Monday, June 26, 2017

DOTr seeks China funding for PNR south Line

MANILA — The Department of Transportation (DOTr) plans to tap a loan from the Chinese government to build a railway project linking Manila to Bicol province, according to Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade.

The planned connection, once part of the Public Private Partnership pipeline before the shift to overseas development assistance funding, will be done via a massive southern railway project split into separate components by the Philippine National Railways.

The South Long Haul project, a P151-billion train line that spans 581 kilometres, will run through Laguna, Batangas, Quezon, Camarines Norte, Camarines Sur, Albay and Sorsogon.

There will also be a short-haul component, called the PNR South Commuter. The government’s “build build build” online infrastructure portal identified this as a P134-billion train line that would span 72 kilometers and link Manila and Los BaƱos, Laguna.

Tugade said they were targeting loan deals from China to fund those projects.

“We would like to have partnership with countries using their own technologies,” Tugade told reporters on Monday at the sidelines of a station marking event for the PNR’s P255-billion Manila to Clark Railway project.

“It stands with rhyme and reason that we spread out the market,” Tugade added.

In line with this, the DOTr is tapping the Japan International Cooperation Agency for its Manila-Clark train project, which it hopes to complete before the end of 2021.

The project will span 106 kilometers and will have stations in Tutuban (Manila), Solis, Valenzuela, Caloocan, Meycauayan, Marilao, Bocaue, Balagtas, Guiguinto, Malolos, Calumpit,  Apalit, San Fernando, Angeles, Clark, Clark International Airport, and the proposed New Clark City.

A railway line to Clark would also bolster passenger traffic at the Clark International Airport, still significantly under-utlized despite its strategic location as an alternative to Manila’s Ninoy Aquino
International Airport, which is suffering from congestion issues.

The Philippine government and JICA already signed an almost $2-billion loan agreement for the Tutuban to Malolos stretch in 2015.

On Monday, the DOTr held a ceremonial marking event for five stations of the Manila-Clark railway line. The stations are  Marilao and Meycauayan in Bulacan, Valenzuela, Caloocan, and Tutuban.

JICA chief representative Susumu Ito said the project would “boost connectivity of emerging growth centers to Metro Manila and improve the mobility of the Filipino commuters.”

“Once completed, it can help address traffic congestion and improve the quality of life of people living and working in urban areas in Metro Manila,” he said.

The DOTr said the Manila-Clark railway would cut the usual two-hour trip to 55 minutes. The government  expects the project to cater to an initial 350,000 passengers per day.

This project is expected to start construction by the end of 2017. The whole line will have 13 train sets with eight cars or coaches per train set. Each train can reach a maximum speed of 120 km per hour.  SFM

http://business.inquirer.net/232058/dotr-seeks-china-funding-pnr-south-line

17 stations of Manila-Clark Railway announced

(UPDATED) The Department of Transportation says it aims to start the construction of the railway system in the last quarter of 2017 and finish it by 2021
By Chrisee Dela Paz
Published Sun, Jun 25, 2017 10:35 PM

(UPDATED) – Tutuban, Tondo, Caloocan, and Valenzuela in Metro Manila, as well as Meycauayan and Marilao in Bulacan, will be the first 6 stations of a mass transit railway that will connect commuters from Manila to Clark International Airport in Pampanga.

This was announced by the Department of Transportation (DOTr) a day ahead of a station marking event for the P225-billion Manila-Clark Railway, which will be funded through official development assistance (ODA) from Japan.

The project that will once again connect Central Luzon and Metro Manila by rail "will be completed under the Duterte administration," Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade said in a statement on Sunday, June 25.

Eleven other stations are Bocaue, Balagtas, Guiguinto, Malolos, and Calumpit in Bulacan, plus Apalit, San Fernando, Angeles, Clark, and Clark International Airport in Pampanga, and the proposed New Clark City in Tarlac.

The 106-kilometer railway project is one of the "high-impact projects" of President Rodrigo Duterte under the government's "Build Build Build" infrastructure program.

