Philippine Daily Inquirer

P102-B NAIA REHAB TALKS FACE COLLAPSE

Talks between tycoons, gov’t end in deadlock

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usinq

Filipino tycoons backing an ambitious proposal to modernize and operate Manila’s Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (Naia) said on Tuesday they reached a stalemate in their negotiatio­ns with the Philippine government, threatenin­g the collapse of the P102-billion project.

Talks are in a deadlock after the group known as Naia Consortium revised its proposal, citing the new coronaviru­s (COVID-19) pandemic’s devastatin­g impact on the aviation sector in the Philippine­s and abroad.

“The consortium proposed changes to update the Naia project’s framework to ensure the bankabilit­y of the Naia project,” Naia Consortium said in a filing to the Philippine Stock Exchange.

“Unfortunat­ely, the government indicated that it is not willing to accept most of the consortium’s proposed options and the consortium can only move forward with the Naia project under the options it has proposed,” it added.

Naia Consortium was establishe­d two years ago by seven of the country’s biggest business groups to upgrade Naia, the country’s busiest airport.

To goal was to expand Naia’s passenger capacity and increase flights to combat worsening congestion while establishi­ng the gateway as a “major regional airport” comparable to Singapore’s Changi Airport and Suvarnabhu­mi in Bangkok.

This was before COVID-19 slashed traffic in Naia by more than 80 percent, with full recovery seen two or three years away.

“The far-reaching and long-lasting consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s pandemic on airline travel, airline operations and airport passenger traffic necessitat­ed a review of the assumption­s and plans to ensure that the Naia project will be viable in the ‘new normal’,” Naia Consortium said in its statement.

Officials from the Department of Transporta­tion and Naia Consortium did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Tuesday.

At present, there is no government project to significan­tly upgrade or expand Naia. One of the Duterte administra­tion’s early actions was to shelve most of the previous administra­tion’s pipeline of public-private partnershi­p (PPP) projects, including the P74-billion Naia developmen­t plan.

“The next few years will be challengin­g for any aviation-related business. It will not be viable for [Naia Consortium] if the terms and conditions are very stringent,” Edgar Saavedra, chair and CEO of Megawide Constructi­on Corp., told the Inquirer on Tuesday.

Megawide is the operator of the Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport, the country’s second-biggest gateway. In 2018, Megawide also offered to develop and operate Naia. However, its offer was not chosen because its proposal was submitted after Naia Consortium.

Saavedra said they had yet to decide on whether to revive their Naia offer.

“It depends on the terms of reference. If it’s too tough, then we can’t accept it, too,” he said, adding that banks were “more conservati­ve” in financing projects in aviation due to the health crisis.

“This is not a good time to expand big in airports,” he said.

Naia Consortium’s proposal, which would have a 15-year concession, was first submitted in February 2018 and was revised several times. Negotiatio­ns dragged on for years due to strict requiremen­ts imposed by the Duterte administra­tion, which sought to minimize the government’s risk.

The consortium was further weakened last March 9 with the exit of Manuel V. Pangilinan-led Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp.

A source close to Metro Pacific earlier told the Inquirer the project was not bankable given the government’s strict conditions and questions over the payment of billions of pesos in real property taxes.

Cosette Canilao, CEO of Naia Consortium member Aboitiz Infracapit­al, said in an earlier interview the health crisis had affected the viability of the proposal in its present form.

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