June 11, 2025

Vanuatu

Country context (P3 lens)

Vanuatu is a small island developing state with limited but emerging use of P3-style arrangements, primarily to address infrastructure gaps, service delivery constraints, and fiscal limitations. P3s are viewed as a pragmatic tool for mobilizing private participation, particularly where projects are supported by development partners and structured at an appropriate scale.

Verified sources: World Bank PPP Knowledge Lab, Government of Vanuatu (Ministry of Finance and Economic Management), Asian Development Bank (ADB), IMF, UNDP.


Economic and infrastructure conditions

  • Economy: Small, open, and vulnerable to external shocks and natural disasters; public investment capacity is constrained.

  • Infrastructure priorities:

    • Transport (ports, airports, inter-island connectivity)

    • Power generation and distribution

    • Water supply and sanitation

    • Solid waste management

    • Climate-resilient public infrastructure

  • Private sector: Limited domestic capacity; private participation often involves regional operators or international firms supported by development institutions.


Public Private Partnerships framework

Legal and institutional setup

  • Vanuatu does not yet have a comprehensive standalone P3 law.

  • Private participation is enabled through sector legislation, concessions, and contractual arrangements, often tailored on a project-by-project basis.

  • Central ministries oversee project approvals, with strong involvement from development partners in preparation and structuring.

Market characteristics

  • P3s are small-scale and highly structured, reflecting market size and risk profile.

  • Financing typically relies on blended finance, combining private operators with grants, concessional loans, or guarantees from development partners.

  • Risk allocation is conservative, with the public sector and donors retaining significant demand and force majeure risk.


Sector experience and opportunities

Energy

  • Independent power-style P3s and concessions have been used for electricity generation and distribution, including renewable energy projects.

  • Long-term service contracts and power purchase agreements underpin bankability.

Transport

  • Ports and airports are key candidates for concession-type P3s, often linked to tourism and trade connectivity.

Water and municipal services

  • Water supply and waste management are explored through performance-based service contracts and management-style P3s, rather than full concessions.


Key P3 considerations

  • Scale and bankability: Projects must be right-sized and often bundled or supported by guarantees.

  • Climate resilience: P3 structures must address disaster and climate risks explicitly.

  • Institutional capacity: Line ministries rely heavily on external advisors and development partners.

  • Fiscal risk: Careful management of long-term commitments is critical for debt sustainability.


Outlook

Vanuatu represents a selective and niche P3 market:

  • Priority sectors: energy, transport, and municipal services

  • Projects are small-scale, donor-supported, and tailored to local capacity

  • P3s will remain targeted instruments rather than a large pipeline, focused on resilience and essential services


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