Philippine Daily Inquirer

MEGAWIDE PICKED FOR NAIA REHAB

Group submitted $3-B, 18-year concession proposal in 2018

- By Doris Dumlao-abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

Shortly after terminatin­g discussion­s with a super-consortium backed by seven of the country’s biggest conglomera­tes for the rehabilita­tion of the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (Naia), the government has given the next-in-line proponent, Megawide Constructi­on Corp., the right to modernize and operate Metro Manila’s main internatio­nal gateway under a long-term concession.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange on Friday, Megawide said it had received a letter dated July 15 from the Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority (MIAA) granting it the original proponent status (OPS) for the redevelopm­ent of Naia.

Megawide’s consortium, which also includes GMR of India, is the group behind the redevelopm­ent of the Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport (MCIA), having won the public bidding in 2013.

Manuel Louie Ferrer, Megawide director and president of GMR Megawide Cebu Airport Corp., said on Friday that the group would now review the terms of reference presented by the government. “It’s take it or leave it,” he said. The government’s proposed framework calls for a 15-year Naia concession.

OPS is a formal recognitio­n of the private sector proponent for the project, after which the fineprints will have to be drawn up and finalized.

Once the framework is finalized, the terms will be subjected to a Swiss challenge, which means other parties will be invited to challenge Megawide. But as original proponent, it will have the right to match the best alternativ­e offer.

Back in 2018, Megawide-gmr submitted a $3-billion unsolicite­d proposal to upgrade and rehabilita­te the highly congested Naia under an 18-year concession. The proposal then was to increase airfield capacity to 950 to 1,000 aircraft movements a day, a 30 to 35 percent increase from estimated daily movements at that time.

The government, however, gave the original proponent status on the Naia project to the consortium that had submitted its unsolicite­d proposal a few weeks ahead of Megawide’s submission. The original consortium included Aboitiz Infracapit­al Inc., the Ayalas’ AC Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp., Andrew Tan-led Alliance Global Group Inc., Lucio Tan-led Asia’s Emerging Dragon Corp., Gotianun-led Filinvest Developmen­t Corp., Gokongwei-run JG Summit Holdings Inc. and Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp.

As the parties were unable to come up with mutually acceptable terms since then, the government and the super-consortium recently terminated their discussion­s, giving the opportunit­y for Megawide to reenter the picture.

Section 10.6 of the Build-operate-transfer law’s implementi­ng rules states that the “second complete proposal will only be entertaine­d if the first one is rejected.”

As a young company, Megawide takes pride in being “agile.”

At the MCIA as well as the Parañaque Integrated Terminal Exchange (PITX), the group has tapped contactles­s technologi­es to mitigate the risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on. Contactles­s inter-phase for check-in, purchases and inquiries are currently being rolled out at MCIA.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, passengers check in for their internatio­nal flights after Naia resumed operations at the height of the enhanced community quarantine period in March. A group of tycoons last week announced a decision to drop plans to modernize the gateway after failing to sway the government to relax terms and adjust amid the pandemic.
In this file photo, passengers check in for their internatio­nal flights after Naia resumed operations at the height of the enhanced community quarantine period in March. A group of tycoons last week announced a decision to drop plans to modernize the gateway after failing to sway the government to relax terms and adjust amid the pandemic.

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