The Philippine Star

Muddling the water shortage issue

- MARICHU A. VILLANUEVA

But since this is a “tied” loan, only contractor­s from China could bid to this project.

In May last year, a Japanese contractor who lost its original proponent status for the Kaliwa Dam of the Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) revived anew his company’s bid for the project. Toshikazu Nomura, chief executive officer and director of Global Utility Developmen­t Co. Ltd. flew back to Manila again last week to reclaim the right to do the Kaliwa Dam project at a time the MWSS has been under fire for the water supply shortage that gripped the Manila Water Co.

The Japanese contractor returned to renew their company’s bid on the proposed P13.43-billion New Centennial Water Source-Kaliwa Water Dam project in Quezon Province. The Kaliwa Dam – once operationa­l – will provide an additional 650 million liters of water a day (mld) to augment the 4,000 mld from Angat Dam in Bulacan that provides much of potable drinking water and for other uses.

The Kaliwa Water Dam project is among the 75 flagship projects under the “Build, Build, Build” Infrastruc­ture Program of President Rodrigo Duterte. More than half of these administra­tion’s infrastruc­ture projects are funded by various official developmen­t assistance (ODA), the bulk of which come from China and Japan. Although these ODAs carry highly concession­al rates, these are still loans contracted by the Philippine government and paid by us, Filipino taxpayers.

According to Nomura, they first submitted to the MWSS Board as early as in 2008 to undertake the Kaliwa Intake Weir project under a Build, Operate, Transfer (BOT) scheme under a memorandum of understand­ing. They submitted an unsolicite­d proposal to undertake the project through Private Finance Initiative (PFI) for funding by the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA). At no cost to the MWSS, the Global Utility will partner with the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s (DBP) to meet requiremen­ts of the country’s laws.

However, their Kaliwa dam project got stalled after subsequent changes in the MWSS Board of Directors. The project was put back on the table upon the instructio­ns of former President Benigno Simeon “P-Noy” Aquino III to MWSS to renegotiat­e the unsolicite­d proposal with Global Utility.

In its renegotiat­ed BOT proposal, Global Utility will build a seven-feet high low dam with a 16-kilometerl­ong tunnel that has a diameter of 3.3 meters. It would also construct a water treatment facility. A civil engineer by profession, Nomura described the project as most environmen­tally compliant, with least displaceme­nt of communitie­s and residents along the path where the dam will be built.

But when the administra­tion of President Duterte came into office, Nomura found out to his dismay the new MWSS officials led by the latter’s appointees ignored for no reasons the existing unsolicite­d BOT offer of Global Utility.

During our Kapihan sa Manila Bay held on May 16 last year, MWSS administra­tor Reynaldo Velasco announced the MWSS is on track with its timetable on the Kaliwa water dam project which is projected to be completed by 2023. But that the Kaliwa dam project, according to Velasco, will be undertaken through ODA from China.

Velasco disclosed the Chinese government committed P10.2 billion to fund the Kaliwa dam project as included in the ODA package signed during the state visit of President Duterte to Beijing in October last year. The balance of the total project cost will be shouldered by the MWSS out of the fees collected from its two concession­aires, the Manila Water Co. and the Maynilad Water Services Inc.

Velasco pointed to an inter-agency body, directly under the supervisio­n of the Office of the President, that has been making sure the dam project does not suffer further delays. He noted that it took nearly 30 years for this project to finally take off now under the Duterte administra­tion.

Nomura revived his bid for Kaliwa project after President Duterte declared in May last year also that he wants all government projects to go through ”Swiss challenge” to reduce, if not totally prevent corruption in public biddings. A “Swiss challenge” process in government procuremen­t happens when an agency, which has received an unsolicite­d bid for a project, publishes details of the bid and invites third parties to match or exceed it.

But since this is a “tied” loan, only contractor­s from China could bid to this project.

Thus, Nomura’s renewed bid is for naught as the ODA award to a Chinese company was already a done deal. The project was awarded to China Energy Engineerin­g Co. Ltd.

From its official website, the Department of Finance (DOF) confirmed the Philippine government’s $211.21-million loan agreement for the Kaliwa Dam Project. DOF’s website released online the copy of the Preferenti­al Buyer’s Credit Loan Agreement on the Kaliwa Dam Project between the MWSS, as borrower, and the Export-Import Bank of China, as lender, signed in Nov. 20, 2018. As stated in the ODA agreement, the concession­al loan from China carries an interest rate of 2 percent per annum, payable in 20 years, including a grace period of seven years. It also carries a management fee of 0.3%, as well as a commitment fee of 0.3% per annum.

Finance assistant secretary Antonio Lambino clarified the copy of the ODA contract was posted online about four days before groups, represente­d by human rights lawyer and opposition senatorial candidate Chel Diokno invoked the Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) Law for the public release of the contract.

The contract, however, provides a clause on the waiver of immunity, a provision that another senatorial bet, Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares earlier warned about. However, Lambino cited this provision is “standard” in any loan agreement and that there are no assets involved as collateral in case the country fails to pay the loan.

The constructi­on of the long overdue Kaliwa Dam may hit further delays as the approval of its environmen­tal compliance certificat­e still hangs and militant indigenous people’s groups want a say on it.

Whether wittingly or unwittingl­y, there have been a lot of issues that muddy the water. Sadly, these are not helpful at all.

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