Philippine Daily Inquirer

SMCpicks Bulacan for airport plan

‘Aerotropol­is’ with 4 runways on 2,000 hectares near Manila Bay

- By Miguel R Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON— San Miguel Corp.’s ambitious plan to build a new internatio­nal airport serving Metro Manila made a comeback—not along reclaimed land in Manila Bay as previously floated, but in nearby Bulacan province, a government official said.

Roberto Lim, undersecre­tary for aviation at the Department of Transporta­tion, shared some details on the diversifie­d conglomera­te’s recent unso- licited proposal. The project was in line with providing a nearby alternativ­e to the aging Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport, which suffers from worsening congestion.

According to Lim, SMC’s proposal would be an “aerotropol­is” spanning at least 2,000 hectares “near” Manila Bay in Bulacan with at least four runways. SMC president Ramon Ang earlier said a new airport project could cost at least $10 billion.

Under the current process for unsolicite­d deals, the project would need to undergo a competitiv­e challenge involving rival bidders. Before that happens, it would require several government approvals, including the final go-ahead from the board of the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, chaired by President Duterte.

Lim, however, said they intended to move fast in making a final decision.

“Given the milieu that we are in, we have to catch up,” he said, referring to the country’s need to ramp up on upgrading infrastruc­ture.

Regarding SMC’s project, Lim said they were planning to make a decision before the end of 2016. He said that supplement­al infrastruc­ture, such as expressway­s, was included in the proposal.

Earlier, Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade said all unsolicite­d projects were welcome, but only if they met certain conditions.

He noted that the government would give no subsidies or sovereign guarantees. For airports, he said the government should not be compelled to pro- vide support in terms of encouragin­g airlines to locate at the new facility.

This was not SMC’s first attempt to propose a new Metro Manila air gateway.

In step with its diversific­ation into infrastruc­ture, SMC, which already operates the Boracay Airport, sent an informal proposal to the Aquino administra­tion in 2014 to build an airport on about 1,600 hectares of reclaimed land in Manila Bay. That project never materializ­ed given the lack of support

from the previous administra­tion. This fresh proposal comes as the Duterte administra­tion moves to address air congestion around Naia, which was designed to handle about 31 million passengers annually but last year, that figure already hit 36.7 million passen- gers.

During the Aquino administra­tion, the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency was tapped to find a suitable location for a brand-new air gateway. Among the viable locations identified was the revival of the Sangley Point, Cavite air base. However, the government could not yet act on this as a full-study by Jica had yet to be completed, Lim said.

The Clark Internatio­nal Airport was another viable Naia alternativ­e, but even DOTr officials admitted that luring traffic there would be challengin­g without first building a mass transit connection like a train system.

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