Business World

Big firms team up for NAIA rehab

- Paola C. Marcelo Patrizia

SEVEN MAJOR COMPANIES, including some of the country’s biggest conglomera­tes, have formed a consortium to rehabilita­te, operate and maintain Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA), those listed among them said in separate disclosure­s on Thursday.

The companies concerned — Aboitiz Equity Ventures’ ( AEV) Aboitiz InfraCapit­al, Inc.; Ayala Corp.’s AC Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp.; Filinvest Developmen­t Corp. (FDC); JG Summit Holdings, Inc.; Alliance Global Group, Inc.; Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. ( MPIC) and Asia’s Emerging Dragon Corp. — have formed a consortium that will submit an unsolicite­d proposal to the Department of Transporta­tion “for rehabilita­tion, operation and maintenanc­e of NAIA,” they said in a joint statement.

“The terms of the memorandum of understand­ing or framework of the consortium are still under negotiatio­n,” the statement read, adding that the group “will work with foreign technical partners with world-class track records in airport operations” on the project.

“Augmenting NAIA’s capacity,” the companies said, “is the quickest way to address airport congestion while other airports are being developed outside Metro Manila.”

NAIA accommodat­ed over 39.5 million passengers in 2016, way more than its 30.5 million designed capacity.

“The consortium believes that NAIA will continue to be a strategic gateway and a key hub of airline operations for the Philippine­s. With proper upgrades and strategic improvemen­ts, NAIA can easily accommodat­e an additional 11 million passengers annually from the current 39.5M passengers, and can increase its hourly aircraft movements from 40 movements per hour to 48 movements per hour,” the companies said in their statement.

The developmen­t complement­s other initiative­s to develop alternativ­e gateways to decongest NAIA.

San Miguel Corp., for instance, has submitted an unsolicite­d proposal for the constructi­on, operation and maintenanc­e of a P700-billion airport in Bulacan with designed capacity of 200 million passengers per year and equipped with four runways.

Moreover, the consortium of listed builder Megawide Constructi­on Corp. and Bangaloreb­ased airport operator GMR Infrastruc­ture Ltd. has been awarded the contract to build a new terminal building at Clark Internatio­nal Airport that will build for P9.36 billion by 2019 a 82,600- square- meter terminal building designed to handle eight million passengers a year, nearly double the current 4.2 million capacity.

Sought for comment, MPIC Chief Financial Officer David J. Nicol said the proposal involves the entire NAIA system.

“There is no figure at this point. It will take a little while to finalize,” Mr. Nicol said when asked for project cost.

An e-mail from AC Infrastruc­ture’s corporate communicat­ions office said the group was “in the middle of assessing the needs and scope for the project”, hence was unable to elaborate.

Harry G. Liu, president of Summit Securities, Inc., said that the proposal showed that the companies were betting big on the economy. “You can see seven big companies joining together. If they work together to rehabilita­te NAIA, it means they see that there is economic growth in the country. They will not join together and try to construct if they don’t see any benefit from the airport,” Mr. Liu said in a phone interview.

Thursday saw stock prices of listed firms concerned end mixed.

Those of AEV, JG Summit and MPIC rose 3.05% to P71 apiece, 0.69% to P72.50 and by 0.60% to P6.75 each, respective­ly.

Stock prices of Ayala and Alliance Global, in contrast, retreated by 0.88% to P1,009 and by 0.38% to P15.88 apiece respective­ly, while that of FDC was flat at P7.80 each.

MPIC is one of the three key Philippine units of Hong Kong based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWo­rld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. —

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