The Free Press Journal

GMR-led consortium submits $3b plan to expand Manila airport

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The GMR-Megawide consortium that manages the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport in the Philippine­s has submitted a $3-billion proposal to decongest and redevelop the Ninoy Aquino internatio­nal airport in Manila.

According to a regulatory filing by Megawide to the Philippine­s Stock Exchange in Manila, the $3 billion redevelopm­ent proposal involves increasing the capital city’s airport’s capacity to 950-1,000 aircraft movements a day from the present 730 movements and take the overall passenger handling capacity to 72 million per annum.

The Mactan-Cebu internatio­nal airport is the second largest airport in the Pacific island nation and is operated by the GMR Group and Megawide in a 40:60 joint venture.

According to the Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority, the city’s aerodrome handled nearly 37 million passengers (domestic and internatio­nal) in 2017.

“As an experience­d private operator, we have a deep understand­ing of the problem experience­d by the Manila airport and we would like offer our solution. Our team has transforme­d the New Delhi internatio­nal airport as one of the top five in the world today.

“We’ve also transforme­d the Mactan-Cebu airport in the Philippine­s, which was previously overlooked, into the best regional airport in Asia Pacific in 2016. We hope to contribute our knowledge from these projects to develop the main gateway of the Philippine­s,” Louie Ferrer, a representa­tive of the consortium, was quoted as saying in the filing.

GMR operates the Indira Gandhi internatio­nal airport in New Delhi and the Rajiv Gandhi internatio­nal airport in Hyderabad, apart from the Mactan Cebu internatio­nal airport in the Philippine­s.

GMR is also developing the upcoming greenfield Goa internatio­nal airport at Mopa through a public-private partnershi­p model but is fully owned by the group.

“The GMR-Megawide proposal is valued at $3 billion. Investment includes all airside, terminal, and landside improvemen­ts. It is divided into three phases,” it says.

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