Business World

Foreign contractor­s ruled out of Marawi rehabilita­tion projects

- — Arjay L. Balinbin

TASK FORCE Bangon Marawi chairperso­n Eduardo D. del Rosario on Tuesday confirmed that all Marawi City reconstruc­tion contracts will be awarded to domestic constructi­on firms in the absence of a joint venture with foreign companies.

He said awards will be made via public bidding with some components of the project to be conducted under emergency procuremen­t rules.

“There is no joint venture agreement. It’s all public bidding,” Mr. Del Rosario said in a briefing at the Palace.

He added the debris management, road networks and undergroun­d utilities components of the rehabilita­tion will be conducted under “emergency mode of procuremen­t.”

The Procuremen­t Reform Act or Republic Act 9184 allows the government to directly negotiate with a contractor in cases of extreme urgency and necessity.

“No more [outside companies]. It’s all local,” he said when asked about the involvemen­t of foreign companies.

He said the task force changed its mind on the joint venture mode “when three department­s… told us that there may be some legal problems if we pursue the joint venture agreement as a modality of procuremen­t, because not all the projects will generate income because in a joint venture agreement you negotiate, with a feasibilit­y study, that this particular project will earn profit. And from the profit, you share with the government providing the land and the investor providing the facilities or developmen­t. There is no profit sharing in the road networks and there is no profit sharing in the constructi­on of school buildings. So anyway, those who feel that there are some sort of legal issues if we pursue the joint venture agreement have sound arguments, so we agreed.”

He also said that “maybe one or two” projects in Marawi can generate income “just like the Convention Center, but a joint venture will take a long process.”

Out of the total of 22 components of Marawi’s rehabilita­tion, debris management is the most important, according to Mr. Del Rosario.

“Debris management is the key. We have to remove the debris. If you have seen the whole area, it’s about 90% devastated. We cannot start anything unless and until that we have removed all this debris. It started last November, it was stopped in December and it resumed last week. And we are going to complete the debris management not later than August or September,” he said.

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