JAKARTA, 27 May 2021 – Today, the Lead Implementing Body for the Master Plan on ASEAN Connectivity (MPAC) 2025 Strategic Area of Sustainable Infrastructure (LIB-SI) concluded the Socialisation Forum of the Framework for Improving ASEAN Infrastructure Productivity which took place on 24 and 27 May.
The two-day virtual forum was supported by the ASEAN Secretariat and received funding support from the ASEAN-Australia Development Cooperation Program Phase II. It gathered more than 160 participants, including representatives from ASEAN Sectoral Bodies, ASEAN Dialogue Partners, Sectoral Dialogue Partners, Development Partners, and representatives from multilateral development banks.
“ASEAN region is still in great need of infrastructure development as we aspire to grow our economies and enhance the region’s investment environment for attracting foreign direct investment,” said the Chair of LIB-SI, Awang Haji Amer Hishamuddin Zakaria, Permanent Secretary of Brunei Darussalam’s Ministry of Development.
ASEAN Leaders welcomed the finalisation of the framework at the 37th ASEAN Summit in November 2020. The framework was developed under MPAC 2025 and aimed to address the challenge of improving infrastructure productivity to achieve quality growth, inclusive development, and greater integration and connectivity in ASEAN.
With limited resources, ASEAN Member States will need to increase not only in the infrastructure spending but also in the productivity of the infrastructure itself.
The Chair of LIB-SI underscored that, “this would mean focusing on better project selection, making sure there is improved efficiency in delivery, greater accountability, strong infrastructure governance, robust financing framework, and most importantly, maximising the life span and capacity of existing assets.”
Studies suggest that ASEAN could save infrastructure costs by US$44-74 billion per year when infrastructure productivity is optimised.
At the forum, participants learned more about the framework and exchanged views and experience on infrastructure productivity topics, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on infrastructure, and hands-on exercise to develop draft action plans under infrastructure productivity workstreams.
The framework recommends 36 priority actions within seven work-streams to help ASEAN Member States enhance productivity throughout the whole lifecycle of infrastructure. Prioritisation and action plan toolkits were developed to support the framework implementation.
The framework can be downloaded here.
- ABOUT ASEANThe Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, was established on 8 August 1967 in Bangkok, Thailand, with the signing of the ASEAN Declaration (Bangkok Declaration) by the Founding Fathers of ASEAN: Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Brunei Darussalam joined ASEAN on 7 January 1984, followed by Viet Nam on 28 July 1995, Lao PDR and Myanmar on 23 July 1997, and Cambodia on 30 April 1999, making up what is today the ten Member States of ASEAN.Menu
- WHAT WE DO
ASEAN organs always strive to achieve ASEAN’s goals and objectives, the Secretary-General of ASEAN and the ASEAN Secretariat shall be functioned as coordinating Secretariat to help facilitate effective decision-making withing and amongst ASEAN bodies. In addition, each Member State shall appoint a Permanent Representative to liaise with Secretary-General of ASEAN and the ASEAN Secretariat
Menu - WHO WE WORK WITH
ASEAN shall develop friendly relations and mutually beneficial dialogues, cooperation and partnerships with countries and sub-regional, regional and international organisations and institutions. This includes external partners, ASEAN entities, human rights bodies, non-ASEAN Member States Ambassadors to ASEAN, ASEAN committees in third countries and international organisations, as well as international / regional organisations.
Menu - OUR COMMUNITIES
The rodmap for an ASEAN Community (2009-2015) was declared by the leaders in 2009. The ASEAN Community, anchored on three community pillars: Political-Security Community, Economic Community, Socio-Cultural Community was launched in 2015. The ASEAN 2025: Forging Ahead Together was introduced in 2015 as a Post-2015 Vision. It comprises the ASEAN Community Vision 2025, the ASEAN Political-Security Community Blueprint 2025, the ASEAN Economic Community Blueprint 2025 and the ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community Blueprint 2025
Menu - SITEMAP