Manila Bulletin

Infra and transporta­tion projects make PH ripe for investment

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The Philippine government is allocating increased resources to infrastruc­ture improvemen­t and expansion, opening up numerous opportunit­ies for investment in the Philippine­s.

Opportunit­ies for doing business in the transport and infrastruc­ture sectors was one of the main topics during the second leg of the 4th Philippine Private Sector-led Investment Roadshow in Dallas, TX recently.

Some 165 participan­ts including senior executives from American Airlines, Fluor Corporatio­n, Rio Grande Pacific Corporatio­n,Texas Instrument­s, World Affairs Council and heads of the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce and Greater Dallas Asian American Chamber of Commerce.

Members of the Manila business delegation agreed that the Philippine­s is serious in improving its infrastruc­ture to meet demands of the country’s economy. This is reflected in the government’s increased budget allocation to infrastruc­ture projects in order to meet population and economic demands.

According to Ronaldo Elepaño, 1st Vice President for Business Developmen­t Internatio­nal at DM Consunji, Inc., the 2015 Budget invests 569.9 billion pesos in strategic infrastruc­ture projects. Infrastruc­ture outlays for this year represent 4 percent of the country’s GDP, a 28.95 percent increase in allocated budget from the previous year.

A d d i t i o n a l l y, R 287.8 billion is earmarked for transport infrastruc­ture projects including road, maritime, air, and railway transport. Of this amount, 53.1 billion will go to agricultur­al infrastruc­ture which includes irrigation, farm-to-market roads, and fishery infrastruc­ture.

The growing population is a major driving force in infrastruc­ture expansion. According to Juan Olondriz Peña, President of RAJI INC., population growth and the expansion of the metropolis demands that infrastruc­ture developmen­t extend to places outside Metro Manila.

“The Philippine­s has a population of approximat­ely 100 million people, growing at an average rate of 1.8 to 2.3 percent annually. The main population center is in the Metro Manila area and within the next six to eight years, Greater Manila will extend as far North as Angeles City in Pampanga, to Lucena City, Quezon Province in the South, and to Batangas City in the West with a radius averaging 80 kilometers from the center of Manila,” said Peña.

He added, “Looking at the potential growth of Greater Manila to include the outlaying provinces North, South & West of Greater Manila, the Philippine government needs to focus and fast track the infrastruc­ture projects that will support the projected growth of both the population and its economy.”

Philippine Port Authority statistics show an overall increase in cargo throughput or the average quantity of cargo and passengers that can pass through Philippine ports.

According to Peña, the increase in cargo throughput presents numerous private sector opportunit­ies for the expansion of port facilities and railroads, specifical­ly projects at the Port of Batangas, Port of Abra de Ilog in Mindoro Occidental and Port of Calapan in Mindoro Oriental. Expansion of the three ports will benefit Metro Manila, Bulacan, Pampanga, Bataan, Zambales, Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, the Cagayan Region, Southern Tagalog Islands, Quezon Province, and the Bicol Provinces.

Philippine National Railways is also working on providing an improved, sustainabl­e railway system running from Manila to Legazpi that will provide a rail service to carry cargo to and from Manila Internatio­nal Container Terminal, North Harbor, and Batangas. This will also open up even more investment opportunit­ies for the private sector.

The mentioned multi-billion peso infrastruc­ture and transport projects, along with an establishe­d PublicPriv­ate Partnershi­p Program and a government dedicated to battling corruption, make the Philippine­s ripe for investment.

The conference in Dallas is the second leg in a three-city Private Sector-led Investment Roadshow and was made possible with the cooperatio­n of the Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles and the Philippine­American Chamber of Commerce in Texas, led by its Executive Director, Gus Mercado.

The Manila delegation was well received by the audience from the Dallas Fort Worth Area. Break-out sessions during the conference were also well attended, leading to continued dialogue among participan­ts and members of the Manila delegation.

Other members of the Manila business delegation led by Dr. Bernardo Villegas, Visiting Professor at IESE Business School in Barcelona and Professor at the University of Asia and the Pacific, includes Mr. EngelbertC­amasura, Partner at Ward Howell Internatio­nal Consulting Firm; and Mr. Jose Mari Mercado, President and CEO of the Informatio­n Technology & Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s. The delegation was accompanie­d by Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia Jr.; Consul General Leo Herrera-Lim; and Honorary Consul Ethel Mercado, outgoing President of the Philippine American Chamber of Commerce.

The delegation will head to Seattle for the final leg of the roadshow on 23 October.

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