REALWorld Law

Construction

Public procurement

Are public private partnerships (PPPs) common? Are they promoted or encouraged by the government?

United Arab Emirates - Abu Dhabi

United Arab Emirates - Abu Dhabi

The Abu Dhabi Government has historically paid private or government contractors to build roads, government offices, schools and hospitals, funded by oil revenues. They would pay to have buildings built, then pay to have them run. As such, PPPs have been uncommon in Abu Dhabi, and generally limited to government procurement programmes for water and power projects.

Following the rise of PPP in Europe and PFI in the UK, the Abu Dhabi Government introduced the PPP model into the domestic market and has since closed numerous PPP deals where the Abu Dhabi Government has provided land and infrastructure and private firms have invested capital. For example, the developments of ICAD, Paris-Sorbonne University, New York University and Cleveland Clinic.

Law No. 22 of 2015 (the ‘PPP Law’) was introduced in August 2015 and aims to encourage further private sector investment in local development projects, and the Department of Municipal Affairs announced in 2016 that the Abu Dhabi Government is encouraging the use of further PPPs by offering one hundred development projects valuing Dh15 billion to private investors in the next four years. These measures are likely to lead to an increase in the use of PPPs in the future.