<p>This book provides an expert analysis of alternative investments routes and the investment strategies available to the major port players, and is a much-needed guide to expanding the investor base for private debt funding of projects from loan providers to bond investors.</p><p>Port infrastructure investments are vitally important to all ports throughout the world; without these investments, the competitive position of ports and of the dependent logistics sector will deteriorate. </p><p>National/regional governments and the local port authorities are no longer a guaranteed source of sufficient financial input to meet the continuous port infrastructure investment needs of major ports. It is, therefore, increasingly crucial for ports to broaden their strategies and secure alternative streams of investment.</p><p>This book provides expert insight into areas of port infrastructure finance across the main regions of Europe, Asia, Africa and the USA. Topics include how to estimate future demand by way of forecasting; Public-Private Partnerships; corporatisation; the pricing mechanisms for syndicated loans; European port privatisation; finance strategies for ports in Asia, the USA and Africa; and a discussion of the investment strategies available to the major port players.</p><p>Port Infrastructure Finance is an invaluable book for all parties involved in the port and maritime business, as well as investment companies, banks and other financial institutions involved in infrastructure investment. </p> <p>Chapter 1. Port Infrastructure: What are we Talking About? <i>PROFESSOR THIERRY VANELSLANDER, UNIVERSITY OF ANTWERP </i>Chapter 2. Predicting the Future: How to Estimate Future Demand for Port Throughput and Infrastructure Use <i>PROFESSORS HILDE MEERSMAN AND EDDY VAN DE VOORDE UNIVERSITY OF ANTWERP </i>Chapter 3. Public-Private Partnerships in Ports: Where are we? <i>PROFESSOR ROSÁRIO MACÁRIO, TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF LISBON </i>Chapter 4. Port Authority Corporatisation: Leading Towards Their Privatisation? <i>FRANC J. PIGNA, AEGIR PORT PROPERTY ADVISERS </i>Chapter 5. Evidence on the Pricing of the Syndicated Loans for the Global Port Industry <i>PROFESSOR COSTAS TH. GRAMMENOS, CASS BUSINESS SCHOOL, DR THEOLOGOS DERGIADES, INTERNATIONAL HELLENIC UNIVERSITY , and GEORGIOS MAZIS C</i>hapter 6: Port Privatisation in the UK and Continental Europe: an Evaluation of Past Experience and New Drivers <i>PATRICK VERHOEVEN, EUROPEAN COMMUNITY SHIPOWNERS' ASSOCIATION </i>Chapter 7. Financing Options for Ports: Observations from Asia <i>PROFESSOR ANTHONY T.H. CHIN, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE SHANE WALDRON, INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT </i>Chapter 8. Experiences with Bond Financing and Innovative Transport Project Financing in the United States: Some Evidence from Port and Port-Related Projects. <i>SOTIRIOS THEOFANIS, PANTEC SA AND RUTGERS UNIVERSITY, and MARIA BOILE, HELLENIC INSTITUTE OF TRANSPORT AND RUTGERS UNIVERSITY </i>Chapter 9. Attracting Private Finance into African Ports <i>DR. SHEILA FARRELL, IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON </i>Chapter 10. How to Finance Future Port Infrastructure Investments? Potential Strategies for the Different Actors <i>PROFESSORS DIMITRIOS TSAMBOULAS AND ATHANASIOS BALLIS, NATIONAL TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY ATHENS </i>Chapter 11. Future Port Infrastructure Finance: Lessons and Recommendations <i>PROFESSORS HILDE MEERSMAN EDDY VAN DE VOORDE AND THIERRY VANELSLANDER, UNIVERSITY OF ANTWERP</i></p>