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.

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“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

Colombia: Overview of new concessions, expansion and construction of new terminals (July 2018)

ANI (Agencia Nacional de Infraestructura de Colombia) is currently structuring five investment projects that entail new concessions for seven airports, the expansion of nine existing terminals and building nine new ones, for a total investment of 6.8tn pesos (US$2.4bn).

The projects are:

San Andrés and Providencia airport (227bn pesos)
A concession for the airports of San Andrés and Providencia was awarded to consortium CASYP in 2007, but was terminated in 2014, because, as ANI argued, the operator incurred several breaches of contract, for example neither presenting a compliance nor a legal liability policy.

During that same year, the concessionaire was also fined by commerce and industry regulator SIC for excessive access fees to its main runway.

Since then, both airports have been operated by Colombia’s aviation regulator Aerocivil.

The new, 20-year concession entails expansion works for both terminals. In the case of San Andrés, the passenger terminal would have to be rebuilt and new boarding bridges installed, bringing the airport’s capacity to 3.5mn passengers per year.

As for Providencia, ANI hasn’t given details about possible works, but last year Aerocivil was forced to modify a contract to widen the airport’s runway after the San Andrés and Providencia departmental tribunal ruled against the project following a legal action presented by locals, RCN Radio reported.

Southwest airports (782bn pesos)
This concession would entail the airports of the cities of Cali (Valle del Cauca department), Neiva (Hulia), Ibagué (Tolima), Buenaventura (Valle del Cauca) and Armenia (Quindío).

Currently, only the Cali airport is operated by a concessionaire (Aerocali), while the others are administrated by Aerocivil.

ANI has already socialized the project to tender all five airports under one concession, according to its website.

Works in this concession include one new terminal for domestic flights, another one for low-cost airlines, a new control tower, an expansion of the current platforms and runways and buying land plots for a second runway.

Armenia’s airport would have to get a new cargo terminal with its respective platform. Buenaventura’s airport, meanwhile, would get a new terminal building, a new control tower, firefighter building, and will get an expansion of its parking lot, runway and passenger platform.

Expected works at Ibagué’s airport include demolishing its old terminal and rehabilitate its main runway, among others, while at Neiva only a new perimeter area and a fueling station are planned.

In March ANI reported that prefeasibility documents have already been delivered by Spanish airport operator AENA and Colombian financing firm Corficolombiana, which proposed the concession as a private initiative.

Cartagena airport expansion (331bn pesos)
Expanding Cartagena’s Rafael Núñez airport was presented as a private initiative by the airport’s concessionaire Sacsa, and is separate from the airport’s current expansion.

As of April, according to ANI, this second expansion entered its feasibility stage and is expected to be finished by late 2021.

Works entail building an international terminal, a loading bay next to the existing building, expansion of the domestic terminal, expansion of the plane parking lot to receive up to 15 Type A 320 planes, a new taxiway and an elevated car parking lot.

These improvements would increase the airport’s capacity to 7.5mn passengers per year, up from 4.6mn.

New Cartagena airport (2tn pesos)
This venture is another private initiative, presented by a consortium headed by the current operator of Bogotá’s El Dorado airport, Odinsa.

Developed under the PPP model, this project entails building of what ANI called an «airport citadel.»

The complex would be 24km from Cartagena’s historic center and accessed via Vía al Mar and La Cordialidad roads. Its first phase includes building a 3,100m runway, a passenger terminal, a parallel taxiway and a platform with boarding bridges and remote positions.

Once the first phase is complete, the new airport will have capacity for 9mn passengers per year, but it could reach up to 30mn in its last phase, according to Odinsa.

The project is still in its feasibility stage and according to ANI the first stage would conclude by 2025.

El Dorado II (3.5tn pesos)
This project has been in its structuring phase since last year, and transport minister Germán Cardona stated in May that structuring and financing will be ready before Duque takes office. A tender would be launched around that time, according to the transport ministry and RCN Radio.

