The Philippine Star

Phl urged to hasten airport upgrades

- By ELIJAH FELICE ROSALES

SINGAPORE – Malaysia’s largest airline AirAsia hopes that the Philippine government can expedite airport upgrades to increase the country’s flight volume and bolster tourism.

AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandes yesterday said that he plans to expand the internatio­nal network of AirAsia Philippine­s once all the airport developmen­ts in the country are completed.

As such, Fernandes asked the government to speed up plans to develop new airports and upgrade existing ones, saying that the Philippine­s can scale up its travel sector once its infrastruc­tures are improved.

“I think that lots can be done with the new airports, and Cebu is doing a great job. Obviously, we want it to be faster, but the pace is good and at least it’s happening,” Fernandes told The STAR.

At present, the public and private sectors are working on building airports around Metro Manila that would serve as secondary gateways to the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA). San Miguel Corp., for one, is spending P735.6 billion to put up the New Manila Internatio­nal Airport (NMIA) in Bulacan.

The NMIA, scheduled to be completed by 2027, is set to be the largest airport in the country that would feature four runways against NAIA’s one.

Further, a consortium led by the Virata and Yuchengco Groups is investing $11 billion to deliver the Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport (SPIA) in Cavite, a gateway that would host two runways and can serve up to 75 million passengers a year.

The SPIA Consortium in February signed the $11 billion deal with the Cavite local government, paving the way for the group to start land developmen­t and, soon, civil works.

Fernandes said AirAsia Philippine­s wants to prioritize the expansion of its internatio­nal network, especially as the competitio­n for domestic flights is getting tighter.

“I think we focus more on the internatio­nal side at the moment. The Philippine­s is an area that most of the world doesn’t know how beautiful it is. We did a lot of this in Indonesia and we want to start doing that in the Philippine­s. We think that the domestic right now is well served by Cebu Pacific and Philippine Airlines,” Fernandes said.

As proof of this focus on the internatio­nal segment, AirAsia Philippine­s will offer a seat sale on March 4 at Bonifacio Global City in Taguig, wherein base fares will go for as low as P33 for local flights and P833 for foreign trips.

Starting this March, AirAsia Philippine­s will restart its scheduled services to Guangzhou, Macau and Shenzhen, scaling up its internatio­nal network made up of Bali, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Kota Kinabalu, Kuala Lumpur, Seoul, Singapore, Osaka, Taipei, Kaohsiung and Narita.

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