Build Better More
Build Better More (BBM) is the flagship infrastructure program of the administration of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in the Philippines, initiated in 2022 to modernize national connectivity, mitigate flood risks, and bolster economic productivity through targeted public works until 2028.[1] Expanding on the preceding Build! Build! Build! initiative, BBM encompasses 185 flagship projects with a total estimated cost of PHP 9.5 trillion, prioritizing physical infrastructure such as roads, railways, and airports alongside human capital and innovation efforts.[2][3] Financing draws from official development assistance—securing over USD 7.2 billion primarily from Japan—public-private partnerships under the updated PPP Code, and domestic appropriations, aiming to sustain debt levels while leveraging concessional loans for long-term viability.[2] Approximately 83% of projects focus on transportation and connectivity, including the Metro Manila Subway and regional expressways, intended to reduce logistics costs and enhance regional integration.[2][3] Notable progress includes completed road networks and airport upgrades that have improved local access, though implementation has faced hurdles like right-of-way delays, addressed via Republic Act 12289 to expedite land acquisition and project timelines.[4] Critics, including economic analysts, have questioned the program's debt implications and benefit distribution, yet official assessments highlight its role in job generation and GDP acceleration through empirical multipliers from infrastructure investment.Background and Origins
Launch Under Marcos Administration
The Build Better More (BBM) program commenced under the administration of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who assumed office on July 1, 2022, succeeding Rodrigo Duterte.[1] This initiative builds upon and expands the prior Build! Build! Build! (BBB) framework, emphasizing enhanced quality, efficiency, and holistic development in infrastructure delivery.[3] The program aligns with the administration's "Bagong Pilipinas" vision, targeting sustained economic growth through improved connectivity, resilience, and public services from 2022 to 2028.[5] BBM incorporates 194 infrastructure projects spanning transportation, energy, health, digital connectivity, and water resources, with a focus on flagship initiatives to accelerate implementation.[5] Early efforts prioritized streamlining project approvals and diversifying funding, including public-private partnerships (PPPs), to address bottlenecks from the previous program.[3] By March 9, 2023, Marcos approved an initial slate of flagship projects valued at approximately 9 trillion pesos (P9-T), marking a significant ramp-up in commitments and signaling the program's operational launch.[6] The approval encompassed critical sectors such as rail systems, airports, and flood control, with allocations designed to boost GDP contributions from infrastructure spending to around 5-6% annually.[6] Initial disbursements in 2022 and 2023 focused on continuing viable BBB projects while integrating new priorities, such as sustainable energy and rural development, to mitigate delays from right-of-way issues and procurement hurdles observed in earlier efforts.[7] Official statements from the Presidential Communications Office highlighted BBM's intent to "build with a heart for people's comfort, security, and progress," underscoring a shift toward people-centered outcomes over sheer volume.[1]Transition from Build! Build! Build!
The Build Better More (BBM) program succeeded the Build! Build! Build! (BBB) initiative upon President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s inauguration on June 30, 2022, with the Marcos administration committing to sustain and expand the prior program's unfinished projects while introducing enhancements for improved efficiency and scope.[8] [9] BBM retained many BBB flagship projects, such as major transportation and connectivity initiatives, but increased the total number of high-impact priority projects from BBB's 119 to 194, as approved by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Board on March 9, 2023, encompassing a broader range of sectors including digital and urban development.[10] [11] Key shifts included a stronger emphasis on project quality and sustainability—reflected in the "better" component—alongside diversified financing strategies that prioritized public-private partnerships (PPPs) and optimized official development assistance to mitigate fiscal pressures from BBB's heavy reliance on loans.[12] [3] Despite these advancements, the transition encountered challenges, including inherited delays from BBB's implementation bottlenecks, such as right-of-way acquisition issues and limited absorptive capacity in agencies, which persisted into BBM and contributed to slower project rollout in areas like roads and expressways.[13] [14] Analyses have highlighted a lack of long-term strategic coherence across administrations, with project designs occasionally revised, potentially disrupting continuity, though official statements underscore BBM's role in accelerating progress toward economic targets like 6-7% annual GDP growth through enhanced infrastructure.[13] [15]Strategic Objectives and Framework
