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Abstract

This study critically examines the Kansai Airports Group’s 44-year Public-Private Partnership (PPP) monopoly-type concession encompassing Kansai International (KIX), Osaka Itami (ITM), and Kobe (UKB) airports. The research uses financial analysis, Monte Carlo simulation, and NPV-at-risk modeling to evaluate how Japan’s fixed-term private monopoly model allocates financial, operational, and environmental risks. In 2015, there were significant developments in the promotion of the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) Act. It was revised in 2015; as a result, it finds that the underestimated long-term maintenance liabilities, especially Kansai airport (KIX) foundation subsidence, and lacked flexibility to manage exogenous shocks like COVID-19 and Typhoon Jebi. Comparative insights from various global models reveal structural weaknesses in Japan’s legal and institutional frameworks. The study also identifies investment disincentives linked to unclear terminal asset reversion and overly rigid performance monitoring. Drawing on international best practices, the research recommends embedding dynamic risk forecasting tools and renegotiation triggers to create more resilient, adaptive infrastructure concessions in Japan’s aviation sector.

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