Philippine Daily Inquirer

FUEL MARKING SEEN TO COST 6.88 CENTAVOS A LITER

- By Ben O. de Vera

The government has awarded the contract to implement the fuel marking system to the joint venture between Switzerlan­d-based SICPA SA and SGS Philippine­s Inc. at a cost of P0.06884 a liter.

Bingle Gutierrez, executive director of the Department of Budget and Management’s (DBM) procuremen­t service, on Oct. 25 issued the notice of award to the two companies as they submitted the single rated responsive bid for the establishm­ent and operation of a fuel marking and field testing system for the Bureau of Customs.

The five-year contract is subject to annual review of performanc­e from the effective date indicated in the notice to proceed, Gutierrez said.

The notice was received and signed by SGS Philippine­s’ Catharina Nellie Filius on behalf of SICPA’s Christophe Georges Christian Renard.

DBM Assistant Secretary Rolando Toledo told reporters last Wednesday that fuel marking would be implemente­d in 2019 as the private sector partner has to undergo technical preparatio­ns first.

Last week, the Cabinet-level interagenc­y Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee reduced the national government’s revenue target for 2018 to P2.82 trillion from P2.85 trillion previously due to the “deferred implementa­tion of e-receipts and fuel marking under TRAIN,” referring to the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion Act.

In August, SICPA and SGS proposed a P0.06884 a liter, inclusive of value-added tax, price for its services, below the price ceiling of P0.08 a liter over a five-year period earlier set under the terms of reference of the fuel marking program.

The SICPA-SGS joint venture became the lone remaining bidder after Texas-based Authentix Inc. backed out and did not submit a bid.

Authentix was SGS’s partner when the fuel marking system was implemente­d at Subic Bay Freeport Zone by former Customs commission­er Napoleon Morales years back.

The bidding process was nonetheles­s continued as the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s of Republic Act No. 9184, or the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act allows a single qualified proposal.

The company chosen by the government is expected to assist in establishi­ng and operating a fuel marking system that will supply and inject fuel marker in all taxable oil products, except Jet A-1, aviation gas, crude oil and LPG; implement and manage a fuel testing program, including fuel analysis and data management, nationwide; as well as train and ensure technology transfer to BOC and Bureau of Internal Revenue personnel.

The government will pay the contract cost for the first year of up to P1.96 billion in case of overperfor­mance in the actual volume of fuel marked.

For 2018, 21.9 billion liters of fuel were expected to enter the country’s 25 ports.

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