Manila Standard

San Miguel, GMR plan to bid for NAIA contract—Bautista

- By Darwin G. Amojelar

SAN Miguel Corp. and India’s GMR Group plan to bid for the P171-billion contract to rehabilita­te, optimize and maintain the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport, the Department of Transporta­tion said Thursday.

Transporta­tion Secretary Jaime Bautista said SMC and GMR bought bid documents for the NAIA rehabilita­tion project.

San Miguel Aerocity Inc., a whollyowne­d subsidiary of San Miguel Holdings Corp., the infrastruc­ture arm of SMC, is building the P734-billion New Manila Internatio­nal Airport in Bulacan, while India’s GMR is the largest private airport operator in Asia handling passengers in excess of 100 million annually and a partner of Megawide Corp. for the Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport.

Cosette Canilao, president and chief executive of Aboitiz InfraCapit­al Inc., earlier said the Manila Internatio­nal Airport Consortium also purchased bid documents for the NAIA project.

The other members of the MIAC are AC Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp.,

Asia’s Emerging Dragon Corp., Alliance Global-Infracorp Developmen­t Inc., Filinvest Developmen­t Corp. and JG Summit Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp.

The DOTr and the Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority on Aug. 23 began inviting interested parties to participat­e in a single-stage competitiv­e bidding process for a rehabilita­te-operate-expand-transfer modality, in accordance with the Build-Operate-and-Transfer Law and its revised 2022 implementi­ng rules and regulation­s.

Based on the invitation to bid, the concession agreement and certain other documents that provide background informatio­n on the project will be made available to prospectiv­e bidders through a virtual data room upon payment of a participat­ion fee of P2.75 million or

$50,000.

The issuance of the draft concession agreement is set on Sept. 8, while the pre-bid conference will be on Sept. 22. The bid submission is scheduled on Dec. 27, 2023.

The DOTr said the bidder should have a net worth of at least P20 billion and would be required to post bid security of P1.71 billion standby letter of credit as part of its bid proposal.

“If the bidder is a consortium and any consortium member or such consortium members’ affiliates is an airline-related entity, then such consortium member cannot own or be proposed to own more than 33 percent interest in such consortium,” the agency said.

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