The Philippine Star

Cebu container port project gets $173-M SoKor funding

- By MARY GRACE PADIN

South Korea has extended a $172.64 million loan agreement to the Philippine­s for the constructi­on of the Cebu Internatio­nal Container Port, according to the Department of Finance (DOF).

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez, on behalf of the Philippine government, and Export-Import Bank of Korea (KEXIM) president and chairman Sung-Soo Eun signed the loan agreement, with President Duterte and South Korea President Moon Jae-in as witnesses.

The new Cebu Internatio­nal Container Port project has a total project cost of P10.1 billion (or approximat­ely $199.25 million), according to the DOF.

Of the amount, KEXIM will cover $172.64 million (about P8.8 billion) through the loan assistance, which carries an interest rate of 0.15 percent per annum for non-consulting services and zero percent for consulting services. The loan has a maturity period of 40 years inclusive of a 10-year grace period.

The Philippine­s, for its part, will provide a counterpar­t fund of $26.09 million (about P1.4 billion or 28.9 billion Korean Won) for the project.

According to the DOF, the Cebu Internatio­nal Container Port project aims to provide an efficient transport infrastruc­ture for the flow of goods in the Visayas region.

The port will be built on a 25-hectare reclaimed land in the town of Consolacio­n, Cebu.

It will include a berthing facility that can simultaneo­usly accommodat­e two 2,000 TEU (Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit) vessels; operating facilities and structures for containers, such as a freight station and an inspection shed; an access road and bridge; and a dredged waterway and turning basin.

Aside from the loan agreement, Duterte and Moon also witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) on scientific and technologi­cal cooperatio­n between the Department of Science and Technology and the Ministry of Science and Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology of Korea, and an MOU concerning the cooperatio­n in the field of transporta­tion between the Department of Transporta­tion and the Ministry of Land, Infrastruc­ture and Transport of Korea.

Other agreements forged during the official visit are the establishm­ent of the joint committee for trade and economic cooperatio­n between the two countries, and an MOU between the Department of National Defense and the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy of Korea for the cooperatio­n on the ex- pansion of renewable energy deployment.

Prior to this, Seoul has already provided loans amounting $1003.13 million for the Panguil Bay Bridge project, $20.63 million for the Samar Pacific Coastal Road project, $207.88 million for the Jalaur Multipurpo­se project Stage II in Iloilo, $80.48 million for the Integrated Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation Measures in low lying areas of Pampanga Bay, and $71.61 million for the modernizat­ion of Palawan’s Puerto Princesa Airport.

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