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Australia’s top economists call for budget measures to speed the switch to electric cars

Image via Ivan Radic/CC BY 2.0

By Peter Martin 

Australia’s top economists overwhelmingly back government measures to speed the transition to electric cars in order to meet emission reduction targets. 

An exclusive poll of 62 of Australia’s preeminent economists — selected by their peers — finds 51 back measures to boost the take-up of electric cars including subsidizing public charging stations, subsidizing the purchase of all-electric vehicles, and setting a date to ban the import of traditionally-powered cars. 

Only 11 oppose such measures, three of them because they prefer a carbon tax. 

Six of the 51 who supported special measures said they did so reluctantly, as their preferred alternative would be a carbon price or a carbon tax, rather than subsidizing “one alternative out of many to reduce emissions.” 

Cars account for roughly half of Australia’s transport emissions, making them about 8% of Australia’s total emissions. 

Yet Australia’s take-up of electric vehicles is dwarfed by the rest of the world. 

On one measure, all-electric cars accounted for just 0.7% of new car sales in Australia in 2020 compared to 5% in China and 3.5% in the European Union. 

Australia has no domestic car industry to protect, meaning industry policy concerns needn’t hold back the transition. 

Norway plans to outlaw new petrol car sales from 2025; Denmark, the Netherlands, Ireland and Israel from 2030; and California and Britain from 2035. 

Asked whether Australia should take action to speed the transition, eight in ten of the 62 economists selected by the Economic Society said it should. 

The results represent a departure for a profession whose usual advice is to avoid interfering with markets. 

One participant, University of New South Wales (NSW) professor Gigi Foster said an important question needed to be answered in order to justify government intervention: “what is the market failure here?” 

The market failure was pollution, imposing costs on the community beyond the drivers of conventionally powered cars and on the planet by pushing up global temperatures. 

If it wasn’t to be dealt with by a carbon price, measures that sped up the switchover to electric vehicles could achieve some of the same effect. 

By far the most popular measure of six presented to the panelists who supported government action was subsidizing public charging points, backed by 84%. 

The next most popular was removing the luxury car tax from electric-only vehicles. At present the 35% tax applies to cars valued at more than $69,152, and $79,659 for fuel-efficient vehicles. 

According to the survey, 43% supported making charging points compulsory in new homes and new car parks; 39% supported setting a date to ban the import of petrol and diesel cars. 

Matthew Butlin, who chairs South Australia’s Productivity Commission, noted that much of Australia was not urban and unlikely to be served by charging points for some time. 

Without government measures to speed the installation of remote charging stations, many buyers would be reluctant to go electric, even if most of their driving was in cities. 

When they were in place, there would be a good case for banning the import of petrol and diesel vehicles, but not until then. 

Others wanted to hold off on banning the import of conventionally-powered cars until Australia had a lower-emissions mix of electricity. 

Macquarie University’s Lisa Magnani said that with three quarters of Australia’s electricity generated from coal, electric vehicles created considerable emissions. 

The Grattan Institute’s Danielle Wood disagreed, saying “network effects” built a case for switching over early. 

The more people switched, the more charging stations would be built and the lower electric vehicle prices would drop, driving more people to switch, and increasing the benefits of decarbonizing the electricity supply. 

The sooner Australia swapped over, the easier it would be to get to net zero emissions by 2050 without the need for a “cash for clunkers” style scheme to buy back polluting vehicles. 

Setting 2035 as the date for banning imports of gas-powered cars as recommended this year by the International Energy Agency would give buyers time to adjust while the charging infrastructure developed. 

Tax specialist John Freebairn said electric cars were already heavily subsidized by escaping the fuel excise used to fund roads, despite the efforts of some states to plug the gap. 

Sydney University economist Stefanie Schurer argued on the other hand bulky and polluting sport utility vehicles were effectively subsidized because of the tax benefits they attracted when used for work. 

Former Liberal Party leader John Hewson who heads the Crawford School of Public Policy said smoothing the transition had become urgent. 

It took only 10 years from 190313 for the United States to switch from horse-drawn to gas-driven vehicles, and technology take-up was quicker today, particularly in Australia. 

Other economists surveyed noted that there was much that could be done to reduce harmful emissions in addition to going electric. 

Sue Richardson said Australia should impose serious limits on the tailpipe emissions of new cars. Australia is unusual among developed nations in not having such a limit, making it a favored market for high-emission cars. 

