Philippine Daily Inquirer

Bidding for port PPP moved anew

Project opposed by Davao-based operators

- By Miguel R. Camus

THE DEPARTMENT of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions (DOTC) has given potential bidders more time to prepare offers for its P19-billion Davao Sasa port modernizat­ion project, the Aquino administra­tion’s first seaport public-private partnershi­p (PPP) deal.

The DOTC said in a bid bulletin that the submission date has been moved to Feb. 26 from Jan. 11 next year.

The deadline, already moved from December this year, was extended “to give prequalifi­ed bidders more time to conduct technical, financial and legal due dili- gence,” the department explained.

Five groups were qualified to submit offers for the project, which is facing opposition from Davaobased port operators since its developmen­t would affect their individual businesses.

The prequalifi­ed groups are the San Miguel Holdings Corp.-APM Terminals Management (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. consortium, port tycoon Enrique Razon Jr.’s Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc., the Asian Terminals Inc-DP World FZE consortium, the Portek Internatio­nal Pte. Ltd.-National Marine Corp. consortium and Bollore Africa Logistics.

Informatio­n on the PPP Center’s website showed that the private partner would finance the constructi­on and modernizat­ion of the existing port. This includes the new apron, linear quay, expansion of the back-up area, container yards, warehouses and the installati­on of new equipment such as ship-to-shore cranes and rubbertire­d gantry over the pre-agreed concession period.

The private partner will also be responsibl­e for operating and maintainin­g the port for a period of 30 years.

“Once the first phases of the project are completed in 2018, the Sasa Port will be comparable to the country’s top ports in terms of speed and quality of service, cutting down cargo unloading from three days to three hours by using modern ship-to-shore cranes and port operating systems,” the DOTC said.

The Davao region thrives in banana exports, being the secondlarg­est banana exporter in the world. A study conducted by Inter-

national Finance Corp. (IFC) and Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s (DBP) showed that container traffic in the Davao region was projected to increase by at least 6 percent annually over the next 25 years.

“Without the added capacity of a modernized Sasa Port, there will be a strong chance of shortage in port capacity in Davao Bay which may affect small-medium banana growers who may not be able to export their bananas,” the DOTC said.

Apart from added capacity, the proximity of the Sasa Port to banana plantation­s would help growers save at least P8,000 in trucking costs per delivery, the DOTC said.

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