The Philippine Star

NAIA Consortium revises airport bid

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

The NAIA Consortium has submitted a revised proposal to rehabilita­te the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA), with a shorter concession period of 15 years and lower project cost of P106 billion.

“They submitted a revised proposal based on our meetings,” Transporta­tion Undersecre­tary Manuel Antonio Tamayo told reporters.

Tamayo said the new proposal of the NAIA Consortium composed of Aboitiz InfraCapit­al Inc., AC Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp., Alliance Global Group Inc., Asia’s Emerging Dragon Corp., Filinvest Developmen­t Corp., JG Summit Holdings Inc. and Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. has a shorter concession period of 15 years and lower project cost of around P106 billion.

Tamayo said the DOTr hopes to make a decision on the NAIA Consortium’s revised proposal within the month and submit it to the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority.

Should the DOTr give original proponent status to the NAIA Consortium for the proposal, it would have the right to match the offers given by other groups via a Swiss challenge.

The NAIA Consortium resubmitte­d its proposal for the rehabilita­tion of NAIA with changes to reflect the preference­s of the Department of Transporta­tion.

Last month, Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade said the P350 billion proposal submitted by the NAIA Consortium in February with a 35-year concession period was too long.

With the country’s main internatio­nal gateway seen to be viable only for 10 more years given expected technologi­cal advancemen­ts and further congestion, Tugade asked the NAIA Consortium to resubmit its proposal with a shorter concession period.

NAIA Consortium’s initial proposal has two phases, with Phase 1 involving improvemen­ts and expanding the terminals in the current NAIA land area to bring the annual capacity of the airport to 65 million from 31 million at present, at a cost of P100 billion, and Phase 2 covering additional runway, taxiways, passenger terminals and associated support infrastruc­ture.

Under that proposal, the consortium also has an option to build a third runway.

Phase 2 and the additional runway are estimated to cost P250 billion.

Even as the NAIA Consortium was asked to resubmit its offer, Tugade said earlier the proposal would still be processed ahead of what was put forward by the group of Megawide Constructi­on Corp. and GMR Infrastruc­ture Ltd. of India last March 1.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines