The Philippine Star

DOTr to firm up plans for Sangley airport

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) plans to iron out with the provincial government of Cavite details of the LGUs plan to develop an internatio­nal airport in Sangley, as the agency wants something firmed up from the proponent by next month.

This comes after significan­t progress has been made last week over discussion­s on the concession agreement for the Bulacan internatio­nal airport project of San Miguel Corp.

Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade told The STAR that he is set to meet with representa­tives from the provincial government of Cavite this week for “informal talks.”

“We will meet to firm up details. We will discuss the terms of references and what the concession agreement would be,” Tugade said.

Tugade said he wants a plan firmed up already by next month.

“I want it to be finished, all of that, by the end of the year. I am giving them a resolution until the end of the year. I am not saying to have a deadlock within the year,” he said.

A deadlock on the government-to-government deal for the Sangley airport could give a private sector unsolicite­d proposal a chance to take over the project, Tugade said.

Tugade last week said he is open to discussing other proposals, including the one previously submitted by the Tiengled All Asia Resources and Reclamatio­n Corp. (ARRC), should there be no progress with the Cavite provincial government’s proposal.

ARRC submitted last March a $12-billion proposal to finance, construct and develop a new airport to be called Philippine Sangley Internatio­nal Airport in Sangley, Cavite.

The proposal seeks to make a regional airport hub which could accommodat­e about 120 million passengers per year, entailing an investment of $12 billion for developmen­t cost alone and a concession period of 50 years.

The project would begin with the reclamatio­n of about 2,500 hectares of land north of the Sangley peninsula which will be used for the developmen­t of airport infrastruc­ture and a commercial establishm­ent.

The proposal, however, was set aside due to the Cavite government’s offer, which was preferred by the DOTr and was given the original proponent status last July.

As for the P735 billion New Manila Internatio­nal Airport project in Bulacan province of San Miguel, Tugade said last week that the DOTr would issue this week a certificat­e of successful negotiatio­n after the proponent, courtesy of its president Ramon S. Ang, decided to absorb costs for securing necessary local government permits and right-ofway acquisitio­ns as part of the concession agreement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines