Chronicled Evidence of Wasteful,
Reckless Major Infrastructure Projects with Material Cost Blowouts and/or
Substantial Completion Delays and/or
Usage/Patronage Paucity
"Australian governments are fast-tracking their transport projects, hoping for
an infrastructure-led recovery from the pandemic-induced recession.
But those ‘infrastructure pipelines’ are constipated by megaprojects that are
too slow to be effective stimulus and prone to
mammoth cost overruns. Governments
should act now to set current projects on a sounder basis, and take steps to
avoid ending up here again.
The era of megaprojects has arrived. It’s 10 years since Australia’s firsttransportinfrastructureprojectworthatleast$5billion;nowthere are nine such
projects under construction. Before the pandemic, the value of transport
infrastructure under construction for Australian governments reached $125
billion for the first time, and two thirds ofthatworkwasonprojectsworth$5billionormore. Billion-dollar
projectsarenolongerunusual. The2020CommonwealthBudget uppedthetransportspendtoone-and-a-halftimestheusuallevel.
Megaprojectsarealreadybreakingrecordsforcostoverruns.There’s an overrun so far of $24 billion on just six current projects:
Inland Rail was costed at $4.4 billion in 2010; it’s now estimated to cost
$9.9 billion.
Melbourne’s North East Link was costed at $6 billion in 2008;it’snowexpectedtocost$15.8billion,eventhoughtheVictorian Government selected the cheapest route.
The Sydney Metro City &
Southwestwascostedat$11billionin2015;thisyeartheNSW Government
announced the latest estimate was $15.5 billion.
Evenbeforethemegaprojectsera,costoverrunswereamega-problem. Over the past two decades, Australian governments
spent $34 billion more on transport infrastructure than they first told us they
would.
GrattanInstitute’sanalysisofallprojectsvaluedat$20millionormore andbuiltoverthepast20yearsshowsthattheactualcostsexceeded the promised
costs by 21 per cent.
Big projects are particularly risky. More than one third of overruns since2001camefromjustsevenbigprojects. Eightypercentofthe costoverrunscamefromjust14percentofprojects;that14percent exceeded their
originally promised cost by more than half. Some overrunsarethesizeofamegaprojectthemselves:for$1billion-plus projectswithanoverrun,thatoverrunaveragedmorethan$1billion.
Projects announced before governments are prepared to formally commit are also
particularly risky. Only one third of projects are announcedprematurely,buttheyaccountformorethanthreequarters ofthecostoverruns.Prematureannouncementswouldbenoproblem if Australia had a
robust process for cancelling the duds, but most projects, once announced, are
seen through to completion.
Right now, governments are focused on creating jobs and stimulating theeconomybyspendingmoneyquickly.Butspendingbigontransport projects makes
little sense, because even before the pandemic, the Prime Minister, Treasurer,
and state infrastructure ministers were worried that there weren’t enough
workers, materials, and machinery for the massive construction workload. When
there are already bottlenecks, racing to build projects dreamt up before the
pandemic justpushesupprices.Governmentswouldgetbiggerbangfortaxpayer buck by instead
spending more on upgrading existing infrastructure, andonsocialinfrastructuresuchasagedcareandmentalhealthcare.
Governmentsshouldrethinkmajorprojectsthathavebeenpromised or are under construction,
particularly those announced without a business case.
Governments should continuously disclose to
Parliament material changes to expected costs and benefits, as listed companiesdotothestockexchange. Toavoidendinguphereagainin future,governmentsshouldcollectdataonandlearnlessonsfrompast projects. Megaprojects should be a last, not a first resort.
"The second stage of
Sydney’s emerging metro network will comprise a line from Chatswood, under
Sydney Harbour to the CBD and onto Sydenham and Bankstown.
Internal documents have shown the cost
of the Metro City and Southwest line, which is due to open in 2024, risks
blowing out to as
much as $16.8 billion, more than $4 billion above what had been budgeted.
Yet it is the third
stage from central Sydney to Parramatta that is the most costly.
Unlike the first two, the government has
never put an official price tag on Metro West, which will be built in two parts
because of its size.
The Transport Minister
says cost estimates for the 24-kilometre line have not been released because the
government is still working through the scope of the project. “It’s a bit hard
to put a final cost estimate for internal budgeting purposes on a project until
you actually have that work complete,” Constance says. “Anyone can pluck a
number, which is why I’ve been very disciplined around cost ranges because that
helps with competitive tension.”
More than four years
after
committing, the
government is still to finalise parts of Metro West, including a turn-back for
trains beneath central Sydney and the exact location of a
CBD station.
Constance says the train turn-back has to be “decided in the next six to 12
months”.
Internal forecasts have estimated the
second stage of Sydney’s metro rail network will cost up to $16.8 billion
Leaked
internal documents
have revealed Metro West could cost almost $27 billion and be opened as late as
2033.
Labor transport
spokesman Chris Minns says a leadership vacuum could be costly for taxpayers.
“It’s probably the worst time in the last 10 years to be unilaterally sacking
your Transport secretary with so many projects on the run. You are dealing with
very savvy private sector operators that move around the world, and experience
can save hundreds of millions of dollars,” he says.
“We would like to see more transparency
from the government in relation to these multibillion-dollar projects – it is
unclear what they will cost and it is unclear when they will be completed.”
But Constance refutes
suggestions of a leadership vacuum and says he is on the cusp of appointing a
Transport for NSW secretary. “We’ve got competent people in our agency and the
beauty is that the agency’s dependency in terms of its direction is not down to
two people,” he says.
Regardless, the
bureaucracy faces ambitious time frames. The state government – in concert with the Commonwealth – has committed to build
an $11 billion metro line from St Marys to the new Western Sydney Airport at
Badgerys Creek by 2026, in time for the first planes taking off from the
curfew-free airport.
Even before earth-moving equipment and
tunnel boring machines start, the justification for the airport line has been
savaged by
Infrastructure Australia, which has warned the cost will far outweigh the
benefits. The airport line is forecast to deliver 82 cents in benefits for every
dollar spent building it, compared to $1.34 and $1.70 in benefits for every $1
spent constructing the Metro West and the City and Southwest lines respectively.
A risk is that any blowouts in the budgeted costs of building the lines will
further erode their forecast benefits when compared with their cost, at a time
when the long-term consequences of the pandemic on travel demand are unclear.
The Grattan Institute’s transport and cities program director, Marion Terrill,
is urging the state government to press pause on its mega projects. “It is a
time of high uncertainty, so forging ahead with these projects that had been
predicated on strong population growth doesn’t seem to make sense. The other
thing we don’t know is whether these changing patterns of work and travel [due
to the pandemic] ... are going to be sustained long term,” she says.
"Australia’s state and federal
governments have developed a costly
habit of rushing major transport projects to market. The premature decisions are
often made for political purposes, but invariably the taxpayer is left to pick
up the tab.
Grattan Institute research shows
that 28 per cent of major infrastructure projects – those valued at $1 billion
or more – end up costing more than governments claimed when contracts were
signed, and when they do the average
blowout is more than $600 million. The price of a quick political win
is often a long, slow and unnecessary budget sink.
When governments pursue risky
infrastructure projects,
they must at least set
themselves up for success by doing adequate planning and discovery. Failing to
do so only leads to expensive mistakes that could have been dealt with far more
cheaply at the project’s conception.
Governments rush projects for
various reasons. Winning votes is certainly one. In the case of the commuter
carpark funding, the decision was made the day before the 2019 federal election
was called, and the money was overwhelmingly directed at Liberal or marginal
seats.
But governments also rush
projects in the pursuit of the image that they “gets
things done”,
and because they cannot tie the hands of future governments. If a government
fails to get a pet project started within its term of office, there’s every
chance the next government might cancel the project altogether.
Whatever the reason, as the
commuter carpark scheme reminds us, a decision to rush only leads to hurt in the
long run. The scheme has already blown out by $20 million before construction
has even begun on three of the four projects.
This example of rushing projects instead of scoping and planning is not an
isolated incident.
The West Gate Tunnel project has had significant delays and cost increases.
The Victorian government failed
to notify utilities of
the West Gate Tunnel project’s status under the Major Transport Projects
Facilitation Act 2009. The result has been significant delays and cost
increases, which have led to arbitration between the government, Transurban and
the construction consortium.
In Sydney, the NSW
Auditor-General criticised
the CBD and South East Light Rail project’s “inadequate planning and tight
timeframes”, after the construction company claimed the government failed to
pass on crucial information about underground conditions. In June 2019, the NSW
government paid the contractors an extra $576 million in compensation.
The
Queensland government rolled out its New
Generation Rollingstock trains in
Dec 2017, to meet a timetable dictated by the 2018 Commonwealth Games. It
was too hasty: the trains failed to comply with the government’s own disability
legislation, and ultimately required refitting, at a cost of $361 million.
Governments sometimes suggest
that if they didn’t move quickly, nothing would ever get built. But when
governments rush to market it’s often unclear whether there is a genuine
imperative to build the project
Cost increases caused by rushing to market may mean that the cost-benefit
equation used to justify building the project in the first place no longer
stacks up. As Grattan Institute has shown, cost overruns are far
more likely than
cost underruns, and this is particularly the case when projects are rushed.
What can be done to break this costly habit of rushing megaprojects to market?
Instead of grasping for votes, governments need to assess projects on their
merits and only fund those that can withstand scrutiny. Problems often arise due
to site conditions, such as contaminated soil. Governments should do better
discovery of underground conditions prior to building, and should certify these
results to potential bidders. Where it is economical to reduce future risks and
costs, governments should also conduct more early work on sites.
Governments have a responsibility to spend public money wisely. Rushing into
political projects or “nation building” megaprojects neglects this
responsibility. To get value for money on transport projects, we need
governments to go back to basics – to plan, prepare and justify before a shovel
even hits the dirt.
The West Gate Tunnel
project has blown out by a further $3.3 billion, and we taxpayers are being
asked to help pick up the tab for what’s become a $10 billion project – so far.
The West Gate Tunnel
started out as a $5.5 billion project, when the new Andrews government in April
2016 signed an in-principle agreement with Transurban for a 5 km toll road
linking the West Gate Freeway at Yarraville with the Port of Melbourne and
CityLink at Docklands. It was a market-led proposal – Transurban put the plan to
the government, not the other way around.
"Transport Department chief executive Tony Braxton-Smith told parliament’s
budget and finance committee this morning the latest updated project cost
was now $842.43 million.
The 127 million increase is principally due to COVID-19 impacts,” he told the
committee."