NA committee
discusses BOT controversy
HÀ
NỘI - The National Assembly (NA) Standing Committee held a working session on
supervising implementation of BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer) traffic projects
in the wake of heated protests over one of them in the southern province of
Tiền Giang.
The National Assembly (NA) Standing Committee held a
working session on supervising implementation of BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer)
traffic projects in the wake of heated protests over one of them in the
southern province of Tiền Giang. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Trí
The BOT model, which primarily cedes
construction of public traffic infrastructure to the private sector, has been
utilised by the Government to alleviate the burden on the State Budget,
especially after official development assistance (ODA) began running thin.
Chairman of
the NA’s Economic Affairs Committee, Vũ Hồng Thanh, said BOT projects were a
necessity and that in recent years, they had significantly improved the
traffic system, especially roads and bridges, helped reduce travel time and
“raised the competitiveness of the economy.”
In the
2011-2016 period, the Ministry of Transport (MoT) mobilised VNĐ171 trillion
(US$7.524 billion) for traffic projects, with 59 BOT projects accounting for
90.2 per cent (55 projects have been completed).
These
included many key connectivity projects including the Hồ Chí Minh Road (the
section passing through the Central Highlands) and expansion of the
trans-Việt Nam highway, National Road 1.
However, a
report by the thematic supervision working group has pointed out numerous
issues plaguing BOT projects, especially in terms of toll collection that is
used to recoup invested capital.
Public
feedback, especially from local residents and guild associations, has not
been accounted for in determining where the toll booths would be located. In
many cases, the toll has kept increasing while the quality of the roads
degraded, according to the report.
NA Vice
Chairman Đỗ Bá Tỵ said the locations of tollbooths and the toll levels were
the direct causes of people’s protests. Tỵ said the Government should “buy
back” the rights of toll collection from booths located less than the minimum
mandated 70km from the nearest booth.
Many members
of the NA Standing Committee agreed that in the coming time, the government
needs to conduct a thorough review of all existing BOT tollbooths, promulgate
fresh criteria for their installation and establishing appropriate price
brackets. They also suggested application of electronic toll collection on
all national roads starting from 2019.
NA
Chairwoman Nguyễn Thị Kim Ngân said the problems afflicting BOT projects in
recent times arose because legal documents were not comprehensive enough,
inadequate project planning led to frequent cost overruns and incompetent
sub-contractors were selected without going through a proper bidding process.
Ngân
asked state agencies to consolidate laws on BOT investment and soon develop
the Law on Public-Private Partnership, creating a consistent legal framework
for both sides – the state and the private enterprises – to observe signed
contracts. In the meantime, state agencies should urgently deal with
regulations that are impractical and unreasonable, she said. — VNS
Public
outrage
The Cai Lậy
BOT tollbooth (at km1999+300 on the National Road section that passes through
the southern province of Tiền Giang) has seen vehement protests.
From last
Sunday, car drivers have been heavily protesting the tollbooth, citing its
“inappropriate location” and “outrageous tolls.”
Drivers
passing through the booth have collectively used small-currency notes to pay
the toll, leading to heavy congestion as the cashiers need a lot of time to
go through piles of cash to check whether the full fee has been paid.
On August 13
at 6:45pm, with hundreds of cars waiting in line, the toll booth had to let
all cars go through for free until 2am the next morning.
The protests
actually began in July, even before the toll booths were operational, when
Facebook groups called on car drivers to use small-denomination currency
notes to pay the toll as a means of peaceful protest.
In addition,
car drivers have told each other to go other routes to bypass the booth,
which soon becomes a bother for nearby residents and a burden on smaller
roads not designed for heavy loads of traffic.
The investor
of the Tiền Giang BOT project said the setting up of the tollbooth on
National Road 1 to collect toll from cars running on National Road 1 and the
bypass road is “totally reasonable,” and was approved by the MoT,
Ministry of Finance, and Tiền Giang People’s Committee.
Trần
Văn Bon, Tiền Giang’s Director of the Department of Transportation, has asked
the Việt Nam Road Administration to think up ways to reduce the tolls and the
agency said the proposal could be feasible. - VNS
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Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 8, 2017
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