DAVAO CITY BUCANA BRIDGE: A GIFT
By Doc. Allan Botuyan
How Davao City got a modern P3.2-Billion Bucana Bridge at NO COST to the national government.
🇵ðŸ‡It is a Donation, Not a Debt
No Repayment: Unlike a loan from the World Bank, Japan (JICA), or even other Chinese banks, the Philippine government does not have to pay this money back. It is a GIFT (Official Development Assistance or ODA).
🇵ðŸ‡No Interest: Since there is no principal debt, there is no interest accumulating over time. It does not add to the national debt of the Philippines.
The arrangement that made the Bucana Bridge "basically free" for the Philippines was structured through a specific diplomatic and financial instrument called an "Agreement on Economic and Technical Cooperation."
This wasn't a standard business deal; it was a government-to-government transaction designed so that no money ever needed to leave the Philippine treasury for the construction.
Here is the "Architecture of the Deal" explaining how it worked:
1. The Legal Umbrella: "The Basket of Grants"
The bridge was not negotiated as a single, isolated item. It was part of a larger "basket" of aid promised by China to the Philippines under the Duterte administration.
The Agreement: In November 2018, and later solidified in December 2020, the two governments signed an Agreement on Economic and Technical Cooperation.
The Pledge: China pledged roughly 500 Million Renminbi (approx. $75 Million USD) in grant funding. This "pot of money" was designated to pay for specific infrastructure projects, with the Bucana Bridge being the largest item on the list.
2. The Payment Mechanism: "Direct Payment"
This is the key to why it felt "free" but also why it "stalled" initially. The Philippines never received the cash.
How it works: When the contractor (China Road and Bridge Corporation) finishes a section of the bridge, they send the bill to the Philippine DPWH for verification.
Who writes the check: Once the DPWH verifies the work is done, they do not pay the bill. Instead, they forward the approval to the Chinese government (specifically the Ministry of Commerce/CIDCA). The Chinese government then transfers the money directly to the Chinese contractor's bank account.
The Result: The money stays within the Chinese financial ecosystem, moving from the Chinese state to a Chinese company, while the Philippines receives the physical infrastructure.
3. The Condition: "Restricted Bidding"
To make this arrangement happen, the Philippines had to agree to a specific hiring process.
The Shortlist: The Philippines was not allowed to open the bidding to Filipino companies (like DMCI or Megawide) or other international firms (like Japanese or Korean contractors).
The Selection: China provided a shortlist of three state-owned Chinese companies. The Philippine government (DPWH) then conducted a bidding process only among those three. The winner was China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC).
4. The Compromise: "Localized Implementation"
In many aid projects, the donor country controls everything (design, management, labor).
However, for the Bucana Bridge, the Philippines negotiated a "Localized Implementation Mode."
What this meant: Even though China paid for and built the bridge, the DPWH (Philippines) remained the Project Manager.
Why this matters: This arrangement gave the Philippines the authority to enforce its own safety standards and design preferences, preventing the "ghost project" issues seen in other countries where donors build infrastructure that doesn't meet local needs.
This structure allowed the Philippines to treat the bridge as a "gift" (an asset with zero liability) while China treated it as an "export of services" (keeping their own companies employed).
Countries don't usually give away ₱3 billion without a strategic reason. One is Diplomatic Goodwill ("Soft Power"):
By building a highly visible landmark in Davao City—the hometown of the former President Rodrigo Roa Duterte—China builds political goodwill and strengthens ties with the local government and population.
