The Philippine Star

DOTC slashes subsidy to winning bidder of LRT expansion project

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions (DOTC) has slashed the P6-billion subsidy to be extended to the winning bidder of the P65 billion Light Rail Transit line 1 (LRT1) Cavite extension project.

DOTC undersecre­tary Jose Perpetuo Lotilla said the agency’s special bids and awards committee (SBAC) would issue the revised instructio­ns to bidders (ITB) for the public private partnershi­p (PPP) project containing the amendments.

“A revised ITB will be issued following this bid bulletin,” Lotilla stated in General Bid Bulletin 12-2014.

One of the amendments is the reduction of the ceiling of the subsidy amount to P5 billion instead of P6 billion.

The DOTC said the reduction of the subsidy is consistent with the removal of the obligation of the concession­aire to fund the relocation under Section 11.7 of the draft Concession Agreement that would entail expenses of up to P900 million.

Last Feb. 10, the DOTC announced that the cap of the subsidy would be P6 billion.

After a failed bid- ding last Aug. 15, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) Board chaired by President Aquino approved last Nov. 21 the revised terms for the project including the payment of real property taxes (RPT) by the government.

The government also approved a five-percent fare increase upon completion of the project, and allowed the submission of negative bids.

The DOTC has extended the deadline for the submission of bids for by another month to May 28 instead of April 28.

The groups interested in joining the bidding include the tandem of infrastruc­ture giant Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. and conglomera­te Ayala Corp. through the Light Rail Manila Consortium, constructi­on giant DM Consunji Inc., Filipinoow­ned Megawide Constructi­on Corp., Spanish-owned Globalvia Inversione­s SAU, SMC Infra Resources Inc. of diversifie­d conglomera­te San Miguel Corp., Eco Rail Services Inc. of businessma­n Reghis Romero II, and Malaysian-owned MTD Philippine­s Inc.

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