Economic and Growth Targets
The Build Better More (BBM) infrastructure program aligns with the Philippine Development Plan (PDP) 2023-2028, which establishes macroeconomic targets including an annual GDP growth rate of 6.5-8 percent starting from 2024 to foster economic transformation, job creation, and poverty reduction.[16] This growth ambition is projected to average 6.0-7.0 percent from 2026 to 2028 under revised medium-term assumptions, reflecting resilience amid global uncertainties while prioritizing infrastructure as a key driver.[17] BBM supports these objectives by accelerating investments in high-impact projects to enhance productivity, attract foreign direct investment, and distribute economic opportunities beyond urban centers.[12] A core target within BBM is sustaining infrastructure outlays at 5-6 percent of GDP annually through 2028, up from prior levels to address longstanding gaps in connectivity, energy, and utilities that constrain expansion.[18] For 2026, this translates to a record allocation of ₱1.556 trillion, equivalent to 5 percent of projected GDP, funding expansions in transportation, power, and digital systems to boost sectoral efficiencies and multiplier effects on output.[19] [20] The program encompasses 194 flagship initiatives valued at approximately ₱9 trillion in total, selected by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Board in March 2023 for their potential to catalyze private sector participation and long-term competitiveness.[21] [22] These targets emphasize causal linkages between capital spending and growth, with infrastructure intended to generate employment in construction and ancillary industries while improving logistics to lower costs for manufacturing and agriculture.[22] Disbursements reached ₱1.42 trillion in 2023 (5.8 percent of GDP), positioning the economy to meet PDP benchmarks despite external pressures, though independent assessments note risks of sub-6 percent growth if implementation lags or fiscal constraints intensify.[23] The framework prioritizes concessional financing and public-private partnerships to maintain debt sustainability, aiming for a debt-to-GDP ratio below 60 percent by fiscal year-end while channeling resources toward high-return assets.[24]Sectoral Priorities and Rationale
The Build Better More program prioritizes infrastructure investments in transportation and connectivity, energy and utilities, water resources, social services including health and education, digital infrastructure, agriculture and rural development, and resilient and green systems. These sectors were selected to address persistent gaps in logistics efficiency, energy reliability, service access, and vulnerability to climate risks, which hinder economic productivity and inclusivity.[25] The program's framework, outlined in the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028, targets infrastructure spending at 5.0-5.8 percent of GDP annually to align with long-term goals of reducing poverty and achieving upper-middle-income status by 2040, emphasizing integrated master plans, public-private partnerships, and conflict-sensitive approaches in underserved regions like BARMM.[25][11] Transportation and Connectivity forms a core priority, encompassing rail (e.g., 76.9 kilometers of new lines), roads, ports, and airports to establish multimodal networks. The rationale centers on lowering high logistics costs—estimated at 20 percent of GDP compared to regional peers—and enhancing trade integration into global value chains, which boosts manufacturing competitiveness and job creation in rural and conflict-affected areas.[25] Investments here aim to improve mobility for 110 million Filipinos, reducing travel times and supporting post-pandemic economic recovery by facilitating domestic and international commerce.[25] Energy, Power, and Utilities focuses on expanding renewable sources and grid reliability to meet rising demand projected at 5-7 percent annual growth through 2028. Prioritization stems from vulnerabilities exposed by supply disruptions and high prices, which inflate production costs; the sector seeks to increase renewable share via amendments to the Electric Power Industry Reform Act, ensuring affordable access while mitigating fossil fuel dependence and climate impacts.[25] This supports industrial expansion and household affordability, with rationale tied to energy security as a prerequisite for sustained GDP growth above 6 percent.[25] Health, Agriculture, and Rural Development emphasizes hospitals, irrigation, cold chains, and rural roads to enhance food security and human capital. With agriculture contributing 9 percent to GDP but facing productivity lags due to poor infrastructure, priorities include resilient logistics to combat inflation (e.g., food prices at 10.3 percent in late 2022) and buffer stocking for supply stability.[25] Health investments target 8 doctors and 7 nurses per 10,000 population by 2028, rationalized by evidence linking infrastructure deficits to uneven outcomes in underserved regions, thereby fostering inclusive growth and resilience against shocks like pandemics or disasters.[25] Urban and Digital Infrastructure, including broadband (targeting 78.69 Mbps speeds) and housing (1 million units annually), addresses urbanization pressures and the digital divide affecting 50 million unconnected Filipinos. The rationale prioritizes these for competitiveness in knowledge-based industries, with ecozones and R&D parks enabling technology transfer and MSME scaling; this counters reliance on low-value exports by promoting digital platforms and green spaces for livable communities.[25] Overall, sectoral choices integrate resilience against hazards—reducing annual losses estimated at 0.5-1 percent of GDP—through hybrid green-grey systems, ensuring long-term sustainability amid climate threats.[25]Infrastructure Flagship Projects
Transportation and Connectivity
The Build Better More program's transportation and connectivity initiatives prioritize expanding and modernizing physical infrastructure to reduce logistics costs, alleviate urban congestion, and integrate regional economies, with 134 of the 207 flagship projects dedicated to these areas.[26] These efforts build on the previous administration's foundations by emphasizing high-capacity systems funded through official development assistance (ODA), public-private partnerships (PPP), and general appropriations, targeting completion timelines extending to 2028 and beyond.[22] Railway projects form a core pillar, aiming to provide efficient mass transit and freight corridors. The North-South Commuter Railway, spanning 147 kilometers from Clark to Calamba via the National Capital Region (NCR), Regions III and IV-A, has an indicative cost of PHP 873.62 billion and remains ongoing with ODA from the Asian Development Bank and Japan, expected beyond 2028.[22][23] The Metro Manila Subway Phase 1, a PHP 488.48 billion underground system in NCR funded by Japan, is under construction to link key urban nodes.[22] Other notable efforts include the MRT Line 7 (PHP 77 billion, PPP, NCR and Region III, targeting partial operations by Q4 2025), LRT-1 Cavite Extension (PHP 64.92 billion, ODA/PPP from Japan), and MRT-3 rehabilitation (PHP 29.61 billion, ODA from Japan), all implemented by the Department of Transportation (DOTr) to boost daily ridership capacity.[22][15] Regional lines such as the Mindanao Railway Phase 1 (PHP 81.69 billion, Region XI) and PNR South Long Haul (PHP 175.32 billion, NCR to Region V) address inter-island gaps, though progress varies with some in pre-preparation stages.[22] Road and expressway developments target expanding high-standard highways from 523 kilometers to 1,963 kilometers, enhancing freight movement and reducing travel times.[27] Key projects include the NLEX-SLEX Connector Road (PHP 23.20 billion, PPP, NCR, ongoing to 2024), Cavite-Laguna Expressway (CALAX, PHP 35.74 billion, PPP, Region IV-A, targeting 2025 completion), and Central Luzon Link Expressway Phase I (PHP 14.94 billion, ODA from Japan, Region III).[22] The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) oversees initiatives like the Panguil Bay Bridge (PHP 8.03 billion, ODA from Korea, Region X, ongoing to 2024) and Southeast Metro Manila Expressway (PHP 31.32 billion, PPP, NCR and IV-A, to 2025), which connect underserved areas and support tourism corridors.[22][28] Airport expansions focus on increasing capacity for domestic and international travel, with DOTr-led projects such as the New Manila International Airport in Bulacan (PHP 735.63 billion, PPP, Region III, ongoing) and upgrades to Laguindingan International Airport (PHP 12.75 billion, PPP, Region X).[22] Seaport enhancements, including the Davao Sasa Port modernization (PHP 9.88 billion, PPP, Region XI) by the Philippine Ports Authority, aim to streamline cargo handling.[22] As of mid-2025, these initiatives have advanced through groundbreakings and phased constructions, contributing to improved regional links despite delays in some PPP negotiations.[29]Energy, Power, and Utilities
The Build Better More program emphasizes energy infrastructure to address chronic power shortages, high electricity costs, and growing demand driven by industrialization and population growth, with a focus on expanding generation capacity, modernizing transmission networks, and integrating renewables while maintaining reliable baseload sources. Approved infrastructure flagship projects in the power sector include developments in solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, and conventional plants, alongside grid enhancements to interconnect islands and reduce outages. The Department of Energy has prioritized these to achieve energy security, targeting a diverse mix that avoids over-reliance on intermittent renewables without adequate storage or backups.[30][31] Key progress includes the energization of 2.5 million additional households since 2022, expanding access in rural and off-grid areas through mini-grids and diesel-solar hybrids, which has supported rural electrification rates approaching 90% nationally. In his July 2025 State of the Nation Address, President Marcos committed to completing nearly 200 power plants by the end of his term in 2028, capable of powering four million homes, over 2,000 factories, and thousands of offices, with initial phases accelerating construction of natural gas, coal, and renewable facilities to add thousands of megawatts. Notable completions include the interconnection of new plants in Mindanao, alleviating regional deficits that previously caused rolling blackouts.[32][33][34] A milestone in renewable integration occurred on September 16, 2025, with the inauguration of the Philippines' first solar baseload power plant, combining photovoltaic panels with battery energy storage systems to provide dispatchable power independent of sunlight variability, marking a step toward hybrid solutions for grid stability. Renewable energy investments approved under the administration reached ₱3.54 trillion by mid-2025, a 71% increase from pre-2022 levels, driven by incentives for solar and wind projects, though critics note that without parallel baseload expansions like natural gas or nuclear, intermittency risks persist. The Philippine Independent Power Producers Association endorsed the 200-plant pipeline in July 2025, projecting lower long-term costs through competitive bidding and foreign partnerships.[31][35][30] Utilities enhancements under the program target efficient distribution and water-energy nexus projects, including upgrades to substations and pipelines for integrated power-water supply in urban areas, with public-private partnerships funding transmission lines to handle increased loads from data centers and manufacturing. In October 2025, Marcos signed the Philippine National Nuclear Energy Safety Act, establishing a regulatory framework for small modular reactors and potential revival of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, aiming to add nuclear capacity by the late 2020s as a low-carbon baseload option amid coal phase-down pressures. These efforts align with the program's P9 trillion investment framework, though implementation faces challenges from regulatory delays and financing gaps in remote utilities.[36][37]Health, Agriculture, and Rural Development
The Build Better More program allocates significant resources to health infrastructure to expand capacity and improve service delivery, particularly through new hospital constructions and enhancements to public health systems. Key initiatives include the UP Philippine General Hospital (PGH) Cancer Center, a 300-bed facility in Manila designed to provide multi-specialty services alongside educational and research components, approved under a public-private partnership (PPP) modality.[38] The UP PGH Diliman Project proposes a 400-bed tertiary hospital in the National Capital Region (NCR), Bulacan, and Rizal areas, pending approval, to address growing demand for specialized care.[38] Complementing these, the Health Facilities Enhancement Program (HFEP), led by the Department of Health (DOH), targets the construction and upgrading of hospitals and health centers across the country to bolster overall healthcare resilience.[39] Agriculture and irrigation form a cornerstone of the program's rural-focused efforts, with multiple flagship projects under the National Irrigation Administration (NIA) and Department of Agriculture (DA) aimed at expanding irrigated land and enhancing productivity. The Jalaur River Multipurpose Project Stage II in Iloilo, funded by official development assistance (ODA), is ongoing and expected to irrigate 9,500 hectares while supporting flood control and water supply.[38] Other NIA-led initiatives include the repair and restoration of communal and national irrigation systems nationwide, extension of existing systems, and small-scale projects such as the Bayabas Small Reservoir (47.479 million cubic meters capacity) and various groundwater pump irrigations, all funded via general appropriations and in various stages of implementation as of March 2023.[38] Preparatory efforts encompass larger developments like the Tumauini River Multipurpose Project and Ilocos Norte-Ilocos Sur-Abra Irrigation Project, focusing on reservoirs, canals, and hydropower integration to achieve rice sufficiency in targeted regions.[38] Rural development receives targeted support through connectivity and post-production infrastructure to reduce losses and stimulate economic activity in agrarian areas. The Farm-to-Market Road Development Program (FMRDP), implemented by the DA with general appropriations, covers 16,756.82 kilometers of roads nationwide to link production sites to markets, ongoing as part of broader agricultural enhancement.[38] Specialized roads, such as those connecting sugarcane farms to mills under the Sugar Regulatory Administration, further aid commodity-specific rural economies.[38] Additional components include the rehabilitation and construction of fish ports, the National Rice Program for production support, and the Second Additional Financing for Philippine Rural Development Project, an ODA-backed effort to scale investments in rural value chains.[38] These projects, totaling among the 194 infrastructure flagships approved in March 2023 with an aggregate value exceeding 9 trillion pesos, prioritize irrigation and water supply as bulk sectors to foster sustainable rural growth.[11]Urban and Digital Infrastructure