The airport would be located alongside the highway connecting the municipalities of Madrid and Facatativá to the west of Bogotá. It will cover an area of around 1,350ha.

Last month ANI reportedly received two private initiatives regarding Bogotá’s existing and future airports.

One of them involves a concession for the runway network of the existing El Dorado airport. The second one, dubbed Sistema Aeroportuario de Bogotá 2025, involves an expansion for the facility, a new passenger terminal, a third runway and the first stage of El Dorado II. The feasibility of both proposals and eventual tenders will fall to Duque’s administration.

Source: BNAmericas

Three international teams line up for Jamaican airport PPP

Following the news of June 4 (See: https://buff.ly/2AlPrme), three teams are in contention for a public–private partnership deal to take over the operation and expansion of Norman Manley International Airport near Kingston, Jamaica.

The winner will finance, develop and maintain the airport, the second largest in Jamaica after Sangster International, which serves the tourist resort of Montego Bay.

A request for proposals was issued by the Ministry of Transport to eight prequalified bidders in June 2017. The three that responded are:

  • Mexican airport operator Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico
  • A team led by Corporación del Este, a subsidiary of Dominican developer Grupo Puntacana. This team also includes China Harbour Engineering and local companies Corporación del Kingston, GBG Energy and Jamaica Producers Group
  • A team led by Egis Projects, a French engineer that specialises in international transport PPPs. Its team includes Jamaican investment adviser GK Capital Management, Kingston finance house Sagicor Investments Jamaica and Razel-Bec, the civil engineering arm of France’s Fayat Group.

Among the prequalified teams that did not submit final bids were Vinci Airports, GMR Infrastructure of India, Zurich Airport International, Cedicor of Argentina, the Korea Airport Corporation and A-Port Chile.

The government of Jamaica expects to announce the preferred bidder by the end of August, after determining whether the bids received meet its legal, technical and financial criteria. The final deal is due to be signed in October.

India: Fresh RFPs invited for AP’s Bhogapuram airport, Andhra Padresh

The Bhogapuram greenfield airport project near Visakhapatnam is on track again with Andhra Pradesh Airport Development Corporation Ltd inviting request for proposals (RFPs) for development, operations and maintenance of the airport.

The Corporation, a special purpose vehicle set up by the government, expects to finalise the developer by the year end. A pre-bid meeting has been scheduled for August 6.

Project scope expanded
The scope of the airport project to be developed under the public private partnership (PPP) mode has been expanded and the cost of the project for 18 million passengers a year for three phases to ₹4,208 crore with phase one for 6 mppa at ₹2,302 crore.

The State government first invited request for proposals in 2016 and finalised the bid of Airports Authority of India which had offered a revenue share of 30.2 per cent as against the only other player, the GMR group, offering 21.6 per cent revenue share.

The government, which approved the bid of AAI, cancelled it on the grounds that it would like to develop an integrated airport project, which includes Aviation University, MRO, airport city and related infrastructure.

The Airport Corporation, formerly known as Bhogapuram International Airport Corporation Ltd, has set August 24 as the last date for submission of RFPs and a bid meeting has been scheduled for August 6. The applicant can be a single entity or a group company but need to have a net worth of ₹590 crore.

AAI keen
Following the cancellation of the contract, the AAI represented to the government that they were open to take up development of other infrastructure and that the necessary additional aspects could be built into the contract as per the concession agreement. However, the State Cabinet was firm that the earlier bid process would be cancelled and a fresh RFP would be floated to take up the project in PPP mode.

Jayant Sinha, Union Minister of State of Civil Aviation, replying to a question in the Rajya Sabha last week, said Airports Authority of India was prepared to take up the construction of the airport.

Some members of the opposition Congress also wrote to the Union Aviation Minister and the Prime Minister about what they described as unilateral cancellation of the contract awarded to AAI. They said AAI was awarded the contract as it had offered higher revenue share. Yet the bid was cancelled after awarding the contract.