bonds. There are two types - general obligation bonds and revenue bonds.[vii] General obligation bonds are normally issued
to raise capital and are backed by the issuing government through its taxing
power. Revenue bonds are issued to fund
infrastructure projects and are financed from the revenue generated by these
projects. Revenue bonds can be a riskier
investment for lenders, as the repayment is predicated on the success of the
project and if it fails, there is no financial obligation on the part of the
government unless otherwise stipulated.
Revenue bonds were the type of financing that Utopia had originally
intended to use, but lenders were unwilling to provide funds on this basis
because of the absence of data on this type of open access model.[viii]
Since many of the U.S.
municipal networks are built and operated as a division of the local government
utility, loan financing is often made available from the reserves of the
utility. However, any loans have to be
provided on commercial terms to ensure that there is no
cross-subsidisation. The provision of
loans by private financial institutions is still relatively uncommon, but there
are a few examples, such as Burlington Telecom[ix]
in Vermont, where a private investor, Koch Financial, is financing most of the
costs of the FTTH system.
In the U.S., there is no established government policy and funding mechanism
for financing municipal networks.
Although grants may be available through a number of federally sponsored
regional development programmes, they do not appear to be used to any extent by
local governments for network development.[x]
The approach to financing local municipal access networks in Europe varies from country to
country based on the policy of the national government and the role of local
government in the provision of services.
Countries, such as the Netherlands and Sweden have national policies and
funding mechanisms to encourage the deployment of open access municipal FTTH
systems, whereas, in countries where there is no such national policy, there
has been very limited deployment of FTTH systems by local governments.
Similar to the U.S.
experience, cities throughout Europe have been deploying wireless networks to provide essential services
to the community at costs that are cheaper than using existing service
providers. A number of these networks
have then been used to provide free high-speed Internet access services to the
community.
Another very important factor in the case of both Sweden
and the Netherlands is the role of local government and housing co-operatives in the
ownership of multi-tenant housing stock.
These institutions have had a significant impact in encouraging the
deployment of FTTH by both private companies, such as Bredbandsbolaget in Sweden
and also municipal networks by local governments. There does also seem to be a level of
cooperation with the incumbent carrier, TeliaSonera, which has teamed up with
several local municipalities and their subsidiary power utility companies to
develop fibre infrastructure in Sweden’s
smaller cities and towns.
Although both Sweden
and the Netherlands are European leaders in the deployment of municipal or
cooperatively owned FTTH networks, many are still in the pilot stage and so the
actual number of community-wide systems that are operational is still
relatively small.
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References
[vii] McWhinney, J., “The Basics of
Municipal Bonds”, Investopedia.com, February 28, 2005.
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/bonds/05/022805.asp
[viii] Utopia web site
[ix] Swirbul, C., “Financing Community Broadband”, Public Power,
November – December 2005.
http://www.appanet.org/newsletters/
ppmagazinedetail.cfm?
ItemNumber=14823&sn.ItemNumber=210
[x] Swirbul, C., “Financing Community Broadband”, Public Power,
November – December 2005.
http://www.appanet.org/newsletters/ppmagazinedetail.cfm?
ItemNumber=14823&sn.ItemNumber=2108
