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Friday, November 15, 2024

San Miguel pursuing plan on 1.2-km Boracay bridge

San Miguel Corp. is pushing for the approval of its unsolicited proposal to construct a 1.2-kilometer bridge from Caticlan in Malay, Aklan to Boracay Island for P5.5 billion. 

“The Boracay project is the most important component to save Boracay.  There is a need to push for government approval.  Someone is blocking it for personal reason.  I think we should set aside that personal reason,” San Miguel president and chief operating officer Ramon Ang. 

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San Miguel submitted the proposal to the Department of Public Works and Highways, but the agency has yet to issue an original proponent status for the project. 

The project is a 1.2-kilometer limited-access bridge infrastructure between Boracay Island and Caticlan in Malay, Aklan in the main island of Panay.

The bridge is not envisioned to cater to vehicular through-traffic, so as not to congest the island.  It will be provided with loading/unloading areas on both ends to process the movement of commuters, solid waste, goods, and supplies.

San Miguel currently operates the Boracay Airport in Caticlan and is upgrading the airstrip into a world-class airport.

Ang earlier said building the Caticlan-Boracay bridge would be a novel approach to resolve Boracay’s environmental woes and bring about growth to other areas in Aklan.

The bridge, he said, would reduce the need for tourists and tourism workers to stay on the island.

The accessibility of Boracay, through the proposed bridge, would enable developers to build hotels and resorts outside the island. These can be premiere destinations in their own right, as these areas also boast of beautiful beaches and coastlines, Ang said.

New establishments can be positioned as alternative or more affordable accommodations for tourists, Ang said. He said accommodations for workers could also be built.

Ang said with the new bridge, thousands of tourism workers from neighboring provinces would no longer need to reside in Boracay and contribute to the island’s population growth and wastes.

“The development of neighboring areas would boost Aklan’s economy as a whole while keeping the island of Boracay sustainable for generations to come,” Ang said.

Ang said the construction of a bridge could also resolve the garbage and sewage problem on the island and could be used as a safe way to deliver sewage via pipes which would be built into the bridge design out of Boracay. Maintenance and repair will also be easier to manage, he said.

This will also resolve the garbage disposal issue, as the daily refuse could be easily transported out of the island, removing the need to put up a dump site, he said.

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