With this rail project, the DOTr aims to cut the two-hour travel time from Manila to Clark to 55 minutes. (READ: Tugade to formalize Manila-Clark train plan in 90 days)

"The rail system stands to benefit 350,000 passengers daily on its first year of operations," said the transportation department.

Completed in 2021

Philippine National Railways (PNR) General Manager Junn Magno said the project is seen to decongest Metro Manila and further spread economic gains.

"This project will ease traffic congestion and help thousands of commuters coming from Bulacan and Pampanga who travel daily to their workplaces or schools in Metro Manila," Magno said.

According to the DOTr, the project will start construction in the last quarter of 2017 and will be completed by the last quarter of 2021.

The whole line will have 13 train sets with 8 cars or coaches per train set. Each train can reach a maximum speed of 120 kilometers per hour.

In June 2016, Duterte told the media that Chinese diplomats offered to fund and build the project in two years. A year later, the transportation department said the project would be funded through ODA from Japan. – Rappler.com

DoTr lays out first five stations along Clark railway

THE GOVERNMENT will lead today the marking of the stations for its planned P255-billion railway project from Manila to Clark, part of an effort to decongest Metro Manila and develop infrastructure in Central Luzon.
The Department of Transportation (DoTr) said yesterday that construction will start in the last quarter of 2017 and will be completed by the last quarter of 2021.

Today, the DoTr will mark five stations of the 106 kilometer (km) Manila-Clark Railway Project: Marilao and Meycauayan in Bulacan, Valenzuela, Caloocan, and Tutuban in Metro Manila.

“The project... will be completed under the Duterte administration,” Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade, who was previously president of Clark Development Corp., was quoted as saying.

The project will cost P255 billion and will be funded through Official Development Assistance (ODA) from Japan.

The entire line will have 13 train sets with eight cars or coaches per train set. Each train can reach a maximum speed of 120 km per hour. The rail project is expected to cut the two-hour travel time from metro Manila to Clark to just 55 minutes.

The DoTr said the railway line will benefit 350,000 passengers daily on its first year of operations.

The 12 other stations in the plan are: Solis in Tondo; Bocaue, Balagtas, Guiguinto, Malolos and Calumpit in Bulacan; and Apalit, San Fernando, Angeles, Clark, and Clark International Airport in Pampanga; as well as the proposed New Clark City.

Philippine National Railways (PNR) General Manager Junn B. Magno said the project is expected to decongest Metro Manila and spread economic gains throughout the country.

“This project will ease traffic congestion and help thousands of commuters coming from Bulacan and Pampanga who travel daily to their workplaces or schools in Metro Manila,” Mr. Magno was quoted as saying.

The government has been promoting Clark as an alternative gateway to help decongest Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) which has been reporting passenger traffic well above its capacity.

NAIA accounts for nearly 90% of all domestic passengers in the Philippines and more than 80% of all international passengers.

Last week, Transportation Undersecretary for Aviation Manuel Antonio L. Tamayo said unsolicited proposals for various airport projects will have to take a back seat as the government prioritizes development of the Sangley and Clark airports to immediately decongest NAIA.

The government will spend around P600 to P700 million for the Sangley Airport development and it will also start building a new passenger terminal at the Pampanga airport this year, implementing the Aeroports de Paris masterplan prepared for Clark International Airport in 2015.

Business groups have earlier recommended building a “fast train” to connect the two gateways and make it easier for passengers to transfer from one airport to the other and for the proposed Manila-Clark rail to be extended to NAIA, instead of terminating at Tutuban.

The government, which has made infrastructure its priority, has said it will reduce the use of public-private partnership procurement which it says takes too long to implement. Instead, it prefers projects to be funded internally or through ODA or a mixture of these modes.

NAIA, the fifth-largest airport in Southeast Asia, handled 39.5 million passengers in 2016, well over its designed capacity of 30.5 million passengers per year. -- Imee Charlee C. Delavin