The Philippine Star

Japanese consultant picked for Malolos-Tutuban rail project

- – Czeriza Valencia

A Japanese consortium led by Oriental Consultant­s Global has bagged the consulting contract for the constructi­on of the North-South Commuter Railway (NSCR) project (Malolos – Tutuban line), the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) said.

“JICA has consistent­ly supported transport infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the Philippine­s since the 1960s. The NSCR project will be the game changer by kick-starting the large scale investment by the current administra­tion through building a modern railway network for achieving the twin goals of addressing the serious traffic congestion in Metro Manila and enhancing the connectivi­ty of Metro Manila and its nearby areas, thus expanding Manila’s economic sphere,” said JICA Philippine­s senior representa­tive Tetsuya Yamada.

The 37.6-kilometer NSCR is an elevated railway expected reduce travel time from Malolos, Bulacan to Tutuban, Manila from 2 hours to 35 minutes and allow economic activity to spread out to surroundin­g areas of Metro Manila. Advanced Japanese technologi­es including seismic designs would be used in the railway to make the infrastruc­ture disasterre­silient.

The NSCR project is funded by an official developmen­t assistance loan amounting to 241.991 billion yen signed in November 2015. It is among the flagship projects under the Philippine government’s Build Build, Build program.

The NSCR is part of the cooperatio­n agenda identified between Japan and the Philippine­s during the first Philippine­s-Japan Joint Committee on Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t and Economic Cooperatio­n meeting in Japan early this year.

Prior to that, the Philippine government has approved the Roadmap for Transport Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t for Metro Manila and its Surroundin­g Areas in 2014. Under the roadmap, the creation of two mass transit systems traversing Metro Manila from north to south – the NSCR and the Metro Manila Subway Project – is eyed to alleviate traffic congestion in Metro Manila by improving its connectivi­ty to the suburbs.

JICA noted that although Metro Manila has a population density of 19,137 people for every square kilometer, its transporta­tion backbone is inferior, having only three elevated railway lines with a total length of about 50 kilometers operating.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines