| Asset Type | Social Infrastructure (Personal Care Home Portfolio) |
| Status | Operational |
| Asset Description | 90% interest in a portfolio comprised of seven personal care facilities representing 449 rooms. Kirby Group, the largest operator in Newfoundland & Labrador, is the operator and owns the balance of the ownership interests in the portfolio. |
| Asset Revenues | Personal care facilities are licensed, regulated and funded by the provincial government. The provincial government subsidizes the care, programs, supplies and accommodation costs of the residents, who are also subject to a co-payment as determined by a Regional Health Authority conducted financial assessment of incoming residents. |
| Counterparty | Regional Health Authorities (agencies of the provincial government) |
| Asset Type | Energy Infrastructure |
| Status | Operational (COD in December 2015) |
| Asset Description | 40 MW operating wind facility located in Dufferin County, Ontario. The wind facility was developed under Ontario’s Feed-in-Tariff (FiT) program. |
| Asset Revenues | 100% of power produced is sold to the IESO under a 20-year Power Purchase Agreement (PPA). |
| Counterparty | IESO (rated Aa3 by Moody’s) |
| Asset Type | Energy Infrastructure |
| Status | Operational (COD between November 2012 and October 2014) |
| Asset Description | Eight solar PV facilities in Ontario totalling 105.5 MWdc of aggregate generation capacity located in the municipalities of Brockville, Ottawa, Temiskaming, Mississipi Mills, and South Stormont. The installations were developed under the Ontario government's Feed-in-Tariff (FiT) program. |
| Asset Revenues | 100% of power produced is sold under 20-year Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) |
| Counterparty | IESO |
| PPA Expiry | 2032 and onward (20 years following COD) |
| Asset Type | Transportation infrastructure |
| Status | Operational |
| Asset Description | Highway 407 is the world’s first all-electronic, open-access toll highway, stretching 108 kilometers from the west to the east of the Greater Toronto Area. The highway forms part of the 400-series highways, serving as a bypass of Highway 401 and a major east-west corridor across the suburbs to the north of the city. |
| Asset Revenues | 100% toll-based (all-electronic tolling) |
| Concession Expiry | 2098 (concession term: 99 years) |
| Project Website | For more information visit: www.407etr.com |