MPTC backs UNICEF’s Child Road Safety Program to benefit children in more cities

Metro Pacific Tollways Corporation (MPTC) recently inked a multi-year partnership agreement with UNICEF in support of the child rights agency’s existing Child Road Traffic Injury Prevention Program (CRTIP). The program aims to scale up models for improved road safety and a safe journey for school-children in high-risk areas, with contributions to road safety awareness, health systems strengthening, child responsive urban planning, and enhanced child rights principles in business practices. In photo are (L-R, front) Carli Snyman, UNICEF Chief of Private Fundraising and Partnerships; Malalay Ahmadzai, UNICEF Chief of Health and Nutrition; Rodrigo Franco, MPTC President and CEO; J. Luigi L. Bautista, NLEX Corporation President and General Manager; and Roberto V. Bontia, MPT South Management Corporation President and General Manager. The signing was witnessed by Christine Salvania, MPTC Corporate Governance Assistant Manager; Miguel Luis Cabais, MPTC Sustainability Assistant Manager; Cynthia Maria Casino, MPTC VP for Corporate Governance and Risk; Mariella Castillo, UNICEF Health Specialist; Maria Margarita Uy-Baula, UNICEF Corporate Fundraising Officer; Angelito Umali, UNICEF Program Officer; and Christopher Daniel Lizo, MPTC Chief Corporate Governance Officer and Chief Finance Officer.

Manila, 26 November 2021 –Metro Pacific Tollways Corporation (MPTC), a subsidiary of Metro Pacific Investments Corporation, promotes the safety of children on the road through its support to UNICEF under the United Nations’ Second Decade of Action for Road Safety.

MPTC signed a multi-year agreement with the child rights agency to help support 100 schools in high-risk areas, reaching potentially 20,000 children.

Studies by the UP-affiliated National Center for Transportation Studies (NCTS) show that in the Philippines, around 38 children die every day due to road traffic injuries. This is consistent with the global statistic that injury and violence has become a major cause of death in children under the age of 18. It is estimated that around 2,270 children are dying every day as a result of unintentional injuries.

MPTC, including its subsidiaries, will support UNICEF’s work over the next three years to scale up models for improved road safety and safe journeys for school-children in high-risk areas, with road safety awareness, health systems strengthening, child responsive urban planning, and enhanced child rights principles in business practices, in support of global targets to reduce road traffic fatalities by fifty percent (50%) by 2030.

The project will also contribute to strengthening data on child road injuries, rallying advocates, enhancing laws and policies, as well as improving attitudes and practices that promote safety, in support of UNICEF’s existing Child Road Traffic Injury Prevention Program (CRTIP).

MPTC will also embed child rights principles in its business practices.

“Children have the right to safe and healthy environments. Road traffic injuries and deaths are preventable. Despite alarming statistics, they often remain overlooked in public health policies. MPTC’s support is an important contribution to preventing road traffic fatalities with concerted efforts across sectors and campaigns that educate motorists, children, families and communities about risks and how to prevent them,” UNICEF Philippines Representative Oyunsaikhan Dendevnorov says.

“We look forward to this cooperative program with UNICEF’s child road safety campaign, as it is aligned with our advocacy on road safety for all motorists and passengers using our tollways in the country – and even in the ASEAN,” declared Rodrigo E. Franco, MPTC president and CEO.

“Road safety is of paramount importance to us at our Tollways Group, and such concerns are integrated in our infrastructure building program and in our operations,” Franco added. “We see this collaboration as an opportunity for MPTC to scale up and expand the reach and range of its road safety efforts, especially with the new emphasis on children.”

MPTC’s support to UNICEF’s joint effort in Child Road Safety will contribute to the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals 3.6 to halve the number of global deaths and injuries from road traffic incidents, and 11.2 to provide access to sustainable transportation systems for all, improving road safety and public transport, with special attention to the needs of vulnerable populations, including children.

  1. University of the Philippines – National Center for Transportation Studies, Road Crash Databases in the Philippines. 2021.
  2. Global health estimates, World Health Organization, 2008