Airport Expansion Project Still Up in the Air
| Travel Internet Domain | Airport Expansion Project Still Up in the Air |
| VolP Callers Sidestep ICE | E.U. Treaty Hinges on CAFTA |
| Would CAFTA Open Human Organ Trade? |
| Wal-Mart-Controlled
Supermarkets Popping | Labor Shortage Nears ‘Crisis’
costa rica news
By Peter Krupa
Tico
Times Staff | pkrupa@ticotimes.net
The long, bumpy road of Costa
Rica's four-year contract dispute with a private consortium
over the management of the country's main airport has been
getting longer and bumpier, and Tuesday it made a U-turn.
That was when representatives
of the Public Works and Transport Ministry (MOPT) announced
that the government would return to the process started last
December to rescind the $120 million contract it granted to
Alterra Partners in 2001 to manage and upgrade the Juan
Santamaría International Airport northwest of San José (TT,
Dec. 22, 2006).
“The contract hasn't borne the
fruit that all Costa Ricans wanted,” said Public Works and
Transport Minister Karla González as she announced the
decision.
What this effectively means is
another ultimatum: Alterra has 60 days to suggest a solution,
and MOPT will review it and provide a response within 30 days.
That solution, González said, could include pulling out and
leaving the government to find someone else to administer the
airport.
Failed Negotiations
 |
Contentious Project: Upgrades to the Juan Santamaría International
Airport just west of San José have experienced
significant delays as the government and the private
company that manages the facility have not been able to
come to an agreement over the contract.
|
Mónica
Quesada | Tico Times
|
For the past six months, the Technical
Council of the Civil Aviation Authority (CETAC), whose parent
entity is MOPT, and Alterra, whose parent entity is Bechtel, a
British conglomerate, had been trying to hammer out an
agreement that would satisfy both sides.
At stake is the financing of the
long-suffering airport expansion project, one of the
obligations in Alterra's 20-year contract. Without certain
financial guarantees, the International Finance Group (IFC), a
private arm of the World Bank, is leery of lending the $48
million necessary to complete the airport upgrade.
At the end of last month, MOPT
laid down five conditions that any agreement between the two
sides would have to meet (TT, June 1).
One of them is that no cap be
allowed on the amount of fines Alterra must pay as a result of
delays in the airport expansion. That condition, said Viviana
Martín, Vice-Minister of Transport and president of CETAC, was
the sticking point in the recent negotiations with financiers.
“The reason is legal,” González
said Tuesday, noting that Costa Rican law does not allow a
limit to how much a business can be fined for non-compliance
with a contract.
Martín said the government is
still adding up the fines Alterra will have to pay, and
González added that the contract is for future work as well,
so it “makes no sense” to limit fines on a job that has yet to
be delivered.
Financing
Uncertain
Since it announced that it
would not accept the contract conditions MOPT laid out in May,
the IFC has been in negotiations with the government to try
and salvage the situation.
But now that MOPT has again
begun the process to rescind the Alterra contract – and says
it will not bend on the five conditions it laid out for the
contract restructuring – it is unclear where the financing of
the airport improvements stands, with or without Alterra as
the company holding the contract.
Adriana Gómez, IFC spokeswoman
for Latin America, said in an e-mail that, “We continue our
conversations with the Costa Rican authorities regarding our
restructuring proposal … to reach a solution.”
Alterra issued a guarded
statement as well.
“It is our firm wish that
during the remediation period established by CETAC, an
agreement is reached with the banks and the government,” the
statement said.
González and Martín made clear
that a new company could take over the same contract should
Alterra decide to withdraw.
The Juan Santamaría contract
dispute began in 2003 when the Comptroller General's Office
issued a report that called into question fee hikes Alterra
had arranged with CETAC and MOPT in 2001 (TT, March 28, 2003).
Construction on the airport
expansion stalled as proposals for how to both satisfy
contract concerns and keep Alterra in the black went back and
forth, with no result. Construction restarted in 2006 after a
government ultimatum (TT, Dec. 16, 2005) and Alterra scrambled
to finish some of the terminals in time for the tourist high
season (TT, Nov. 10, 2006).
Yet by the end of that year,
government officials had started the process to rescind
Alterra's contract. Construction is now stalled once more, and
MOPT officials say Alterra will have to pay fines for all the
construction delays.
| Travel Internet Domain | Airport Expansion Project Still Up in the Air |
| VolP Callers Sidestep ICE | E.U. Treaty Hinges on CAFTA |
| Would CAFTA Open Human Organ Trade? |
| Wal-Mart-Controlled
Supermarkets Popping | Labor Shortage Nears ‘Crisis’ |
|