Rana Roy said a better approach would be to limit transport itself through remote working and efforts to encourage walking and cycling. Subsidies for electric cars could send such moves backwards. 

When responses to the survey were weighted by the confidence respondents had in them on a scale of 1 to 10, support of special measures to drive the transition remained about as strong, backed by 8 in 10 of the economists surveyed. — The Conversation 

 

Peter Martin is a visiting fellow at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University. 

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. 

Cheers and quiet reflection as US crowds mark Juneteenth

ATLANTA/CHICAGO  Marching bands sparked loud cheers and quieter reflections about racial justice from crowds gathered on Saturday to mark Juneteenth as a new US federal holiday commemorating the end of the legal enslavement of Black Americans.  

President Joseph R. Biden, Jr., and Vice-President Kamala D. Harris on Thursday signed a bill making Juneteenth the 11th federally recognized holiday, just over a year after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis ignited nationwide protests for racial justice and for ending police brutality.  

“Juneteenth is a day of profound weight and profound power,” Mr. Biden tweeted on Saturday.  

Juneteenth, or June 19th, marks the day in 1865 when a Union general informed a group of enslaved people in Texas that they had been made free two years earlier by President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation during the Civil War.  

“This particular Juneteenth is special because last year we were in the George Floyd protests, and this year we received some resolution,” said Andrea Johnson of Atlanta, watching a parade under rainy skies near the historic Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.  

Outside the church where Martin Luther King, Jr. preached and led protests for voting rights, equal access to public services, and social and economic justice, boisterous crowds cheered marching bands and their dancers, who competed with dramatic dips and twirls and were followed by Jeeps adorned with “Black Lives Matter” signs.  

Many onlookers were joyful but some said declaring a national holiday might be a hollow victory for Blacks, many of whom still suffer racial injustice in the United States that can be remedied only through more substantial efforts by the federal government.  

“There are mixed feelings for me,” said Jermaine Washington, a marching band director who lives in Stone Mountain, Georgia, just 20 miles northeast of Atlanta.  

“Oftentimes we see these types of events as a win when it’s just pacification for the Black community instead of making sure there’s an equal education or equitable housing,” Mr. Washington said as he herded his young musicians at the Atlanta procession.  

Stone Mountain, a tiny village that is holding its first ever Juneteenth celebration this year, stands in the shadow of a nine-story high bas-relief of Confederate figures carved into a sprawling rock face, the largest monument to the pro-slavery legacy of the US South.  

Around the United States, concerts, rallies, art displays, and lots of food were among events planned for Juneteenth.  

Atlanta and its metro area have been celebrating Juneteenth for years. Richard Rose, president of the Atlanta chapter of the NAACP, said this year’s designation of Juneteenth as a federal holiday resonates in the city often called the “cradle of the civil rights movement.” 

“While we celebrate, what we have to remember is that we must fight for our rights  in the ballot box, in the schools. And we have to stand up, city-to-city, across this nation,” Mr. Rose said.  

Across the country, many events will take place in-person, unlike last year, as the United States emerges from the coronavirus pandemic and more Americans get vaccinated.  

Chicago’s “March For Us” has a mile-long route in the city’s business district known as the Loop.  

“We celebrate Independence Day, so we would be remiss if we don’t celebrate the day that people who were worth three-fifths of the person finally became free and started this journey towards equality,” said “March for Us” organizer Ashley Munson.  

Ms. Munson said that while strides have been made, recent incidents of police brutality toward Black people and legislation in several US states that curtails voting rights show that much work still needs to be done.  

Among events planned in New York City is “Juneteenth in Queens,” a week-long festival of virtual panel discussions set to conclude on Saturday with food trucks of jerk chicken and waffles, BBQ and more, as well as in-person live performances.  

The initiative is spearheaded by Assemblymember Alicia Hyndman, who sponsored legislation last year that made Juneteenth a state holiday.  

One of the events taking place in Colorado is a flyover to honor the legacy of aviation pioneer Bessie Coleman, who in 1921 became the first African-American woman to earn a pilot’s license.  

Deneen Smith, a 17-year-old Black high school student and aspiring pilot, is inspired by Coleman’s story.  

“That’s what Juneteenth means to me  independence and freedom for African Americans because of what our ancestors struggled through,” Smith said. — Rich McKay and Brendan O’Brien/Reuters 

Duterte to finish 29 flagship projects before term ends

DPWH

The government expects to finish 29 flagship infrastructure projects worth P238.48 billion before President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s term ends in 2022.

It has added 13 more projects for a total of 119 projects worth P4.73 trillion, presidential adviser for flagship infrastructure projects Vivencio B. Dizon told a televised news briefing on Friday.

The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) has yet to release the updated list.

Mr. Dizon said 11 projects worth P126.76 billion have been completed. Fifty-one projects worth P3.28 trillion are expected to be finished beyond Mr. Duterte’s term.

Twenty-eight projects worth P1.09 trillion are in the pipeline, he added.

He said some projects had been canceled as the state tries to be fiscally prudent amid a coronavirus pandemic.

“We really have to be more prudent about how we finance and what we finance,” Mr. Dizon said, noting that many of these funds had been channeled to the government’s pandemic response.

The government has completed 212 airport projects, 446 seaport projects, 10,376 flood mitigation structures, 26,494 kilometers of roads and 5,555 bridges under Mr. Duterte’s Build, Build, Build program, he said.

He said 102 airport projects, 117 seaport projects, 1,090 kilometers of railways, 2,587 flood mitigation structures, 2,515 kilometers of roads and 1,020 bridges were ongoing.

“Nowhere in our history did we exceed 5% of gross domestic product,” Economic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua told the same briefing, referring to state infrastructure spending.

“Ten years ago, that was our aspired goal. We could not even reach more than 2% of GDP.”

Mr. Chua said the government had programmed P1 trillion worth of infrastructure projects in the past three years excluding 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

“We have a strong pipeline to ensure that the next administration will have a very good starting point to build on the progress we have so far,” he said. “We will continue to welcome all possible financing options.”

Government infrastructure spending grew by 45% to P58.2 billion in April from a year earlier, according to data from the Budget department. The spending declined by 34% from a month earlier.

On a monthly basis, infrastructure spending rose by 29% to P253.4 billion in the four months to April.

The higher spending mainly came from various infrastructure projects of the Public Works and Transportation departments.

These include the first segment of the Metro Manila Subway project and North-South Commuter Railway project.

The inter-agency Development Budget Coordination Committee expects state infrastructure spending to have peaked at P324.974 billion in the second quarter from P243 billion in January to March.

The government has a P1.02-trillion infrastructure spending plan for the year.

Meanwhile, the World Bank said it had approved a $280-million (P13.5 billion) loan for the Philippines to boost infrastructure projects in the countryside.

The loan is an additional financing for the Philippine Rural Development Project and will be complemented by a newly approved €18.3-million (P1.06 billion) grant, the multilateral lender said in a statement on Friday.

The bank expects more than 300,000 Filipinos in rural areas to benefit from the project.

BoP 2021 estimate raised on better economic landscape

JANNOON028/FREEPIK

The Philippine central bank raised its balance of payment (BoP) projection for this year on expectations of an improved economic landscape here and overseas.

It now expects the payment position to post a $7.1 billion surplus by year-end, which is lower than the $16-billion surplus last year but higher than the $6.2-billion surplus projection made in March.

“The better-than-expected global economic outlook for the year is driven by upward revisions in the growth prospects of major advanced economies such as the US and Japan, the country’s major trading partners,” the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said in a statement on Friday.

On the local front, government efforts to fast-track, the recovery and the faster rollout of coronavirus vaccines are expected to “boost market confidence and encourage further expansion of domestic economic activities.”

The BoP which measures the country’s transactions with the rest of the world. A surplus means more funds entered the economy.

Cash remittances from migrant Filipino workers are expected to grow by 4% this year, unchanged from the previous estimate.

“This is supported by expectations of improved labor mobility following rising vaccination levels in the country and in major destination countries, easing of travel restrictions and reopening of borders to foreign workers,” the BSP said.

It expects the payment position to decline to a $2.7-billion surplus next year, driven mainly by the anticipated narrower current account surplus of $6.7 billion. This is lower than the $3.8-billion surplus estimate given in March.

The outlook depends on the sustained performance of both exports, which should grow by 6% and imports, which should rise by 10%, the central bank said.

Meanwhile, foreign direct investment and hot money inflows are projected to reach $8.5 billion and $7.4 billion, respectively, as the investment climate improves further.

