The Philippine Star

The Phl PPP program

-

This is in relation to Mr. rederico Pascual’s article entitled

ime to update mutual defense treaty with , which appeared in

the Philippine STAR on May 6, 2014 under his column Postscript. Part of the column talked about the Philippine PPP Program and the PPP Center.

We wish to clarify two main points raised in Mr. Pascual’s column with the end view of providing your readers updated and official informatio­n about the Philippine PPP Program and the PPP Center.

irst, the column stated that, “... But after his midterm passed

and still no sails of his PPP flagship could be seen on the horizon, some mischievou­s businessme­n started calling it his Power Point Presentati­on.

We are happy to share with you that since its inception in 2010, the PPP Program has in fact already awarded seven PPP projects with total estimated cost of $1.3 billion. These are the DaangHari SLE Link and NAIA Expressway projects of the Department of Public Works and Highways, the Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions’ Automatic are Collection System and Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport projects, Department of Health’s (DOH) Modernizat­ion of the Philippine Orthopedic Center project, and Department of Education’s (DepEd) PPP for School Infrastruc­ture Project Phases I and II. All these projects were undertaken through the BOT law or RA 7718 and its Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s.

In fact, the PPP program maintains a robust pipeline of more than 50 PPP projects in various stages of procuremen­t, structurin­g, review and developmen­t. We invite you and your readers to

check our website for this pipeline as well as the recent comparativ­e matrix on PPP projects pursued under the BOT Law during the Ramos, Estrada, Arroyo and A uino administra­tions.

urther, Mr. Pascual’s column stated here is actually a PPP

Center complete with key officials. By virtue of Executive Order 8, series of 2010, the Center is mandated to facilitate PPP program and projects.

It is obviously not functionin­g as envisioned. As the main coordinati­on and monitoring agency of the country’s PPP Program, the Center is heavily invested in the task of rolling out PPP projects by providing technical assistance to Implementi­ng Agencies (lAs) and Local overnment Units (L Us) technical assistance in all aspects of PPP project developmen­t, capacity building, policy and process improvemen­ts as well as monitoring and evaluation.

The Center also manages the Project Developmen­t and Monitoring acility (PDM ) which provides lAs access to internatio­nal firms and experts to provide, assist them in the preparatio­n of feasibilit­y studies, bidding documents and transactio­n advisory during the actual procuremen­t processes.

We have mounted capacity building programs for these IAs L Us and PPP knowledge products (e.g. manuals, guidelines, templates, etc) have been developed for them and all other PPP stakeholde­rs.

The Center has also spearheade­d necessary policy and process improvemen­ts in the way these IAs L Us do PPPs. These include policy issuances on right-of-way ac uisition for PPPs as well as dispute resolution among parties in PPP contracts. In collaborat­ion with the concerned agencies, the Center initiated the proposed amendments to the BOT Law into the PPP Act, now undergoing committee deliberati­ons at the lower house. The proposed PPP Act, supported by both public and private stakeholde­rs, will institutio­nalize policy, process and institutio­nal reforms and improvemen­ts in undertakin­g PPPs in the country.

This central role of the PPP Center has been recognized not just by lAs and L Us who continuall­y approach the Center for various forms of technical assistance. It has also been acknowledg­ed by developmen­t partners (i.e. ADB, CIDA, AusAid, WB, etc) as the appropriat­e catalyst for a strong PPP Program. This is

evidenced by their numerous technical assistance interventi­ons for PPP project developmen­t and structurin­g, procuremen­t, capacity building, policy and institutio­nal reforms - all coursed through the PPP Center.

In the ASEAN Connectivi­ty Program, the PPP Center has also been referred to as a resource institutio­n regularly re uested to provide inputs and share its experience and innovation­s with its ASEAN neighbors and their respective PPP programs and projects. The 2011 Infrascope Study commission­ed by the ADB which named the Philippine­s most PPP-ready in the ASEAN, noted the significan­t presence of a central PPP coordinati­on and monitoring agency — the PPP Center.

inally, the 2014 Partnershi­p Awards of the prestigiou­s Partnershi­ps Bulletin, a UK-based infernatio­nal PPP organizati­on tracking PPP programs and projects worldwide, shortliste­d the Philippine PPP Center to the “Best Central Regional overnment PPP Promoter.’ The Philippine­s is the lone Asian in the said category alongside finalist PPP agencies from Maryland, Texas and California in the US, Croatia, Puerto Rico, Scotland and Brazil.

All the informatio­n about the PPP Program and the PPP Center can be accessed from our official website, www.ppp.gov.ph. We invite everyone to visit the site for official, updated and accurate informatio­n about both the Program and the Center.

— ELEAZAR E. RICOTE, Director I , PPP Center

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines