Philippine Daily Inquirer

5 groups vie for P108-B airports PPP

Awarding seen in February ’16

- By Miguel R. Camus

THE DEPARTMENT of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions (DOTC) has cleared five out of six groups seeking to participat­e in its next big-ticket public-private partnershi­p (PPP) project, the auction of airport contracts for the Bacolod-Silay, Iloilo, Davao, Laguinding­an and New Bohol air gateways.

In a bid bulletin issued Friday, the department said it prequalifi­ed consortium­s led by Filipino conglomera­tes and their internatio­nal partners vying for the contracts valued together at about P108 billion.

Those that made the cut were San Miguel Corp. and South Korea’s Incheon Internatio­nal Airport (SMHC-IIAC Airport Consortium); Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. with a unit of Aéroports de Paris and TAV Havalimanl­ari Holdings A.S. (Philippine Airports Consortium); Aboitiz Equity Ventures with VINCI Airports (Maya Consortium); Megawide Constructi­on Corp. and India’s GMR Infrastruc­ture (GMR Infrastruc­ture and Megawide Consortium), and Filinvest Land Inc., Japan Airport Terminal Corp. and Sojitz Corp. (Filinvest-Jatco-Sojitz Consortium), the DOTC said.

A sixth group, Union Equities-Acsa Consortium, was disqualifi­ed by the DOTC.

The prequalifi­cation documents were submitted last Aug. 17. This exercise is meant to determine which groups are qualified to submit technical and financial proposals for the pro-

ject. Those bids are expected to be opened by January 2016 and the DOTC expects to award the project by February 2016.

The DOTC said the operations and maintenanc­e (O&M) of the regional airports, selected partly for their tourism potential, would be bid out in two bundles.

The first bundle consists of the P20.26-billion Bacolod-Silay and the P30.40-billion Iloilo airport projects. The second bundle will include the P40.57-billion Davao, the P14.62-billion Laguinding­an and the P2.34-billion Bohol airport projects.

The winning concession­aires for each bundle will handle the O&M of the airports for 30 years and will undertake the expansion of the facilities as most of the airports are operating beyond their design capacity. These improvemen­ts are needed to enhance passenger safety and convenienc­e as well as to ensure more efficient airport operations.

This is the second airport PPP deal after the P17.5-billion Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport was rolled out and eventually awarded in 2014 to the Megawide-GMR consortium.

Apart from this project, the DOTC had said it was studying the possible O&M auction of Manila’s Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport, the country’s busiest air gateway. This comes amid the broader goal to replace Naia, which suffers from heavy congestion, with a new internatio­nal gateway.

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