The emerging gross international reserves in 2022 is estimated to reach $117 billion in anticipation of continued foreign currency deposits by the National Government to address the coronavirus pandemic and fast-track its infrastructure program.

The estimates considered potential renewed coronavirus lockdowns, Zeno Ronald R. Abenoja, senior director at the central bank’s Department of Economic Research told an online news briefing.

The country posted a BoP deficit of $2.8 billion in the first quarter, higher than the $68-million deficit a year earlier after an uptick in net outflows in the financial account, coupled with the reversal of the current account from a surplus to a deficit during the period.

The current account posted a $614-million deficit as the merchandise trade gap widened on import growth amid the gradual reopening of the domestic economy, the BSP said. Lower net receipts of primary income also contributed to the deficit.

The country had a $225-million current account surplus a year earlier.

“An expected economic recovery that would lead to a corresponding pickup and rebound in imports plus remittance growth means the current account may not post a substantial surplus,” Robert Dan J. Roces, chief economist Security Bank Corp. said in a Viber message. — BML

BSP fully awards 28-day bills

BW FILE PHOTO

The Philippine central bank raised P100 billion from its auction of short-term securities on Friday even as rates rose on hints by the US central bank of a looming interest rate increase in 2023.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) fully awarded the 28-day bills from total bids worth P140.525 billion. The auction was 1.4 times oversubscribed, but the demand was 14% lower than P162.69 billion in the previous auction.

The debt paper fetched an average 1.811%, up by 1.4 basis points (bps) from 1.797% last week.

Yields sought by banks ranged from 1.78% to 1.845%, narrower than 1.755-1.87% a week earlier.

The continued uptick in local yields may be traced to the US Federal Reserve’s hints that two 25-bp rate increases are likely to happen toward the end of 2023, said Michael L. Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp.

The possibility of the Fed soon unwinding its bond purchases as the US economy recovers may also have contributed to rising local bond yields.

At its latest two-day meeting, majority of the Federal Open Market Committee members said they expected the Fed to raise its benchmark interest rates twice in 2023.

The Fed also increased its forecast for inflation to 3.4% from 2.4% this year amid a bigger-than-expected impact of supply chain disruptions.

Investors are also becoming more cautious about when the Fed will taper its bond purchases, a measure that many central banks adopted to boost market liquidity amid a coronavirus pandemic. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Q1 external debt declines

KSTUDIO-FREEPIK

The country’s outstanding foreign debt fell by 1.5% or $1.4 billion to $97 billion at the end of March from end-December, after the National Government redeemed maturing bonds and local banks settled their obligations, according to the Philippine central bank.

Year-on-year, the country’s debt stock rose by $15.6 billion after borrowings worth $13.5 billion by the government and private nonbanks, it said in a statement.

External debt refers to all types of borrowings by Philippine residents from nonresidents.

The country’s external debt stock remained at “prudent levels,” the central bank said. Gross international reserves stood at $104.5 billion as of end-March and represented 7.7 times cover for short-term debt based on the original maturity. — Beatrice M. Laforga

COVID-19 cases hit 1.35M

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

The Department of Health (DoH) reported 6,833 coronavirus infections on Friday, bringing the total to 1.35 million.

The death toll rose by 110 to 23,385, while recoveries improved by 3,441 to 1.26 million, it said in a bulletin.

There were 61,776 active cases, 1.2% of which were critical, 92.2% were mild, 3.7% did not show symptoms, 1.7% were severe and 1.22% were moderate.

The agency said 14 duplicates had been removed from the tally, 10 of which were tagged as recoveries and one was tagged as a death.

A total of 30 recoveries were reclassified as active cases, while 60 cases previously tagged as recoveries were reclassified as deaths. Five laboratories failed to submit data on June 16, the agency said.

About 13.4 million Filipinos have been tested for the coronavirus as of June 16, according to DoH’s tracker website.

The coronavirus has sickened about 178.2 million and killed 3.9 million people worldwide, according to the Worldometers website, citing various sources including data from the World Health Organization.

About 162.7 million people have recovered, it said.

Meanwhile, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire urged Filipinos to get vaccinated against the coronavirus to prevent infections and hospitalizations.

This was after reports of infections among vaccinated health workers in Indonesia.

“Let’s get the vaccine,” she said. “Let us not be doubtful,” she told an online news briefing in mixed English and Filipino.

