Philippine Daily Inquirer

Japan aid eyed in MRT3 rehab

Gov’t in talks to bring back Sumitomo-Mitsubishi partnershi­p

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

The Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) wants to bring back the Japanese group involved in the Metro Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT 3) constructi­on and design 18 years ago in a bid to resolve breakdowns that disrupt the journey of thousands of commuters on a near-daily basis.

The DOTr said yesterday it was holding high-level talks with the Japanese government for Sumitomo Corp. and its technical partner, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, to maintain and rehabilita­te the MRT 3 via an indicative three-year agreement—backed by a fresh loan from Japan.

It hopes to sign the agreement before the end of 2017.

Sumitomo-Mitsubishi maintained the MRT 3 for its first 12 years of operations. The agreement was not renewed in 2012 under the Aquino administra­tion when the 17-kilometer MRT 3, which traverses the crucial Edsa highway, was al- ready showing signs of strain.

Aquino-era officials said the tandem had imposed conditions they could not accept, including increasing the monthly maintenanc­e fee to $2.2 million from $1.4 million while cutting back on certain responsibi­lities covering fare collection and the MRT 3 signaling system. Local companies were hired instead but the problems at the MRT 3 did not abate.

The DOTr’s announceme­nt yesterday came less than a month since it formally terminated the contract of previous maintenanc­e provider Busan Universal Rail halfway through its three-year agreement due to continued glitches and for not meeting certain obligation­s.

The new direction with Sumitomo also casts the spotlight on the MRT3 rehabilita­tion, maintenanc­e and operations offer of Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp., which was already granted original proponent status. It likewise reflects the Duterte administra­tion’s general skepticism on the private sector funding big infrastruc­ture projects.

“The joint venture of Sumitomo and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries is being closely considered due to its background and experience with the MRT 3,” the DOTr said in a statement.

The DOTr did not detail the target loan amount under the Japanese overseas developmen­t assistance (ODA) component. The department said the intention was for Sumitomo-Mitsubishi to “rehabilita­te and restore the system to its original performanc­e condition.”

“Due to under-investment in preventive maintenanc­e and renewal works in recent years, the condition of MRT 3 has degraded to a state where maintenanc­e works alone are no longer sufficient,” the DOTr said.

The department also clarified that these were direct talks with Japanese counterpar­ts and that businessma­n Robert Sobrepeña was not involved. Sobrepeña, part of the group with private interests in the MRT 3, said last May that Sumitomo offered to rehabilita­te the MRT 3 for $150 million (P7.5 billion).

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