Adani says they paid Ksh.6.5M review fee to Gov’t for JKIA lease proposal
Adani Airport Holdings Limited says it paid
a $50,000 (about Ksh.6.47 million) review fee to the Kenyan government for its $1.85
billion (Ksh.242 billion) proposal to take over and facelift the Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport (JKIA) in Nairobi.
In new court filings seen by Citizen Digital,
the Indian infrastructure company owned by the Adani Group says it deposited the money to the Public Private Partnerships Facilitation Fund, alongside submitting
the relevant documents for its controversial privately initiated proposal (PIP)
to the Kenyan government.
“Upon submission of the PIP, the 5th
respondent (Adani Airport Holdings Limited) duly paid a review fee of USD
50,000 to the Public Private Partnership Facilitation Fund as required by the
law,” the company submits through its lawyers.
“The 5th respondent also provided all the
necessary pre-approval documents including incorporation and corporate
documents, tax compliance documents and financial documents to aid the PPP (Public
Private Partnership) Directorate, in coordination with KAA, to carry out their
due diligence on the proponent.”
The company says this in a Tuesday, September
17 replying affidavit to the case lodged by the Kenya Human Rights Commission
(KHRC) and the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) on September 9, blocking the deal.
Adani says the Kenya Airports Authority wrote
back on March 18 confirming receipt of the PIP, indicating that it had “cleared
the project to proceed to the project development phase, that is, the feasibility
study phase.”
The company says it then provided a feasibility
study report outlining “the environmental and social impact of the project”,
the financial plan and “how the Kenyan public will get value for money from the
PIP project.”
Adani “also provided a preliminary
operating plan for the project and the report confirmed that the project is
aligned with the national infrastructure priorities and is aimed at curbing the
perennial infrastructure flaws and deterioration that has been witnessed at
JKIA,” reads court papers.
The Indian company holds that the project
is still at the review and due-diligence stage, dismissing statements by KHRC and
LSK that JKIA has already been leased for 30 years as a misrepresentation of
facts.
LSK and KHRC argue in their submissions Kenya's
busiest airport was leased to a foreign private entity without adequate
consultation or transparency.
According to the Public Private Partnerships
Act, a contracting authority may consider a privately
initiated proposal if: the project is aligned with national infrastructure and priorities
and meets a demonstrated societal need; it provides value for money; it
provides sufficient information for the contracting authority to assess fiscal
affordability and the potential contingent liability implications of the
proposal.
The project must be able to be delivered at
a fair market price; supported by all required documents and support the
efficient transfer of risk from the public sector.
The contracting authority shall submit the privately-initiated
proposal to the Directorate of Public Private Partnerships for assessment and
approval.
The Cabinet Secretary may, by notice in the
Gazette, prescribe when submissions may be made.
Additionally, the private party is required
to pay into the Public Private Partnership Facilitation Fund a non-refundable
review fee at the time of submitting its proposal, calculated at the rate of 0.5
per cent of the estimated project cost, or $50,000, whichever is lower.
“The review fee paid… shall not create any
obligation on the contracting authority or the Directorate towards the proponent,”
the law states.
The Cabinet Secretary shall, in
consultation with the Directorate, make regulations for the better implementation
of this section.”
In Tuesday’s court filings, Adani says it learnt
of the deteriorating condition of JKIA through Kenyan media and sought to
invest in the airport's improvement, submitting a proposal on March 1, 2024, to
KAA.
Former Transport Cabinet Secretary
Kipchumba Murkomen in November last year alluded to JKIA’s facelift, although
he did not give definite figures on how much the project would cost.
Murkomen at the time said the government
wanted to upgrade JKIA – the
main gateway into Kenya and the busiest airport in East Africa – to be at par
with its world’s top counterparts.
But KAA acting CEO Henry Ogoye previously
said Adani’s deal requires significant capital investment the government cannot
afford due to current fiscal constraints.
The court on September 9 halted all further action on the proposed lease of JKIA to Adani until the case was fully
resolved.
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