“The vaccines are one of the keys in fighting the pandemic,” she added.

Ms. Vergeire cited “breakthrough infections” that occur after getting complete doses.

Reuters reported on Thursday that more than 350 doctors and medical workers got infected with the coronavirus despite being vaccinated with CoronaVac, with dozens hospitalized.

Most of them did not have symptoms and were self-isolating at home, Reuters said, citing Badai Ismoyo, head of the health office in the district of Kudus in central Java.

Ms. Vergeire cautioned against interpreting incomplete data, noting that the number of health workers there was unknown.

She also said that they would recommend a shortened quarantine and no testing for returning Filipinos who have been fully vaccinated overseas.

The government on June 4 approved the rules cutting the quarantine requirements for fully vaccinated foreign travelers to seven days.

Presidential spokesman Herminio L. Roque, Jr. earlier said the relaxed rules apply to people who got vaccinated in the Philippines.

Returning Filipinos who got vaccinated overseas must still undergo a 10-day quarantine at a facility and four days at home.

A person is considered fully vaccinated two or more weeks after completing his dose, Mr. Roque said.

SC seeks to unclog dockets

The Supreme Court (SC) on Friday released an order amending its rules to unclog case dockets and speed up the judicial system.

Under the order dated May 4, the fully court will now act only on administrative cases penalized with more than two years of suspension or a fine of more than P100,000.

It used to hear cases involving a suspension of more than a year or a fine of more than P40,000.

The en banc will also now only act on cases involving the lifting of judges’ or lawyers’ suspension if the suspension period is more than two years.

Meanwhile, court spokesman Brian Keith F. Hosaka released the Judicial Bar and Council’s (JBC) list of shortlisted candidates for the tribunal’s associate Justice position vacated by now-Chief Justice Alexander G. Gesmundo.

The 15 nominees were down to nine, with candidates Amparo M. Cabotaje-Tang, Sedfrey M. Candelaria, Ramon A. Cruz, Japar B. Dimaampao, Geraldine Faith A. Econg, Rafael R. Lagos, Jose Midas P. Marquez, Maria Filomena D. Singh and Raul B. Villanueva still in the running. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Prisoners allowed to attend wake

@DOJPHILIPPINES

The Justice department has approved the request of the imprisoned wife and son of a farmer who had been a political prisoner for 16 years and who died of cardiac arrest on Sunday to attend his wake on Friday.

In a statement, Fides Lim, spokesperson of Kapatid, a support group for families and friends of political prisoners, asked the government to let them “grieve in peace and pay our last respects to a good father, a good husband and a kind, helpful and brave political prisoner whom his fellow inmates called Tatay.”

“He’s been in prison for 16 years and the only thing he wished for is to walk free and live with his family,” she said, referring to the deceased Jesus Alegre.

After months of illness, Mr. Alegre, a farmer from Negros Occidental, died of cardiac arrest on June 13 at 75 years.

Kapatid earlier said Mr. Alegre and his family had been “wrongfully incarcerated for 16 years.”

He, his 74-year-old wife and 47-year-old son were arrested in 2005 and were convicted of murdering a bodyguard in a land dispute case. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

PAL share trading halted on audit disclaimer

The Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) suspended the trading of PAL Holdings, Inc. shares beginning Friday after the exchange noted a disclaimer of opinion of the company’s independent auditor on the listed company’s annual report.

“We do not express an opinion on the accompanying consolidated financial statements,” SyCip, Gorres, Velayo & Co. said in the company’s annual report, which was disclosed Thursday.

“Because of the significance of the matters described in the Basis for Disclaimer of Opinion on the 2020 Consolidated Financial Statements section of our report, we have not been able to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence to provide a basis for an audit opinion on these consolidated financial statements,” it added.

The local bourse put the company’s stocks on a trading halt at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday after taking note of the disclaimer.

SyCip, Gorres, Velayo said its basis for the disclaimer is that it had “not been able to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence to conclude as to whether the use of the going concern assumption in preparing these consolidated financial statements is appropriate.”

The company’s deals with lessors and creditors have yet to be concluded, it said.

It also noted that PAL Holdings is going on a financial restructuring plan to ensure its business continuity. The company is said to be considering filing a pre-negotiated court-rehabilitation in an overseas jurisdiction.

