PORT UPGRADE: The modernization of the decrepit North Harbor in Manila, now a mere shadow of the crown jewel of the transport industry that it used to be, is long overdue.
The good news is that the waiting is about to end for the estimated one million inter-island passengers transiting annually through it and the many others, including cargo handlers and concessionaires, depending on port operations for their livelihood.
The Philippine Ports Authority is set to award by Oct. 15 the modernization contract to the winning bidder — the joint venture of Harbour Centre of the Romero family and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. led by its chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan.
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RIGOROUS TEST: Announced two weeks ago, the winning offer of the joint venture, the only qualified bidder, was P14.5 billion. The consortium passed the rigorous pre-qualification and bid process (which took two years) mandated by the PPA’s terms of reference.
The project will raise more than P6.8 billion in revenues for the PPA over 25 years regardless of the economic situation and lower port rates by 10-15 percent. More than 1,000 workers of North Harbor operators will be absorbed, and an additional 5,000 jobs generated.
Harbour Centre chief executive Michael Romero said port modernization would help revitalize economic activities in Manila and spur growth across the country without the government spending a single centavo.
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BENEFITS: The entry of MPIC — the local infrastructure holding company of First Pacific Co. Ltd. of Hong Kong — is expected to stir competition and put pressure on the rates being charged by the older players International Container Terminal Services Inc. and Asian Terminals Inc.
North Harbor could also become the only port with direct access to the North Luzon Expressway whose operation is now in the hands of MPIC under a separate contract. New road links with the NLEx could be opened to Letre, Malabon, leading to the port.
Modernization will include dredging the filth and silt around the port, and replacing the old piers with structures similar to the modern ports of Rotterdam, Singapore and Hong Kong. Modern cranes and bigger container depots will be able to handle more containers.
Port officials have noted that the dilapidated state of the piers and the corroded structures below could no longer support heavy loads.
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FIRST STAGE: Phase I of the project will be carried out over six years. The winning bidder will complete during the first year the crane rail for two LO-LO (Load on-Load off) berths at Terminal 1 and the concrete paving of container yards.
After the crane rail for the LO-LO berths is completed, the operator will bring in two shore cranes and support equipment.
To be completed within three years of Phase 1 are such components as reclamation, construction of a passenger terminal, building of more LO-LO berths and RO-RO (Roll on-Roll off) berths, and the development of a P1-billion Information Technology system to streamline operations.
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PPA ROLE INTACT: The three years of Phase II will see the rise of Terminals 2 and 3 and the second passenger terminal.
Contrary to reports, the consortium will not be given a three-year grace period just to enable it to collect port dues, tariff and charges. As winning bidder, it will complete during the first three years of the contract a substantial amount of work.
The government will retain its sovereign power to levy tariff. In the 25-year contract period, the PPA/government will exercise its sovereign power and authority to levy port charges, such as usage fees and wharfage.
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SACOBIA ROW: At the north end of the NLEx, meanwhile, a boundary dispute threatens to stymie the development of Clark’s Next Frontier in the Sacobia hills in Mabalacat (Pampanga) and Bamban (Tarlac).
The towns are quarreling over quarry sites in the lahar-rich Sacobia river — not to mention the votes there — whose defining features have been altered by the erratic flow of volcanic debris from Mt. Pinatubo.
Usually, the middle of a river is the boundary between political entities on either bank. But the river’s path has panned out over a wide area, making delineation difficult.
To make matters worse, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources reportedly made a mistake in its mapping of the river area. And then, part of the land has turned out to be in the ancestral domain of balugas (aetas) recognized as exclusively theirs.
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SLOW DRAG: The town of Bamban filed way back in 2006 a petition that 3,325 hectares allegedly “landgrabbed’ be restored through amicable talks with Mabalacat authorities.
Mabalacat officials insisted that the land belonged to the town.
When long-winded negotiations failed, it was decided to ask the court to resolve the dispute. But at the rate the legal volleyball is being tossed around, the area might be overtaken by the next Pinatubo eruption without anybody getting to know who owns it.
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EXECUTIVE HAND: As an interested native and a frequent visitor of Clark and Sacobia, I strongly endorse a proposal that the matter be referred to President Gloria Arroyo for executive arbitration.
Ms Arroyo can be fair. Although she is Pampanga’s favorite daughter, the other parties in Tarlac are also Capampangan like their ancestors in the pre-Commonwealth Pampanga mega-province that was three times its present size.
With a Pampanga-Tarlac joint board resolution committing to respect the President’s decision, the matter could be resolved faster. Speed is important, because with her term ticking away, the development of Sacobia as Clark’s Next Frontier must take off soonest.
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