PCG unveils patrol, disaster response assets
Members of the Philippine Coast Guard demonstrate their skills in responding to emergencies using a newly acquired rigid hull inflatable boat during a turnover and blessing of surface assets at the PCG headquarters in Manila yesterday. Inset shows Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana and PCG commandant Admiral Elson Hermogino during the turnover.
The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) yesterday unveiled newly acquired assets meant to boost its patrol and disaster response capabilities.
The new assets – 90 pick-up trucks, 73 rubber boats with outboard motor, 12 rigid hull inflatable boats with outboard motor, seven buses and five fullyequipped ambulances – were turned over and blessed in ceremonies led by Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana and Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade at the PCG headquarters in Manila.
Lorenzana said the boats would be used to patrol the West Philippine Sea and assist fishermen, especially during distress.
“You will be able to fulfill your duty better with these equipment,” he told the PCG men.
The PCG said the pick-up trucks are capable of carrying several deflated rubber boats and other cargoes.
The new rubber boats, on the other hand, are 4.3 meters in length with 30 horsepower outboard motor and built-in heavy-duty transom with stainless support plate.
The seven-meter long rigid hull inflatable boats are also equipped with navigational equipment such as X Band Radar, Electronic Chart Display, Global Positioning System and marine VHF radio for communication. Each boat can accommodate 10 to 12 passengers.
PCG commandant Admiral Elson Hermogino said the new equipment would also enable the coast guards to provide better and more dependable service to the public especially during times of calamities.
He said the assets would be distributed to various PCG districts nationwide for maritime security, patrol and interception, transport of crew and rescue operations.
The PCG is awaiting the delivery from France of an offshore patrol vessel to be used for patrolling the West Philippine Sea and the Philippine (Benham) Rise. The vessel, PCG’s biggest and most modern, is expected to arrive in Manila in December and will be named BRP Gabriela Silang.
Its PCG crew will undergo training in September. The Gabriela Silang, according to the PCG, will be used in operations against pirates and terrorists in southern Philippines.
The French-made offshore patrol vessel has a length of 83.6 meters, maximum speed of 20 knots, can sail for 22 days and can carry 64 crewmembers.
Earlier, Lorenzana revealed that the Philippines is looking at entering into a government-to-government agreement with Australia for the procurement of offshore patrol vessels (OPV) for the Philippine Navy.
“I think we can actually do away with the bidding process and go into a government-to-government transaction,” Lorenzana said at the opening of Australian shipbuilder Austal’s new assembly bay in Cebu.
He said the Philippine government could take advantage of the financing offered by the Australian government at his meeting with Australia’s minister for defense last year.
The Philippine government, he said, has allocated P30 billion for the procurement of six OPVs.
“If we can do paper work fast, we could be signing the contract by end of this year,” he said.
Austal, which recently obtained a license to build naval vessels in the country, earlier expressed interest in providing OPVs for the Philippine Navy as part of the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ modernization program.