The Build Better More program includes several flagship initiatives aimed at enhancing urban resilience through flood management and river rehabilitation projects in densely populated areas. The Metro Manila Flood Management Project, Phase I, rehabilitates pumping stations in cities such as Manila, Pasay, Taguig, Makati, and Malabon while constructing new facilities to reduce urban flood risks by addressing solid waste accumulation in waterways.[38] Similarly, the Parañaque Spillway and Tunnel Project develops an open channel and underground tunnel to divert excess water from the Laguna de Bay lakeshore into Manila Bay, mitigating flooding in southern Metro Manila urban zones.[38] In regional centers, the Davao City Flood Control and Drainage Project improves drainage along the Matina, Talomo, and Davao Rivers to counter flood vulnerabilities exacerbated by rapid urbanization.[38] Urban development efforts also encompass large-scale rehabilitation and green space creation, notably the Pasig River Urban Development Project, which has advanced through multiple phases under the Marcos administration. Phase 4, launched on October 19, 2025, extends a 530-meter riverside esplanade behind the Manila Central Post Office, integrating with earlier phases to form continuous public walkways and restore ecological functions along the historic waterway.[40] Complementing these, New Clark City serves as a model for sustainable urban planning, spanning 9,450 hectares within the Clark Freeport Zone and incorporating smart infrastructure, green spaces, and resilient design to decongest Metro Manila while fostering economic hubs.[41] Digital infrastructure projects under the program prioritize nationwide connectivity and government digitization to support economic inclusion. The National Broadband Program (NBP), budgeted at US$299.86 million and ongoing as of June 2025, expands high-speed internet access, particularly to geographically isolated areas, via fiber optic networks.[37] The Philippine Digital Infrastructure Project (PDIP), approved in October 2024 with US$288 million in funding, further bolsters this by investing in a national fiber optic backbone and last-mile connectivity to unserved regions, aiming to bridge the digital divide.[42] Supporting data sovereignty, the National Government Data Center (NGDC), costing US$242.57 million, provides centralized cloud services to agencies, reducing reliance on private vendors and enhancing cybersecurity.[37] Additional digital enablers include the upgraded Digital Transformation Centers (formerly Tech4ED), which deploy facilities for digital skills training and e-services to promote employment and local economies, and the Philippine Identification System (PhilSys), a US$519.14 million initiative establishing a biometric national ID to streamline transactions and reduce administrative inefficiencies.[38][37] These projects collectively target improved service delivery, with implementation tracked through the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT).[38]Funding and Financing Strategies
Budget Allocations and Fiscal Planning
The Build Better More infrastructure program receives its primary funding through the Philippine national budget, with allocations managed by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) in coordination with the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA). For fiscal year 2024, the program was allocated PHP 1.418 trillion within the proposed National Expenditure Program, marking a 13.5% increase from 2023 levels to accelerate flagship projects in transportation, energy, and digital connectivity.[43][15] In 2025, infrastructure outlays under the program rose to PHP 1.507 trillion, equivalent to 5.2% of gross domestic product (GDP), prioritizing disbursements for the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) at PHP 900 billion to support regional development and flagship initiatives.[44][45] Actual spending reached PHP 1.5 trillion in 2024, exceeding programmed targets and reflecting accelerated implementation amid post-pandemic recovery efforts.[46] Funding for the program's 194 infrastructure flagship projects (IFPs) is diversified across sources to mitigate fiscal strain, including general appropriations from the annual budget (covering 66 projects), official development assistance (ODA) loans and grants (79 projects), and public-private partnerships (PPPs) (45 projects), with 3.3% utilizing hybrid models combining government allocations, ODA, and PPPs.[47][48] This mix aligns with the Public Investment Program (PIP) for 2023-2028, which operationalizes NEDA's Philippine Development Plan by prioritizing national government-funded projects under a whole-of-government approach.[49] Unprogrammed appropriations have supplemented core funding, with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. approving PHP 214.4 billion for 3,770 public works projects from such funds in 2023-2024, tappable only upon meeting revenue or financing conditions like excess tax collections or new loans.