Philippine Daily Inquirer

BULACAN AIRPORT PROJECT FACES DELAY

Tugade says DOJ reviewing issues raised by finance dep’t

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguerlcam­usinq

Conglomera­te San Miguel Corp.’s (SMC) $15-billion plan to build an internatio­nal airport in Bulacan province and alleviate air congestion in Manila, about 50 kilometers away, is facing delays.

The massive airport project, which was set to hold a ceremonial ground breaking this month after SMC won the notice to proceed on Sept. 18, is currently on hold pending a review of its terms by the Department of Justice (DOJ), Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade said on Sunday.

Tugade said that even after the signing of the concession agreement with SMC three months ago, there were lingering issues that needed to be “clarified” by the Department of Finance.

“It’s an issue of wording and interpreta­tion,” Tugade said.

He said the review by the DOJ covered provisions on material adverse government action (Maga) and caps on liabilitie­s of the government.

The Maga clause deals with compensati­on to the concession­aire in cases where national government actions negatively affect the project.

The wording of the Maga was a major cause of delay for a separate private sector offer to upgrade and expand capacity at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (Naia), which was approved by the board of the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority on Friday—almost two years since it was first submitted.

“He is not making objections,” Tugade said, referring to Finance secretary Carlos Dominguez III. “He’s making sure what’s in the contract is favorable to the government.”

Dominguez last year publicly expressed reservatio­ns on SMC’S airport offer given its impact on the government’s investment­s in New Clark City, which is located near the Clark Internatio­nal Airport in Pampanga, about 55 km northwest of the Bulacan airport site.

“When the DOJ says it’s okay, then it’s a go,” said Tugade, adding that he hoped the groundbrea­king would continue before the end of 2019.

SMC president Ramon Ang, however, said they were already behind schedule.

“The groundbrea­king is delayed because it’s on hold,” Ang told reporters.

Despite a notice to proceed, Ang said they were advised by the Department of Transporta­tion, as the implementi­ng agency, to wait until the government had completed its review.

SMC’S project, dubbed New Manila Internatio­nal Airport, aims to solve congestion in Naia and provide a long-term solution to rising demand for air travel in the capital district and nearby provinces.

The New Manila Internatio­nal Airport was first proposed in 2016 and is expected to cover 2,400 hectares in Bulakan, Bulacan.

SMC wanted to open the airport in five years with four runways, eight taxiways and three passenger terminals with an annual capacity of at least 100 million— three times the design capacity of Naia. SMC will control the airport over a 50-year concession period.

The New Manila Internatio­nal Airport is potentiall­y one of two new major air gateways in Luzon. The provincial government of Cavite also launched a tender for a $10-billion internatio­nal hub in Sangley Point, Cavite. These two new airports will potentiall­y add to a market currently being served by Naia and Clark Internatio­nal Airport.

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