Philippine Daily Inquirer

Improved BOT, right-of-way laws sought

Amendments will result in faster PPP deals, says Neda chief

- By Ben O. de Vera

TO SUSTAIN the gains made thus far in the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p (PPP) program, state planning agency National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (Neda) is pushing for amendments in

the laws governing right of way acquisitio­n as well as the build-operate-transfer (BOT) scheme.

In a message during last week’s Philippine-Australia PPP Policy Dialogue held in Cebu, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary and Neda Director-General Arsenio M. Balisacan noted of the successes in the imple- mentation of the Aquino administra­tion’s centerpiec­e PPP program aimed at fasttracki­ng infrastruc­ture investment­s.

“The Philippine PPP program has come a long way in terms of developing a robust pipeline of bankable PPP projects while ensuring that they are supported by policy re

forms and facilitati­ve processes for greater efficiency,” Balisacan said, citing over 50 active PPP projects whose investment value totaled about $23 billion, on top of 10 contracts worth $4.2 billion or P189.02 billion already awarded to private sector partners.

“We are now simultaneo­usly tendering 14 projects valued at $11.51 billion (P518.28 billion), and several other projects are ready for rollout and waiting for the approval of the Neda board. Some projects are also in various stages of project preparatio­n and conceptual­ization,” Balisacan added.

The Neda chief also cited that the Philippine­s was deemed the “most improved” Asia-Pacific country in terms of PPP readiness by the 2014 Infrascope 2014 report.

“We were ranked No. 7 among the 21 countries that were part of the study. From being an ‘emerging’ PPP market in 2011 we have joined the ‘developed’ PPP markets group alongside countries like [South] Korea, Japan and India. This is attributed mainly to the country’s improved PPP regulatory and institutio­nal framework,” he said.

Also, Balisacan commended the PPP Center, which he said during the last five years worked to “institute policy reforms, streamline processes, and adopt good practices to further enhance the PPP framework and boost private sector interest and confidence in the country.”

“I am proud to say that we now have a sound PPP investment environmen­t founded on the principles of transparen­cy and level playing field,” Balisacan said.

The Neda chief said that given the inroads made so far, “the challenge for us now is how to sustain the gains and successes of our PPP program.”

In this regard, Balisacan said Neda is pushing for the enactment of the PPP Act or amendments to the BOT Law in order to “embed in our systems the earlier reforms we have initiated.”

“We are also seeking to amend the law on right of way acquisitio­n to address infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s and delays in project implementa­tion,” he added.

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