Clark International Airport’s new terminal expected to open in 2020

The Department of Transportation said the construction of a new passenger terminal at Clark International Airport is on track and will be operational by 2020.“It’s on track. Hopefully, we can get it operational by 2020,” Transportation Undersecretary for aviation Manuel Antonio Tamayo said.The Megawide-GMR consortium submitted the lowest financial proposal for the airport expansion project at P9.36 billion on Dec. 14, 2017.Clark International Airport is the second main gateway into the country, and the new 100,000-square-meter terminal will double its capacity to eight million passengers a year, boosting air transport capacity for the Greater Manila Area.The project is expected to reduce the strain on the congested Ninoy Aquino International Airport and help create jobs and increase development in Central Luzon, a growing economic center.Clark International Airport is envisioned to be Asia’s next premier gateway.  It now has an annual capacity of four million passengers.

Airlines operating in Clark include Qatar Airways, Cebu Pacific, Tigerair, Jin Air, Asiana Airlines, Dragon Air, AirAsia Berhad, Philippine Airlines and Emirates Airlines. These airlines mount flights to Hong Kong, Singapore, Bangkok, Macau, Pudong, Incheon, Doha, Dubai, Davao, Cebu and Kalibo.

 Megawide-GMR is the consortium of local company Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR Infrastructure Ltd. of India. Its unit GMR-Megawide Cebu Airport Corp. is the builder and operator of Mactan-Cebu International Airport.Earlier, the North Luzon Airport Consortium won the operations and maintenance contract of Clark International Airport’s existing passenger terminal and the new terminal.

North Luzon Airport Consortium members are Filinvest Development Corp., JG Summit Holdings Inc., Philippine Airport Ground Support Solutions Inc. and Changi Airport Philippines Pte. Ltd.

Source: Manila Standard

Bidding for Clark airport O&M a landmark accomplishment for PH gov’t

The success of the bidding for the Clark International Airport operations and maintenance (O&M) contract shows the seriousness of the Duterte administration to “Build, Build, Build.”

The Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) in partnership with the Department of Transportation (DOTr) recently awarded the O&M contract to the four-member North Luzon Airport Consortium (NLAC), which includes Changi Airport Group, the operator of the number one airport in the world, Singapore Changi Airport.

The successful selection process proves that government is committed to providing our citizens with world-class, efficient and comfortable infrastructure, as envisioned under the President’s Build Build Build program.

The Clark airport expansion project was done in record time, within the first two years of President Duterte’s term—a major accomplishment considering that development plans for the airport were neglected for years. 

The BCDA Special Bids and Awards Committee for the O&M contract conducted a stringent and very transparent bidding process, which was guided by the International Finance Corporation of the World Bank (IFC-WB) as its transaction adviser, and the Public-Private Partnership Center (PPPC).

In a year-end press conference held by the PPP Center last December 20, Executive Director Ferdinand Pecson said that the bidding process for the Clark airport O&M contract was aboveboard and no group was favorably chosen over another.

The Clark International Airport is the first project being implemented using the hybrid PPP mode to fast-track infrastructure development under the Build Build Build program.

The concession agreement for the O&M contract has also been cleared by the Office of the Government Corporate Counsel and the Department of Finance (DOF), and is seen to protect not only the interest of the present government, but also future governments from undue and contingent risks and liabilities. 

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez said in an earlier statement that DOF had meticulously scrutinized the concession agreements for the Clark airport to ensure the government would not incur unwarranted contingent liabilities, like what happened to the Mactan-Cebu airport contract.

“If you compare the guarantees that were given to the Cebu contract comparing to what we have for the Clark and the Bulacan, you will see the big difference from before,” Dominguez said. “We’re going to get those, the contract in Clark, and the contract for the Bulacan airport with no government liability at all,” he added.

Meanwhile, citing the key features of the Bulacan airport concession agreement, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia added that these projects “certainly raise the bar on PPP projects.”

NLAC’s financial bid offer of 18.25% annual gross revenue percentage share is almost twice the minimum rate set at 10% as approved by the NEDA Board. The bid offer, according to the PPPC, is more than 80 percent better than the minimum rate set.

The other three members of NLAC are Filinvest Development Corporation, JG Summit Holdings, Inc. and Philippine Airport Ground Support Solutions, Inc. Each consortium member has a vast experience in property development, air transportation and airport operations, especially Changi Airports Philippines Pte. Ltd., which is 100%-owned by Changi Airports International Pte. Ltd.

Singapore Changi Airport was ranked first in Skytrax’s top 100 airports for 2018, and was voted as one of the best airports in the world for six consecutive years. (BCDA).

Source: Philippines Information Agency

Indonesian operator seeks to manage Philippines airport

State-owned airport operator PT Angkasa Pura II (AP II) is eyeing to manage the Clark International Airport in Manila part of its plans to expand internationally.

“We are invited [to take part in a tender] along with AirAsia,” AP II finance director Andra Y Agusalam said in Jakarta on Wednesday.

AP II had submitted a document of the tender that was also followed by operators of Zurich International Airport in Switzerland and the Changi International Airport in Singapore, Andra said.

He added that AP II president director Muhammad Awaluddin would go to Manila for the tender process.

The cost to manage the airport, which was a former United States airbase, is reported to be about Rp 350 billion (US$23.91 million).

“Our calculation is that 35 percent of the consortium is Rp 350 billion,” he added.

AP II currently operates dozens of airports in Indonesia, including the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Tangerang, Banten, the largest airport in the country.

Source: The Jakarta Post

The Philippines Government has relaxed the eligibility rules for contract of the Clark International Airport.

The Philippines Government said it has relaxed the eligibility rules for companies seeking to participate in the auction for the operations and management (O&M) contract of the Clark International Airport.

The bidding qualifications released in May required prospective bidders to not have “a majority equity interest in a concession holder of an International Airport in the Philippines,” which would have eliminated a major construction company that runs the airport in Cebu as part of a consortium.

Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) President Vivencio B. Dizon said in a briefing on Wednesday that the eligibility terms have since been relaxed, which opens the door to companies such as Megawide Construction Corp., which operates the Mactan-Cebu International Airport.

Mr. Dizon said the new terms of reference now rule out companies currently operating such airports within the same main island group.

“So meaning, if you’re operating an airport in Luzon, then you cannot have another major airport in the same island group. Obviously Cebu is not part of Luzon where Clark is, so Megawide can participate,” he added.

The Department of Transportation (DoTr) and BCDA are currently bidding out the 25-year, P5.61-billion contract for the O&M of the Clark International Airport. The development of the gateway in Pampanga aims to decongest the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) in Metro Manila.

Megawide, along with its Indian consortium partner GMR Infrastructure Ltd. won the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract for the Clark airport in December 2017. The hybrid public-private partnership structure being tested for the Clark airport separates the contracts for EPC and O&M.

The preliminary timeline for the project indicates a target for contract awarding and signing on Aug. 30, but Mr. Dizon said on Wednesday the BCDA will accept bids until late August.

(Clic to enlarge)

“Government will just accept whatever bids are finally submitted by the deadline (in late August),” he said.

The O&M concession is due to start on Dec. 1 for the current passenger terminal. The new terminal is scheduled to open in July 2020.

Source: BusinessWorld