Philippine Daily Inquirer

CAVITE DROPS SINO-BACKED SANGLEY AIRPORT DEAL

Despite multiple extensions, the Chinese-Filipino consortium failed to submit postaward requiremen­ts and correct defects in the joint venture documents. Gov. Jonvic Remulla sees this as a sign of a lack of commitment to the project.

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

Negotiatio­ns for a new P500-billion China-funded internatio­nal gateway on Manila Bay were scrapped on Wednesday, easing national security concerns over its strategic location close to the Philippine capital but stalling a major project to decongest Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (Naia).

Cavite Gov. Jonvic Remulla said his office approved a Jan. 26, 2021, recommenda­tion by the provincial Special Selection Committee to cancel the award granted to staterun China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co. Ltd. (CCCC) and taipan Lucio Tan’s MacroAsia Corp. on Feb. 12 last year.

“The notice of selection and award for the Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport Project issued on 12 February 2020 was canceled,” MacroAsia reported to the stock exchange on Wednesday.

CCCC-MacroAsia was the only group that made a bid to develop the first phase of Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport (SPIA)—a massive airport and land reclamatio­n project envisioned to serve up to 130 million passengers per year, or four times Naia’s capacity.

In an interview on Wednesday, Remulla told the Inquirer that the cancellati­on followed the failure of the Chinese-Filipino consortium to submit postaward requiremen­ts and to correct defects in the joint venture documents despite multiple extensions due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Remulla told Reuters news agency that the consortium’s documentat­ion was “deficient in three or four items.”

“We saw it as a sign they were not fully committed to the project,” Remulla said.

The governor told the Inquirer that the Cavite government would rebid the SPIA and hopefully award the project before the October 2021 deadline for the filing of certificat­es of candidacy.

“I still believe that a new internatio­nal airport is important for the country,” said Remulla, who said he would run for reelection in 2022.

The SPIA was conceived and implemente­d by the provincial government and one of the few local projects with national impact.

It faced additional obstacles after the US government on Aug. 26, 2020, placed CCCC’s subsidiari­es and other Chinese companies on a blacklist for their role in building and militarizi­ng artificial islands in the West Philippine Sea.

Remulla said the blacklisti­ng had nothing to do with the cancellati­on.

He had publicly defended CCCC and appeared to adopt the Duterte administra­tion’s broader policy of pursuing friendlier ties with Beijing.

The project faced additional obstacles after the US government on Aug. 26, 2020, placed China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co. Ltd.’s subsidiari­es and other Chinese companies on a blacklist for their role in building and militarizi­ng artificial islands in the West Philippine Sea. Remulla said the blacklisti­ng had nothing to do with the cancellati­on

Security threat

But an Inquirer source, who is an expert on national and internatio­nal security issues, said Remulla was also briefed extensivel­y on the security threat posed by Chinese entities in the SPIA, which is home to the Major Danilo Atienza Air Base.

“Sangley Point is located in Manila Bay and only 8 miles (13 kilometers) southwest of the capital,” the source, who requested anonymity, told the Inquirer. “The strategic location allows it to act as defender against any security threats at sea against the central government.”

The security expert warned that getting a foothold on this location would allow China to strengthen and assert its power in the West Philippine Sea and that the project fell “within a pattern among Chinese investors who are interested in land features around Philippine waters.”

The Chinese are also interested in developing Grande and Chiquita islands on Subic Bay, site of a former US naval base.

Remulla told the Inquirer he would meet with the Cavite selection committee next month to discuss plans to rebid the SPIA.

Favored from start

He declined to say whether they would revise the bid terms. The Inquirer had reviewed the terms and found that a Chinese partner was favored from the start.

The documents identified the project as among those under a cooperatio­n agreement on China’s Belt and Road Initiative signed in Manila on Nov. 20, 2018. China aims to link Asia, Africa and Europe through this ambitious $1-trillion global infrastruc­ture developmen­t project.

But critics view this as an attempt by China to apply debt-trap diplomacy in which it wins strategic concession­s from borrowers that default on their loans.

The project documents also indicate ongoing talks with Chinese policy banks and state-owned enterprise­s to finance up to 98 percent of the SPIA. The July 2019 documents identified several of these companies as CCCC, China Airport Constructi­on Group, and China National Import and Export Technology.

The short time frame and the preference for Chinese lenders discourage­d other proponents from joining the bid.

Debt trap

Five other companies, including infrastruc­ture giant Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. and billionair­e Manuel Villar Jr.’s Prime Asset Ventures, decided not to pursue the project, leaving CCCC-MacroAsia as the sole bidder.

In view of those concerns, Remulla vowed that the project would not turn into a debt trap similar to huge China-backed projects in other countries.

The SPIA is among the big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects for Chinese financing in the Philippine­s. The others include the Mindanao Railway project, the Philippine National Railways South Long-Haul and the Subic-Clark Railway.

It is the second major airport project to suffer delays after the Duterte administra­tion turned down the P109-billion proposal by Megawide Constructi­on Corp. and India’s GMR Infrastruc­ture to rehabilita­te and expand the congested Naia, the country’s main gateway.

These setbacks, however, provided a boost to conglomera­te San Miguel Corp.’s (SMC) massive P735-billion airport city project in Bulacan province.

SMC plans to start constructi­on of the New Manila Internatio­nal Airport within the first quarter of this year.

While favoring the closure of Naia after the Bulacan airport project is completed, SMC president Ramon Ang said the decision would be up to a future administra­tion.

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? NOT THE END The scrapping of the award to build a new internatio­nal gateway to a Chinese-Filipino joint venture is not the end of the Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport project in Cavite province. The provincial government plans to rebid the project by October. The massive airport and land reclamatio­n project is envisioned to serve up to 130 million passengers a year, four times the capacity of Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA NOT THE END The scrapping of the award to build a new internatio­nal gateway to a Chinese-Filipino joint venture is not the end of the Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport project in Cavite province. The provincial government plans to rebid the project by October. The massive airport and land reclamatio­n project is envisioned to serve up to 130 million passengers a year, four times the capacity of Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport.
 ?? —MALACAÑANG PHOTO ?? ABORTED PROJECT President Duterte and Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade unveil a marker for the future Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport in this Feb. 15, 2020, photo. Cavite Gov. Jonvic Remulla (in dark shirt) announced on Wednesday that the P500-billion project was aborted.
—MALACAÑANG PHOTO ABORTED PROJECT President Duterte and Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade unveil a marker for the future Sangley Point Internatio­nal Airport in this Feb. 15, 2020, photo. Cavite Gov. Jonvic Remulla (in dark shirt) announced on Wednesday that the P500-billion project was aborted.
 ??  ?? Jonvic Remulla
Jonvic Remulla

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