PPP Guideline

Executive Summary

To achieve and realize the SDG’s, the sufficiency of a Member State’s initial, medium- and long-term infrastructure jointly with the private sector, it seems a necessary solution for industry and government to work together in ensuring it is both are successfully pursuing their mutual interests and goals.

The Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) is generally a system of partnership between public and private sectors but based on the attractivity and success of PPP system, now private companies also contracting according to PPP system to execute their valuable projects.

This collaboration in the form of Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) has evolved in many Member Counties and at different times, depending on the environment, culture, and legal outline. It is therefore not surprising that there is not a common definition of what constitutes a PPP addressing this zone. Consequently, if we read once again the PPP Definition page, we will find that the PPP is a packed of too many structures, systems and procedures which defend on Policy of each Country, PPP Facilitator, project type, region or project site, project life and its effects on environment and both contractual parties.

If the goal is to achieve the SDG’s-17, then it is extremely necessary to improve and promote the understanding of the PPP system to share the facilities and able us to end illiteracy, Racial prejudice, poverty until 2030. The special aim of the PPP union is to research, improve and promote PPP Globally.

Based on the pursuit of goals, the PPP Union experts endeavor to provide simple, successful, safe, and faster methods in PPP sector to enhance the development of SDG’s-17, and protect the members from fraud, scam and time wasting circles of disqualified systems.

Although our PPP educational subjects and lectures are for PPP Platform members, but this brief PPP Practice Guide on Cooperative Models for Effective Public Private Partnerships builds on the desktop research, which revealed a set of characteristics that can be used to describe these PPPs in a common form despite their diversity.

This data was collected from both public and private sector participants across the member countries and PPP expert Facilitators. This is not a prescriptive guide but has a focus on clarity of purpose and approach so that participants can easily choose those aspects that will add value to their endeavors in setting up and running PPPs.

THE PUPOSE OF GUIDE

“The determine of realization for a PPP is the qualified people coming to share their facilities collectively to do the accurate things pursing the Sustainable Development Goals in the right way.”

Although the assortment of PPPs presents across the 170 Counties internationally, the PPP Union experts have developed a safe guide for which is useful for both private and public sectors. The brief guideline describes how these partnerships operate. The Guide uses this structure to provide procedures and a road map for understanding a range of diverse implementation approaches both for new PPPs and for evolving PPPs. This 5-part framework will be defined in detail through the rest of this section. The following diagram summaries the underlying arrangement for this framework and provides a clue of the rich variety of existing PPPs as well as the range of options available to those starting up a PPP.

SCOPE OF GUIDE

While there is no single, internationally accepted, definition of PPP, the essentials of a PPP arrangement which are encapsulated in a PPP Contract are.

1- THE WORLD BANK DEFINITION

(A)- a long-term contract between a private party (the Private Partner) and a government entity (the Contracting Authority).

(B)- For providing a new or existing public asset or service.

(C)- Under which the Private Partner bears significant risk and management responsibility; and

(D)- Where payments received by the Private Partner are linked to performance.

2- OTHER DEFINITION

(2.1)- PPP is an arrangement where private parties participate in or provide support for the provision of infrastructure.

(2.2)- PPP describes a government service or private business venture which is funded and operated through a partnership of government and one or more private sector companies.

(2.3)- PPP is Not the procurement of an asset but the payment of a stream of services under specified terms and conditions. (2.4)- An organized relationship between public and private organizations, which establishes common scope, objectives, and uses defined functions and work methodology to achieve shared goals.  

3-PPP UNION DEFINITION The PPP is a regulated model for humanitarian project(s) funding and financing partnership arrangement between two or more parties who agreed to work cooperatively toward shared and/or compatible objectives and in which there is shared facilities, authority, and responsibilities.

On page of PPP Definitions there are several definitions of PPP, we kindly advising our kind visitors and members to study the linked page. You may find deferent definitions of PPP which has a focus on clarity of purpose and approach to give you wise thought and understanding about PPP. But for the Scope of the Guide, we should choose one or maximum two definitions of PPP as below. (1)-The PPP is a regulated model for humanitarian project(s) funding and financing partnership arrangement between two or more parties who agreed to work cooperatively toward shared and/or compatible objectives and in which there is shared facilities, authority, and responsibilities. (2)-An organized relationship between public and private organizations, which establishes common scope, objectives, and uses defined functions and work methodology to achieve shared goals.

Due to the significant types of PPPs in existence, the scope of the study, which conveyed the safe and successful Practice Guide was engaged using the following measures:

(1)-to enter national and international partnerships between two private entities according to PPP models.

(2)- to participate and execute on national and international level PPP with Public sector.

(3)-To include PPPs which addressed threats and risks to enhanced security and strength of electronic   Communication networks including using the all-dangers methodology.

(4)-To evaluate the focal point those PPPs which address high power outcomes such as risks to critical national infrastructure and cybercrime.

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