North Luzon Railways Corporation (Northrail) has concluded an out-of-court settlement agreement over its dispute with China National Machinery & Equipment Corp. Group, now named China National Machinery Industry Corporation (SINOMACH), the former contractor of the 80-kilometer Caloocan to Malolos segment of the Northrail Project.

The settlement agreement, which was approved by the Commission on Audit (COA), and was likewise reviewed and certified legal and enforceable under Philippine law by the Office of the Government Corporate Counsel (OGCC), will save the Philippine government upwards of $100 million, or more than P5 billion in potential payment of claims to SINOMACH, as well as hundreds of millions of pesos in legal fees and arbitration costs, according to the Department of Transportation (DOTr) and Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA).

Under the terms of the agreement, the parties have agreed to waive their claims against each other and declared that there will be no more payment by Northrail to SINOMACH, and vice versa; and share the remaining arbitration fees in equal proportions.

As of March 2017, Northrail, a fully-owned subsidiary of BCDA, has already spent P161 million for its participation in arbitration proceedings, including fees for its legal consultants. Without the settlement agreement, Northrail expects to spend an additional P500 million if the arbitration hearings originally scheduled in November 2017 would take place.

Besides avoiding the potential $106 million liability and more than P500 million additional legal expenses, DOTR said the agreement will also ensure that there will be no more contractual issues that may hamper or compromise the development of Philippine National Railways (PNR) Manila to Clark Railway project, which is one of the top priorities under the administration’s Build, Build, Build infrastructure program.

The PNR Manila to Clark Railway project is expected to serve as a catalyst to decongesting Metro Manila, and at the same time bring growth to the regions north of the capital, particularly Central Luzon. The railway project, which was conceptualized as early as 1995 when Northrail was incorporated, has long been delayed and was subject of many controversies. DOTr has already expressed its full commitment to finally deliver this project before the end of the current administration’s term.

The settlement will also put an end to the arbitration proceedings initiated by SINOMACH in 2012 after it was notified by Northrail that it can no longer proceed with the implementation of the project due to serious legal issues in the contracts. The seat of the arbitration proceedings is in Hong Kong.

In February 2016, Northrail lost the first phase of the arbitration proceedings. The Arbitral Tribunal in Hong Kong published a partial award, which upheld the validity of the contracts with SINOMACH. Having found SINOMACH’s claims meritorious, the Tribunal also ordered Northrail to bear all costs relating to the first phase of arbitration. It thereafter directed the parties to proceed with the next phase, which is the determination of liability and extent of liability. SINOMACH is claiming almost $106 million from Northrail for costs it incurred under the contracts and for damages.

Despite the signing of the settlement agreement, both Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade and BCDA president Vivencio Dizon said the administration will still go after government officials involved in allegedly anomalous and/or overpriced contracts.

Image courtesy of tiverylucky at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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