The Department of Tourism (DOT) and the Department of Transportation (DOTr) have partnered to develop at least 85 airports across the country to promote tourism growth. “We are talking about developing our airports so that we have more capacity to receive flights from other destinations and accommodate more tourists to the country,” DOT Undersecretary Arturo Boncato Jr. said in an interview. The convergence programme aims to set criteria for tourism-friendly airports to be prioritized, which will have a significant impact on visitor growth. “We also like to develop a certain path in developing airports that need initial help. There are small airports that would require some attention. They’re not primary; they are secondary, and they probably don’t have the desired number of tourists yet, but given the potential of the destination, we could give more attention to it in developing,” Boncato said. The DOT wants to primarily focus on modernizing the infrastructure and facilities of the airports in the provinces to provide direct flights for tourists in major gateways of the country such as Manila, Cebu, Davao, and Clark. “For instance, we would like to give as an example the Davao International Airport. There is a small airport in Mati, Davao Oriental. If you travel by land, that’s around three hours from Davao International Airport, but if we open the small airport in Mati that would help improve the economy of not only Davao Oriental but also the Compostela Valley all the way to the eastern seaboard going to Surigao. So that is the kind of concept that we would like to roll out in developing our airports. So there’s a hub and there’s spokes - small airports to support the big airports,” he said. He added that the DOT is eyeing to tap the existing budget from the DOTr for the development of regional airports. It is a three-year rolling pipeline in terms of developing airports. The Tourism Department will provide inputs to the DOTr on the airports to be prioritized, which will be based on increasing demand of tourists. Meanwhile, Cherry Lyn Rodolfo, consultant of the Asia Foundation, has proposed that the development of the airports should be based on the following categories: development of new airports in identified tourist destination areas (TDA) without any existing airport facility; upgrading (expansion, improvement, rehabilitation) of an existing airport serving commercial traffic and general aviation in the same location; transfer of existing airports to a new location within the same province to address physical constraints of the airport; development of a new airport in an identified TDA with existing airport but not serving any commercial traffic; and development of a new airport in an identified TDA with existing airports serving commercial traffic. “These airports will be developed in 20 clusters covering the Northern, Central and Southern Philippines covering 49 tourism destination areas,” Rodolfo said. The current prioritization criteria of DOTr on locally-funded development projects for airports are based on the number of cargoes and aircraft traffic handled for the past three years, service to development centres, and those serving areas with economic potential/viable geographical location of airports. Currently, there are 13 domestic airports and 12 international airports across the country that are either completed or have on-going improvements and upgrades, according to the DOTr. -- The convergence programme is expected to lead to the signing of a formal agreement between DOTr Secretary Arthur Tugade and DOT Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat on the criteria for the prioritization and development of primary and secondary airports in the country. #1087.21