The listed operator of flag carrier Philippine Airlines widened its net loss after tax to P73.08 billion in 2020 due to the impact of the pandemic on the airlines’ operations. Its net loss attributable to equity holders of the parent company also surged to P71.91 billion in 2020 from P10.31 billion the previous year.

“After a review of PAL’s 2020 Annual Report, the exchange deems that the said report is not in compliance with Rule 68, as amended, of the SRC (Securities

Regulation Code),” the PSE said on Friday, resulting in the trading suspension.

The rule states that “(t)he AFS (audited financial statement) of companies covered by Part II of this Rule with an auditor’s opinion other than unqualified because of deviation(s) from the required financial reporting framework or due to a scope limitation imposed by the company, shall be considered a violation of this Rule.”

PAL Holdings has yet to respond to BusinessWorld’s request for comment.

Shares of PAL Holdings at the local bourse were last traded on Wednesday for P6.05 each.

AC Energy divests in three biomass projects

NEGROS ISLAND Biomass Holdings Inc. has forged binding agreements to divest its shareholdings in three biomass-fired power plants in the Visayas, its part owner Ayala-led AC Energy Corp. said on Friday.

In a stock exchange disclosure, AC Energy said Negros Island Biomass will sell its equity stake to Singapore-based ThomasLloyd CTI Asia Holdings Pte. Ltd., subject to certain conditions.

As a result, ThomasLloyd will have full control over the 20-megawatt (MW) San Carlos BioPower, 25-MW North Negros BioPower, and 25-MW South Negros BioPower.

Negros Island Biomass is a joint venture development holding company between AC Energy and the Zabaleta group. Terms of the sale were not specified in the disclosure.

ThomasLloyd already indirectly owns more than 90% economic equity ownership in the biomass-fired power plants.

“The acquisition by ThomasLloyd allows it to fully consolidate and further expand the biopower business, moving beyond just the power business and into complementary and ancillary businesses,” AC Energy said in the disclosure.

Meanwhile, AC Energy said the divestment of its indirect minority interest will allow it to concentrate efforts on expanding its core solar and wind businesses in an effort to reach 5 gigawatts of renewable capacity by 2025.

It added that the Zabaleta group is still invested in the solar and wind sectors and continues to operate Bronzeoak Clean Energy.

“Bronzeoak Clean Energy continues to provide management services to ThomasLloyd for the three plants, and continues as a bioenergy development and management company,” AC Energy said.

During the first quarter, AC Energy posted a 54% increase in its attributable net income to P829.32 million on the back of higher revenues from electricity sales.

On Friday, shares of AC Energy at the stock exchange rose 4.17% or 34 centavos to finish at P8.50 apiece. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

San Miguel airport project’s launch seen in 45-60 days

Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade said Friday San Miguel Corp. has been quietly working on the P735-billion New Manila International Airport project in Bulacan.

“Kailan magagawa ang groundbreaking, gustong gusto ko rin itulak ‘yan pero mahalaga na alam natin na may ginagawa ang San Miguel at si Ramon Ang,” Mr. Tugade said at a televised press briefing.

(As for when the groundbreaking will take place, I also really want to push for it, but it is important that we know San Miguel and [President and Chief Operating Officer] Ramon S. Ang are already working on it.)

“Wala po akong rason o dahilan na pagdudahan na ‘yung groundbreaking magagawa at magagawa ‘yan in the next 45 to 60 days,” he added.

(I have no reason to doubt that they can do the groundbreaking in the next 45 to 60 days.)

San Miguel’s airport project is expected to be completed in four to six years. It is projected to accommodate 100 million to 200 million passengers annually.

The company has selected Dutch firm Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V., through its local unit Boskalis Philippines, Inc., to undertake land development work for the project, which will be built in the coastal areas of Bulakan town in Bulacan province.

It has tapped Groupe ADP (Aeroports de Paris), Meinhardt Group and Jacobs Engineering Group for the construction of the airport. These firms are behind Singapore’s Changi airport, France’s Charles de Gaulle airport, and the United States’ Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International airport.

The project will include four to six parallel runways, eight taxiways, and three passenger terminal buildings.

San Miguel hopes the project will generate more than a million direct and indirect jobs, and once completed, create up to as much as 30 million tourism jobs nationwide.

San Miguel will also build an expressway that will link the airport to North Luzon Expressway and a rail link through Metro Rail Transit-7.

The government hopes the Bulacan airport will help decongest Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Pasay City. — Arjay L. Balinbin