The Philippine Star

Tycoons present infra wish list to Marcos

- By IRIS GONZALES

Some of the country’s most prominent tycoons have presented to President Marcos a wish list of measures on how to improve the infrastruc­ture landscape in the country.

Ports and casino tycoon Enrique Razon, chairman of Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc.(ICTSI), for instance, pushed for the developmen­t of ports outside Manila.

During a meeting last week of the Private Sector Advisory Council (PSAC) at Malacañang,

Razon and ICTSI executive vice president Christian Gonzalez discussed the challenges facing the logistics sector.

In their presentati­on, Razon and Gonzalez said the logistics industry is too geographic­ally concentrat­ed, with the ports outside Manila underutili­zed.

The current port setup often leads to double or even triple handling of cargo, resulting in higher handling costs and time delays.

The PSAC recommende­d that key assets of the Philippine Ports Authority be identified and developed into regional hubs capable of handling internatio­nal cargo.

Razon also suggested developing the Port of Iloilo into another internatio­nal port.

This would ultimately lead to reduced costs and time to market for imports, as well as provide the local agricultur­al industry with direct global access, Razon said during the meeting.

Razon is familiar with the business potential of Iloilo as he has investment­s in the province, particular­ly through his power company, MORE Electric and Power Corp.

Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. president Manuel Pangilinan, meanwhile, cited the various challenges plaguing clean water accessibil­ity, from the over-dependence on depleting groundwate­r to the highly fragmented governance structure.

The PSAC Infrastruc­ture Sector additional­ly recommende­d increasing funding support for water projects and sewage treatment, while also incentiviz­ing the private sector to invest.

The PSAC also recommende­d the adoption of a water tariff based on affordabil­ity instead of a straight-line cost per cubic meter.

For the energy sector, the PSAC recommende­d rationaliz­ing secondary price caps in order to open up new investment­s, factoring in prevailing market conditions, as well as connecting the Small Power Utility Groups (SPUGs) to the grid.

For the transport and mobility sector presentati­on, Aboitiz Group president and CEO Sabin Aboitiz highlighte­d that in the World Economic Forum (WEF) ranking of global competitiv­eness in air transport efficiency, the Philippine­s ranks low at 96 out of 141 countries.

With flight propensity increasing to pre-pandemic levels, it is imperative to improve transport and mobility infrastruc­ture to support economic recovery and growth, the PSAC said.

In attendance at the meeting from the government for the transport and mobility sector were Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) Secretary Jaime Bautista, Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s (CAAP) director general Capt. Manuel Antonio Tamayo, and Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority general manager Cesar Chiong.

The PSAC Infrastruc­ture Sector recommende­d quick wins with the rehabilita­tion of NAIA through public-private partnershi­p (PPP) and the accelerati­on of the award process of projects with original proponent status this year.

During the meeting, the DOTr said there are ongoing NAIA privatizat­ion terms of reference being developed by the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) that will soon be published. In the medium- and long-term, PSAC proposed the developmen­t of an aerodrome strategy and airport master plan by the DOTr and CAAP.

Present during last week’s meeting were Aboitiz and other PSAC Infrastruc­ture Sector members, namely Globe Capital Partners chairperso­n Joanne de Asis, MPIC’s Manuel V. Pangilinan, Atok-Big Wedge Co. president Eric Recto, San Miguel Corp. president and CEO Ramon Ang and ICTSI’s Razon.

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