N7 Limerick Southern Ring Phase II (Limerick Tunnel Scheme)
This project was included in the Government announcement of pilot projects on 1st June 1999. A study undertaken in 1987 identified several routes south and west of Limerick connecting the Dublin Road, N7 to the Ennis Road - N18. Phase I of this scheme proceeding south and west from the N7 and joining the Cork Road N20/21 at Rossbrien was completed in May 2004 through a separate contract. Phase II continues west and north to the N18. The project comprises of approximately 10 km of standard dual carriageway and incorporates a tunnel under the River Shannon.
The PPP contract was awarded to the DirectRoute Consortium (Kellogg Brown & Root Ltd., Strabag AG, John Sisk & Son (Holdings) Ltd., Lagan Holdings Ltd., Roadbridge Ltd. (Mulcair) on 18th August 2006.
Contract Award Date | Contract Awarded to | PPP Type | Government Programme | Status |
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August 2006 | Direct Route | Concession | National Development Plan 2000 - 2006 | Opened 2010 |
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Financial Aspects of the Limerick Tunnel Scheme |
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Concession CompanyThe DirectRoute consortium comprises Strabag AG, John Sisk & Son (Holdings) Ltd, Lagan Holdings Ltd, Roadbridge Ltd (Mulcair), and two third party equity providers namely Meridiam Infrastructure Finance S.C.A. SICAR and Allied Irish Banks p.l.c. |
Duties and obligations of the Concession CompanyThe Limerick Tunnel PPP Scheme incorporates a fourth crossing of the River Shannon in the environs of Limerick City, involved the construction of approximately 10 km of new dual carriageway, along with associated link roads and side roads. This fourth crossing of the River Shannon involved an immersed tube tunnel, approximately 900m in length, linking the townland of Coonagh, on the northern bank, with the townland of Bunlicky on the southern bank of the Shannon. The route commences in the townland of Rossbrien, linking the eastern end of the Limerick Tunnel PPP Scheme at the location of the existing Rossbrien Roundabout and proceeds westwards, through the townlands of Rathbane North, Ballinacurra (Weston), Ballinacurra (Hart), Ballykeefe, Bunlicky, Castlemungret, Coonagh West, Clonmacken, Coonagh East, Meelick and Cratloemoyle to join with the existing N18 close to Cratloe Castle. The Scheme includes four grade separated junctions; at Rossbrien joining the Limerick Southern Ring Road Phase I and the Limerick Tunnel PPP Scheme to the N20 Cork/Tralee road; at the Dock Road (N69); at Coonagh West; and at the N18 Ennis Road tie-in. There are two toll plazas and associated utilities located north of the river Shannon and six river crossings, including the tunnel crossing of the River Shannon DirectRoute is required to carry to undertake the following tasks:
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Period of ConcessionThe contract was signed on the 18th August 2006 and will extend for 35 years from that date. The construction is anticipated to take approximately 4 years and DirectRoute will be responsible for collection of tolls for a period of approximately 31 years. |
Cost of the projectThe Authority estimates that if it were to undertake itself all the design, construction, maintenance, operation and re-investment tasks that are being required of DirectRoute the cost would be in the order of €660m (excluding land and preliminary design costs) in 2006 values. The Authority estimates that the cost of land, preliminary studies/design necessary to identify the route, preparation of the statutory documents (Motorway scheme and Environmental Impact Statement), advance ground investigation, initial archaeological testing and resolution, and supervision of its construction will amount to approximately €150m. These costs apply irrespective of the contractual means that could be employed for the delivery of the scheme. |
DirectRoute’s financingDirectRoute is investing substantial funding into this project by means of equity from the companies included in the consortium. The majority of the funding is debt funding and DirectRoute has arranged funding from three sources:
A key component of DirectRoute’s financial package for the Project is a debt funding solution involving a monoline wrapped private placement bond underwritten by HBoS (the conduit structure). This has enabled the debt financing to be arranged at a lower cost than traditional debt funding. The funding package also includes a drawdown of equity bridge finance and mezzanine finance. DirectRoute is the party responsible for the repayment of all these debts and without recourse to the state. |
Payments from the Authority to DirectRouteThe Authority’s payments to DirectRoute are fixed and consist of payments of €180m (Nominal) over the period of the construction, released on satisfactory completion of key construction elements, and €60m (2006 values) during the period of operation. (Note: Operational payments are subject to indexation in line with the consumer price index.) |
Payments from DirectRoute to the AuthorityDirectRoute will pay a share to the Authority, dependent on the level of traffic on the road, of the toll revenues collected. Without divulging full details due to the commercial sensitivity of the exact proposal, the Authority anticipates that this revenue share will be a substantial amount of money that will part repay the subvention payments that the Authority will have made. |
Payments from DirectRoute to the StateIn addition to the revenue share that it will pay to the Authority, DirectRoute will be obliged to make the following payments:
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Summary OverviewFor infrastructure with an estimated cost (construction and on-going operations and maintenance) of €660m, excluding land/planning/ preparatory design costs, the State will pay €180m (excluding land/preparatory costs) throughout the 4 year construction period along with a further €60m during the operational period. The State will recoup monies by means of revenue share, rates and taxes. |