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DoTr eyes new provincial airports

Passengers are seen at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3 in Pasay City, June 23. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

THE MARCOS administration is looking into developing more provincial airports, the Department of Transportation (DoTr) said on Wednesday.

“We are studying to build new airports in Zamboanga, Dumaguete, Masbate, and Bukidnon,” Transportation Undersecretary for Planning and Project Development Timothy John R. Batan said in Filipino during a televised briefing.

Mr. Batan clarified the airport projects in Zamboanga, Dumaguete, Masbate, and Bukidnon “are in the pipeline and are still in the early stages of project development.”

At present, there are existing airports in Zamboanga City, Dumaguete City, and Masbate City.

There is currently no airport in Bukidnon. Last year, Senator Juan Miguel F. Zubiri said the DoTr is developing a P1.8-billion airport in Barangay Maraymaray in Don Carlos, Bukidnon.

“The objective is to make our airports safer and expand their capacity to accommodate more flights and passengers,” Mr. Batan said.

The new administration will ensure continuity of ongoing airport projects, especially San Miguel Corp.’s P740-billion New Manila International Airport (NMIA) project in Bulacan.

“We will also coordinate with the Cavite province for the Sangley airport,” he said.

The Cavite province is currently soliciting alternate bids to challenge the unsolicited proposal to build the Sangley Point International Airport (SPIA) submitted by the SPIA Development Consortium.

Cavite has been pushing for the development of the Sangley airport as an alternative to Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA), the country’s main gateway, as demand for air transport is expected to increase in the next 30 to 40 years.

STILL INTERESTEDMeanwhile, Metro Pacific Investments Corp. Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan said at a separate briefing on Wednesday that the company remains interested in the airport project in Cavite.

“It’s a good collateral project for NAIA… In the long run, it can be a replacement for NAIA,” Mr. Pangilinan said.

In his first State of the Nation Address (SONA) last month, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. said his administration will “create more international airports to help decongest the bottleneck at the Manila airport.”

The Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), an arm of the DoTr, recently started the procurement process for the expansion of airports in Vigan, Baler, Roxas City, and Virac.

Under the Duterte administration, completed projects included the new passenger terminal at Clark International Airport, the new Bicol International Airport, Mactan-Cebu International Airport, Bohol-Panglao International Airport, Puerto Princesa International Airport, Zamboanga International Airport, Catarman Airport, Calbayog Airport, Siquijor Airport, General Santos Airport, and Ormoc Airport.

“Other notable projects for the country’s aviation and airports include the establishment of the long-delayed communications, navigation, surveillance/air traffic management, as well as the night-rating of 23 commercial airports,” the DoTr said.

Transport Secretary Jaime J. Bautista has said the department aims to “transform the Philippine transport industry and elevate it to global standards.”

There are currently 90 airports in the country, according to the CAAP.

CLARK’S NEW ROUTESMeanwhile, Clark International Airport, operated by Luzon International Premier Airport Development Corp., said it is expanding its connectivity with new routes, including Boracay.

The airport said low-cost carrier Philippines AirAsia, Inc. is set to resume its Clark-Caticlan flights on Aug. 16.

It also noted that South Korea is now more accessible as flights from Clark have resumed for South Korean airline T’way Air and Royal Air Philippines, a Philippine-registered budget airline. — Arjay L. Balinbin

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