[50] Fiscal planning emphasizes sustaining infrastructure spending at 5-6% of GDP annually to drive long-term growth, a target inherited and refined from the prior Build Build Build program, with diversified financing reducing reliance on domestic borrowing.[51] The 2025 national budget of PHP 6.326 trillion, signed on December 30, 2024, after vetoing PHP 194 billion in non-essential items, incorporates these priorities while aiming for fiscal consolidation through revenue enhancement and controlled debt.[52][53] Disbursement tracking by DBM shows infrastructure spending hit PHP 1.42 trillion in 2023 (5.8% of GDP) and PHP 346.9 billion by April 2024, on pace to meet growth objectives despite risks from external financing dependencies.[18] This strategy supports economic recovery but has drawn scrutiny for potential over-reliance on ODA and unprogrammed funds, which critics argue could elevate debt sustainability risks if revenue shortfalls occur.[53][50]Public-Private Partnerships and Investments
The Build Better More program emphasizes public-private partnerships (PPPs) as a core financing mechanism to supplement government budgets, with 46 of its 207 infrastructure flagship projects (IFPs) structured under PPP modalities, valued at PHP 2,137.6 billion (approximately US$37.5 billion).[54] These PPPs span sectors such as transportation, airports, and expressways, aiming to leverage private sector expertise, innovation, and capital for efficient project delivery while mitigating fiscal strain.[54] The program's pipeline includes over 230 PPP projects nationwide as of October 2025, positioning the Philippines as the global leader in PPP volume, surpassing Saudi Arabia.[55] The enactment of the PPP Code of the Philippines (Republic Act No. 11966) on March 31, 2024, streamlined approval processes, enhanced risk allocation, and introduced incentives like tax exemptions to accelerate PPP implementation within Build Better More.[56] President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. highlighted PPPs as a "significant approach" to infrastructure development, noting that approximately one-fourth of the administration's projects incorporate PPP elements to foster private investment.[57] Key examples include the New Manila International Airport project, budgeted at US$12.9 billion and advancing through PPP bidding for design, construction, and operations; the North-South Commuter Railway, valued at US$15.3 billion, with ongoing operations and maintenance tenders; and the C5 South Link Expressway at US$221.84 million, focused on urban connectivity enhancements.[54] Other notable PPPs encompass the Ninoy Aquino International Airport rehabilitation and the NLEX-SLEX Connector Road, both awarded or in procurement by 2025 to address capacity bottlenecks.[58] Private investments under these PPPs have been bolstered by foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows, with the Philippines attracting commitments from international partners; for instance, Japan expressed intent in May 2025 to expand infrastructure PPPs, building on prior collaborations like the Bohol-Panglao International Airport.[59] Overall PPP pipeline investments reached PHP 2.60 trillion across 176 projects by March 2025, primarily in transportation and digital infrastructure, supported by executive orders streamlining permitting and right-of-way acquisition.[60][54] Despite these advances, FDI equity in infrastructure remained challenged, with total national FDI declining to US$8.9 billion in 2023 from US$9.5 billion in 2022, partly due to regulatory hurdles though mitigated by recent liberalization measures.[61]| Key PPP Projects in Build Better More | Sector | Estimated Value (US$ billion) | Status (as of June 2025) |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Manila International Airport | Aviation | 12.91 | Ongoing procurement |
| North-South Commuter Railway | Rail | 15.33 | Operations & maintenance tendered |
| C5 South Link Expressway | Roads | 0.22 | Implementation approved |
| Ninoy Aquino International Airport Rehabilitation | Aviation | Not specified in aggregate | Awarded |
Implementation and Progress
Key Milestones and Completions (2022-2025)
As of June 2025, seven of the 207 infrastructure flagship projects (IFPs) under the Build Better More program had been completed, with a combined value of PHP72.4 billion (US$1.3 billion).[54] [63] These completions represent progress in targeted sectors such as flood management and road connectivity, though the pace remains modest relative to the program's scale and timeline. Key completed IFPs include:- Arterial Road Bypass Project Phase III (Plaridel Bypass): This road project in Bulacan enhances traffic flow and regional links, funded partly through official development assistance.[54]
- Flood Risk Improvement and Management Project for Cagayan de Oro River (FRIMP-CDOR): Completed at a cost of PHP12.54 billion, it features dikes, flood gates, and dredging to reduce flood vulnerability in northern Mindanao.[22]
- Samar Pacific Coastal Road Project: This initiative improves coastal access and economic corridors in Samar province.[63] [64]