Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Megawide, GMR submit $3B offer to rehabilitate NAIA


Construction and engineering firm Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR of India have submitted a $3-billion unsolicited proposal to upgrade and rehabilitate the highly-congested Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA).

Consortium representatives said on Thursday that the proposal – which was based on an 18-year concession – was aligned with the government’s strategy to develop a sustainable multi-airport system in the Philippines.

The GMR MEGAWIDE consortium believes that its solution will increase airfield capacity to 950 to 1,000 aircraft movements per day, a 30-35 percent increase from the current estimate of 730 aircraft movements daily.

For peak hours, the consortium pitches to increase NAIA’s aircraft handling capacity by 50 percent, from 40 to 60.

Within 24 months of taking over operations, the consortium also plans to rehabilitate and expand the existing terminals, which will roughly double the space and result in over 700,000 square meters of terminal area. Once completed, both the airside facilities and the terminals shall be able to handle a total annual throughput of 72 million passengers.

“As an experienced private operator, we have a deep understanding of the problem experienced by NAIA and we would like offer our take on the solution,” said Louie Ferrer, one of the consortium’s authorized representatives. “Our team has transformed Delhi International Airport, previously one of the world’s worst airports, into one that is consistently named among top five best airports of the world. We have also transformed Mactan-Cebu International Airport, one of the Philippines’ previously overlooked airports, into the 2016 Best Regional Airport in Asia Pacific. We hope to contribute our knowledge from these projects to the development of our country’s main gateway,” Ferrer said.

The GMR Megawide consortium is also the operator of the Mactan-Cebu International Airport.

“It is vital to immediately decongest NAIA and maximize its potential in order to sustainably support the air traffic needs of the greater capital region,” Ferrer explained. “A solution is urgently needed, which we in the private sector are willing to support and provide.”
The “alternative” proposal was submitted around two weeks after seven of the country’s biggest conglomerates submitted a rival P350-billion unsolicited proposal to upgrade NAIA.
28/02/18 Doris Dumlao-Abadilla/Inquirer.Net

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