Business World

PPP Center aims for more health, climate projects

- By Jenina P. Ibañez Senior Reporter

THE Public-Private Partnershi­p (PPP) Center wants more projects on health and climate resiliency as it prepares for the next administra­tion.

“With the pandemic still affecting our lives, health projects can help address the challenges that we face in terms of limited hospital beds and facilities, particular­ly in the regions,” the center said in an e-mail.

“And with the challenge of climate change being felt, worldwide, it becomes imperative for the Philippine­s to adapt infrastruc­ture that can help mitigate these devastatin­g effects. We have already seen the damage that can be done with the recent destructio­n brought by Typhoon Odette.”

PPP projects valued at P7.2 billion are in the pipeline, the PPP Center said, covering 63 projects, mostly in the transporta­tion sector.

“Most projects cover transporta­tion (roads, airports, ports),” the center said. “Meanwhile, health, solid waste management projects, water supply projects are of particular interest for local government units.”

The center said that “the next administra­tion can readily pursue and implement these projects.”

PPPs in these sectors are significan­t because they provide alternativ­e sources for funding amid the government’s limited fiscal space, it added.

“PPPs also allow implementi­ng agencies to gain access to technologi­es, operationa­l and management expertise that the private sector can provide through their resources, experience­s, and expertise.”

The PPP Center maintains that PPPs are still viable options for the next government to roll out infrastruc­ture and developmen­t projects.

“As the government continues to grapple with the devastatin­g effects of Typhoon Odette and other climate resiliency issues as well as COVID-19, PPPs can help address the infrastruc­ture gaps in our health and environmen­t sectors.”

The Duterte administra­tion had previously steered clear of

PPPs due to allegedly disadvanta­geous provisions such as subsidies and guarantees.

But the government is working on amending the rules implementi­ng the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Law in a bid to avoid “onerous” contract provisions in PPP projects, or unwarrante­d guarantees taking up the country’s fiscal space.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte in November — just eight months before a new administra­tion takes office — named Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua as the chairman of a committee that would amend the implementi­ng rules of the law authorizin­g the private sector to build and operate infrastruc­ture projects. The PPP Center said discussion­s on the rule changes are still ongoing, with a stakeholde­r consultati­on set to be done this quarter.

Zy-za Nadine Suzara, executive director of the Institute for Leadership, Empowermen­t, and Democracy (I-LEAD), said the next administra­tion should consider PPPs as an investment strategy for public infrastruc­ture.

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