13 Jan 2011

PKFZ may face 'bankruptcy' next year

Port Klang Free Zone (PKFZ) will not be able to finance its RM4.6 billion soft loan from the Finance Ministry which it must service beginning this year.
It is likely that without federal government intervention, the controversy-ridden mega-project operated by the Port Klang Authority (PKA) will be bankrupt, albeit technically, next year.

"Even if PKFZ is fully tenanted, we will not be able to pay our loan installment by 2012 to the Finance Ministry according to the Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PWC) report," said PKA chairperson Lee Hwa Beng in an interview yesterday.


After three years of operation, the free-trade zone is currently still underutilised. The occupancy rate for light industrial units is close to 50 percent while only about 25 percent of the land is occupied.

The occupancy rate for office blocks is about five percent. Others facilities such as a hotel and an exhibition hall larger than Mines International Exhibition Convention Centre, are still not operational.
Waiting for a lifeline from MOF

The PWC audit report commissioned by former Transport Minister Ong Tee Keat in 2009 to probe the PKFZ scandal, said the project outlay has ballooned from RM1.96 billion when it was conceived in 2001 to a staggering RM12 billion.

PKA was unable to fund its obligations to PKFZ turnkey contractor Kuala Dimensi Sdn Bhd (KDSB) from its own resources when the first scheduled payment was due in 2007.
Following this, the Treasury disbursed a RM4.6 billion 20-year soft loan of RM4.632 billion, which critics consider was a bail out of a failed government project.
The cash flow projections by PKA indicates that it would be unable to service its loan installments between 2012 and 2041, thereby attracting additional interest of another RM5 billion.

This will bring the total project outlay to a whopping RM12.453 billion by year 2051, according to the audit report.
However, Lee, whose term will end on Mac 31, is confident that the federal government will not allow PKFZ to go bankrupt.

"We pay the Finance Ministry, not a third party, and we are part of the federal government. So the port will not become insolvent... definitely business will carry on and the terminal operators can continue to do their business," Lee assured.

The PWC audit report stated that PKA can however avoid or reduce the extra RM5 billion interest cost on two conditions - that (1) it can restructure the treasury's soft loan and (2) make the project viable.

Elegant silence
A 'super' task force set up by cabinet in Oct 2009, was supposed to study the project and offer solutions to the current dire situation.

However Lee claimed he is totally uninformed about the findings of the task force since it was set up.

"I don't know if the task force has come out with a report," said Lee, adding that any solution must be implemented through PKA because it is the statutory body that governs PKFZ.

The high-powered task force, headed by chief secretary to the government Mohd Sidek Hassan, was established by the cabinet after the PKFZ investigation report, commissioned by Ong, was submitted to the cabinet.

It was to determine if there was misconduct or criminal elements on the part of individuals or entities involved in the project and recommend the actions to be taken against them, recommend measures to improve governance as well as PKFZ's management, prepare a restructuring plan and formulate business models for PKA and PKFZ.

It was given six months, to come out with a report which meant the due date was Apr 2010.

But no announcement has been made by the government so far.

Source : http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/153292

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