The Philippine Star

Privatized

- ALEX MAGNO

The Commission on Audit (COA) raised red flags on the bidding process leading to the award of the Kaliwa dam project to a Chinese contractin­g company with no track record for dam constructi­on.

In COA’s view, the bidding was staged. Two other companies participat­ed in the bidding process merely to satisfy the requiremen­ts of our procuremen­t law.

The MWSS has not commented on the COA observatio­n. In the meantime, more serious questions have been raised over whether the approach taken in this particular project is the best one possible.

For instance, a Japanese company has tendered an offer to undertake the Kaliwa River project at no cost to the Philippine government. This offer was ignored because the Japanese engineerin­g team proposes to build a weir to impound water rather than a tall dam. The MWSS seems to have set its mind to build a dam.

Too, a Credit Loan Agreement was signed November last year between the MWSS and the Export Import Bank of China. This is a tied loan, meaning we are obligated to hire a Chinese company to undertake the project.

While the loan provides about P11 billion for the project, the contract with the winning Chinese bidder was for P12.189 billion. This raises the question: How will the MWSS fund the difference, to include possible cost overruns and project administra­tion expenses?

Right of way acquisitio­ns, environmen­tal mitigation measures and other expenses will surely raise the total cost of the project. Since the project will produce water above what the concession­aires can currently sell, water tariffs might have to be raised to cover costs.

The MWSS no longer sells water. It supports itself from concession fees from Maynilad and Manila Water amounting to P200 million annually. That amount is hardly enough to cover the MWSS’ operating costs.

The Philippine government, as a matter of course, guarantees the loan taken from the Export-Import Bank of China. Should something go terribly wrong with this project, the Philippine government will take loan repayments from taxpayer money.

Otherwise, the MWSS may choose to raise concession fees on the two water concession­s. That will be passed on to the consumers. The regulatory agency does not have a plan to sell the water to the Southern Tagalog and Central Luzon regions to improve water sales.

The Kaliwa River project accounts for only 25 percent of the estimated water to be collected from the entire Laiban dam complex. The Kanan River project, to be undertaken later, will produce 75 percent of the total raw water to be generated.

This entire project could be lucrative in the long run, especially if property developmen­t around the area comes into play. Several local corporatio­ns, including San Miguel, have earlier offered bids to undertake the project (including building a new city for communitie­s that the dams might displace) at no cost to government.

If so, why did government choose to take out a tied Chinese loan and have a Chinese company with no track record in dam constructi­on to undertake the project? Bulk water

When water supply fell critically low last April, someone from the MWSS took responsibi­lity on behalf of government for the water shortages. That is not true.

Section 3.9 of the concession agreement approved by the MWSS Board of Trustees Dec. 2, 1996 acknowledg­es the letter sent by the regulatory body to the winning concession­aires. That letter, dated Nov. 27, 1996, reads: “The concession­aires, as agents or representa­tives of MWSS… shall be authorized to exercise the water rights of MWSS under the water permits issued, or to be subsequent­ly issued by the NWRB.”

The Privatizat­ion Strategy Report approved by the MWSS board months before that was even more explicit: “The concession­aires… will be responsibl­e for the supply of their respective future bulk water requiremen­ts. It is they who will be best positioned to identify the most efficient means of securing additional raw water.”

That quote could not be clearer. If water rights have been conceded to the concession­aires, why is the MWSS now insisting that the responsibi­lity for the developmen­t of raw water resources remains with the agency?

If the MWSS had ceded water rights to the concession­aires, why was the constructi­on of the Kaliwa River dam suddenly a government undertakin­g, funded by a tied loan and contracted out (possibly through anomalous bidding) to a Chinese company with no record in dam building?

The water privatizat­ion program undertaken by the Ramos administra­tion was a resounding success. It became the textbook model for many other countries. It dramatical­ly increased the volume of water supplied urban consumers, brought down non-revenue water levels and brought investment­s in new water distributi­on technologi­es.

Although this program required the concession­aires to put in humongous amounts of capital, they make no more than bond rates in profit. This means that if they put their capital in bonds, they will be making the same amount of money without the heartaches.

Why then did government take over the projects that would bring more bulk water to consumers?

It could be that the concession­aires were not interested in putting in more capital to a business venture that brings only bond rate returns. But then, it is widely known that Ayala Corporatio­n (that controls Manila Water) has banked a tremendous amount of land in the Laiban area.

This could, in all probabilit­y, be a failure in project design. Properly framed, this project could attract private investment­s taking advantage of the prospects for property developmen­t to supplement water revenues.

That said, the Kaliwa River project now seems destined for trouble.

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