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Passengers at Terminal 3 of Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport on January 1, 2023. Photo: AFP

India’s GMR Group potential front runner for US$3 billion Manila airport project amid China tensions: sources

  • The government is weighing bids to redevelop Manila’s under-pressure airport, with sources saying a consortium led by India’s GMR Group could be in front
  • The tender comes amid growing tensions between Manila and Beijing in the South China Sea, but the Philippines says bilateral ties ‘won’t be a factor’ in its selection
The Philippines, Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing economy, is set to award a flagship Manila airport redevelopment project tender, with sources saying India’s GMR Group is likely in the lead among four private bidders.

The US$3 billion airport redevelopment bid was launched last August after two previous failed attempts to expand operations at the facility, considered among the worst worldwide at 50 per cent over capacity.

The Philippines has shortlisted three out of the four international consortiums for the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA), according to Timothy John, Philippine Undersecretary for Planning and Project Development under the Department of Transportation.

“Our target is that by February 15, we are able to award this concession and sign the agreement a few weeks after that. [The] actual development is to start anytime between the second and third quarter this year,” John said, adding that commencement would depend on conditions for the handover of work between the government and the bid winner.

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A consortium led by India’s GMR Group had emerged possibly as the front runner under a public-private partnership model, sources told This Week in Asia, also adding that GMR had proposed to share up to 33.3 per cent of annual revenues with the Philippine government.

In second place is Manila International Airport Consortium, led by Global Infrastructure Partners which was recently acquired by US asset management firm BlackRock. The grouping, which includes six Filipino family conglomerates, proposes to share 25.91 per cent of revenue with the Philippine government.

The third contender, a consortium led by Philippine multinational corporation San Miguel Holdings Corp, has proposed to share up to 82.16 per cent of revenue with the government, which makes it the highest bidder. But such a high revenue-share model may stoke concerns about the business viability, though discussions with the government are yet to be finalised, sources said.

The fourth bidder, Asian Airports Consortium, failed to qualify in the technical evaluation, they added.

Passengers look at a screen showing flight information at Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport on January 1, 2023, after flight cancellations and delays. Photo: AFP

The China factor

The airport tender is being finalised amid growing military tensions between Manila and Beijing in the South China Sea, with the Philippine navy expressing alarm last week over the growing presence of Chinese warships and maritime militia around Mischief Reef in the disputed waterway.
The move to redevelop the Manila airport – strategically positioned geographically between Australia and Southeast Asia – also comes even as China has been trying to shore up support for its Belt and Road Initiative, a multibillion-dollar push to link the world’s second-largest economy with other nations through trade and infrastructure.

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New Delhi is a key partner in the India-Middle East-Europe Corridor project, which is backed by the United States, and touted as a potential rival to China’s belt and road ambitions.
During former president Rodrigo Duterte’s tenure from 2016 to 2022, there was a significant push by the Philippines to attract Chinese investors for infrastructure projects, but none of the qualified bidder consortiums for the Manila airport project this time include any Chinese infrastructure partner.

However, the Philippines says bids for the Manila airport will not be influenced by bilateral ties.

“The NAIA airport PPP (Public Private Partnership) is intended to be a benchmark for demonstration to the market on how the Philippines government, in particular the Department of Transportation is going to develop, is going to tender out the other PPP projects in our pipeline,” John from the transport department said.

“Bilateral ties are not a factor in our selection criteria,” he added.

People at Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport. Photo: Shutterstock

If India’s GMR Group is successful, it will be the firm’s third airport project in the Philippines. In 2014, it won the tender to develop and operate the Mactan-Cebu International Airport, and in 2019 it was awarded the project to expand Clark International Airport.

Mayur Patel, head of Asia at OAG Aviation, said the Manila airport needed to be spruced up because peak-hour flights were inevitably delayed.

“If you look at the Philippines from a strategic hub perspective, it is actually sitting in a very good location. It’s right in the middle of Southeast Asia, Australia and Japan. But it’s never been utilised properly,” he said.

The upgraded airport is expected to serve at least 60 million passengers annually from its current peak of 48 million. The winning bidder will be given a concession period of 15 years initially, with an extension of another 10 years on the card.

GMR International Airports CEO Puvan Sripathy last Tuesday said the Manila Airport was the “crown jewel” of Philippines aviation, but was in “real bad shape”.

“Manila is a capital city airport [and] the demand is always there. Even after the pandemic, Manila recovered much faster than any other airports in the Philippines,” Sripathy pointed out.

Tourists at Chocolate Hills in Bohol, Philippines. Photo: Shutterstock

If GMR wins the bid, the project will be the largest international airport the group will develop outside India, where it is the airport operator in the capital Delhi. Airports de Paris, the operator of three airports in Paris, plans to buy a 49 per cent stake in GMR Airports.

The Philippines already has seven regional airports that are in various stages of evaluation, with different proposals having been submitted by developers, besides a plan to work on other airport development in the country, according to John.

“One of the biggest industries that we are targeting is, of course, tourism. The Philippines has arguably a lot more tourism destinations than some of our neighbouring countries that are enjoying higher traffic, because we are unable to maximise our connections to the rest of the world,” he said.

“What we are expecting is that by expanding our capacity of the main gateway we are able to not just expand more of the connections, but we are also able to improve service levels and encourage higher tourism inflows,” he added.

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The success of the Manila airport project will be pivotal to several other infrastructure projects in the pipeline.

The government is looking to build an additional international container port at Cebu, award operations and maintenance concessions for two of its largest railway lines that are being built and two others which are operational. It is also looking for interested parties to operate and maintain a bus project in Davao that is being financed by the ADB, and a bus project in Cebu being financed by the World Bank. The country is also building a nationwide automated fare collection system, among a host of projects.

Some of these projects will be developed with private-sector partners, while others will be with bilateral partners, John said.

“We are looking to deliver most of the projects during the term of our current President [Ferdinand] Marcos Jnr, whose term is up in 2028,” he said.

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