The Philippine Star

Noy: NAIA-3 talks end this month

- By DELON PORCALLA

President Aquino is hopeful the ongoing negotiatio­ns between the government and Takenaka Corp. could be concluded this month to make the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport Terminal 3 in Pasay City fully operationa­l.

Speaking to reporters last Wednesday when he inspected NAIA- 3 in preparatio­n for the influx of passengers during the long All Saints’ Day weekend, Aquino acknowledg­ed that the airport has limitation­s because the facility is not fully operationa­l. He cited the air conditioni­ng units that were only

partially completed.

The Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions (DOTC), previously under Secretary Manuel Roxas II and now run by new DOTC chief Joseph Emilio Abaya, had continued the negotiatio­ns with Takenaka Corp., the original contractor of the project, to immediatel­y complete the airport and make it 100-percent operationa­l.

“Negotiatio­ns have been lengthy and instead of going to court that would mean endless litigation, here we have a chance at settlement to have complete use of NAIA- 3,” Aquino said in Filipino.

Aquino said 23 systems in the airport have not yet been completed.

The DOTC and Takenaka signed a memorandum of understand­ing in Japan last March.

The move was seen as the first legal step to complete NAIA-3, which has been operating below maximum capacity since it opened four years ago.

The Philippine Internatio­nal Air Terminals Co. contracted Takenaka to build NAIA-3 in 1998 but work stopped in 2002 over allegation­s of anomalies.

Under the MOU, Takenaka would complete the 23 airport systems critical to NAIA-3’s full operations by the end of the year or early 2013.

These systems include fire alarm and protection system, flight informatio­n display system, building management system, local area network, baggage handling and reconcilia­tion system and passenger loading bridges.

The government is expected to spend $45 million for the installati­on and rehabilita­tion of the 23 systems at NAIA-3, according to the DOTC.

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