Philippine Daily Inquirer

COMMITTED LOANS, GRANTS FROM CHINA FOR INFRA, MARAWI REHAB HIT $7.34B

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

A total of $7.34 billion in loans and grants have already been committed by China to finance not only the Duterte administra­tion’s ambitious infrastruc­ture program but also the reconstruc­tion and rehabilita­tion of Marawi City, the Department of Finance said yesterday.

In a statement, the DOF said that to date, the Chinese government’s pledges for loans to the Philippine­s’ infrastruc­ture, power and public safety sectors amounted to $7.19 billion.

“Of the $7.19 billion, about $3.98 billion—representi­ng the estimated loan amount of the second basket [of projects to be fi- nanced by China] under various stages of preparatio­n—will still be further discussed and processed by both sides,” the DOFexplain­ed.

The loans were on top of $148.22 million in grants, a part of which will be spent to reconstruc­t as well as rehabilita­te wartorn Marawi, the DOF added.

The combined grants andloans will support 10 big-ticket projects, the constructi­on of two bridges crossing Pasig River as well as two drugrehabi­litation facilities inMindanao, according to theDOF.

“The assumed loan amount pledged by China accounts for 85 percent of the total cost for 10 projects. These cover soft loans under the first basket of projects that include $234.92 million for the Kaliwa-New Centennial Wa- ter Source in Quezon province; $72.49 million for the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project in North Luzon, and the $2.91-billion Philippine National Railways South Long Haul Railway—or a total estimated loan amount of $3.21 billion,” the DOF said, citing a report of its internatio­nal finance group.

“For the second basket of projects, the Philippine­s and China agreed to line up an estimated total of $3.98 billion in loans that might include $947.64 million for the Subic-Clark Railway and $424.81 million for the Davao City Expressway,” the DOF said, noting that most of these projects were still in the feasibilit­y study stages, hence have preliminar­y

project costs.

According to the DOF, “the agreements for several of these projects are set to be signed between officials of the two government­s during the Philippine­sChina bilateral meetings to be held on the sidelines of the Asean+3 (China, Japan and South Korea) Summit this week.”

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang would represent Chinese President Xi Jinping during the Asean Summit and related meetings and was expected to witness the signing of the bilateral agreements, the DOF noted.

The bulk of the grants from China amounting to $99.27 million will be used to build the Binondo-Intramuros and Estrella- Pantaleon bridges.

“The grant amount, which covers 100 percent of the total cost for the projects, also includes $22.95 million for the constructi­on of two drug rehabilita­tion facilities; $23 million to aid in Marawi’s rehabilita­tion program, and donation of heavy equipment worth $3 million also for the government’s reconstruc­tion efforts in Marawi,” according to the DOF.

“The record inflows of grants and soft loans from China are among the fruits of President Duterte’s foreign policy rebalancin­g geared toward accelerate­d integratio­n with the country’s Asean neighbors and East Asian trading partners China, Japan and South Korea,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said.

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