Home Blog Page 10128

Water politics and power price control

“Adam Smith said people who intend only to seek their own benefit are ‘led by an invisible hand to serve a public interest which was no part of their intention. I say that there is a reverse invisible hand: People who intend to serve only the public interest are led by an invisible hand to serve private interests which was no part of their intention.”

Milton Friedman, “Why Government is the Problem”, Essays in Public Policy, no. 39.
Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press, 1993.

Government populism is the trick of demonizing big corporations so that it can impose new sets of interventions, regulations, prohibitions, price control, and even engineer corporate takeover by crony firms. This is happening in the country’s water and power or electricity sector now.

HARASSMENT OF WATER CONCESSIONAIRES
When Maynilad Water and Manila Water went to the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in Singapore to seek damages when the Philippine government did not allow price adjustments in 2013–2017, i.e., water price control, the two firms won. PCA ruled that the government should pay Manila Water P7.4 billion, Maynilad Water P3.4 billion.

From there, President Rodrigo Duterte lambasted the two companies daily. Then Congressional hearings and harassment, new contracts drafted by the DOJ, then MWSS officially cancelled the concession extension to 2037. The two firms that earlier signified that they will no longer collect the penalty from government can stay only until end-2022, after which new private concessionaires will be named by the administration before its term ends by June 2022. Very likely only crony firms will be entertained.

The two firms made good performance actually (see table 1).

For improving and raising water delivery to households, for saving poor families from buying expensive water from water trucks, for expanding sewerage and water treatment services, they are now demonized and penalized. At P30 to P35 per cubic meter tariff, five drums of water, that is not expensive. The P30–40 for one liter of bottled water is expensive, but people do not complain.

POWER PRICE CONTROL
Recently the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) drafted a new order that will further bring down the secondary price cap or second-layer price control at the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) from P6.24/kWh to P4.50/kWh.

When this will be implemented, consumers will suffer, rich and poor, residential and commercial, industrial. They will suffer from more yellow-red alerts during the hot months of March to June, planned or actual rotating blackouts and darkness.

Why? Because no one has been investing in peaking plants, power plants that run only during peak hours in high-demand months.

In 2018, Luzon grid had 16.55 GW of installed capacity with total electricity generation of 72.73 terawatt-hours (TWH). I constructed a separate table where I computed the implied capacity factor (ICF = Generation/(installed capacity x 24 hours x 365 days)) and implied available capacity (IAC = capacity factor x installed capacity). For brevity purposes, I summarize the ICF as follows: oil-based 90%, natural gas 70%, coal 68%, biomass 64%, geothermal 51%, wind 32%, hydro 27%, solar 16%. The IAC was 11.23 GW.

New capacity additions in the Luzon grid, committed projects are as follows: 2019, 874 MW (800 coal, 74 biomass and hydro); 2020, 1,363 MW (1,336 coal, 12.6 hydro); 2021, 1,253 MW (600 coal, 650 gas, 3 hydro); 2022, 31 MW geothermal.

See — not a single plant, not even 1 MW of oil-based peaking plant to address demand spikes during rush hours. This is dangerous.

I made power reserves projections to 2023. The peak demand from 2015-2018 was rising by 5.7% a year on average; for 2019–2023, a 5% annual increase due to GDP growth deceleration recently is made. And assuming an average capacity factor (CF) of 85% for new plants in 2019–2021 (mostly coal) and 65% for a new geothermal plant, we can derive the projected reserves (see table 2).

Even without new power price control via lower secondary price cap, Luzon grid is already in danger due to low reserves margin, especially by 2022–23. Add forced outages and unscheduled shutdowns due to many old and ageing conventional plants and intermittent energy from renewables, the risk of blackouts go up. Yellow-red alerts will surely be back in 2020 and beyond.

The ERC should not proceed with the planned new power price control. In fact they — ERC, DOE, IEMOP — should lift and abolish price control, at least the secondary price cap. Attract investors in peaking plants and avoid the risks of blackouts.

And this water politics and harassment by the Duterte administration, the arbitrary change of rules midway, is bad news for foreign investments. Lack of rule of law, disrespect of contracts, bad.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers.

minimalgovernment@gmail.com

Focus and be involved

In a 2019 study by Hootsuite, a social media management system, it was reported that Filipinos spend an exorbitant amount of time in social media. We check out the lives of friends — even complete strangers — and contemplate their lives instead of our own. We fixate on what they have and realize how different our lives are from theirs. As soon as we ask the question “why won’t our job give us that kind of life,” we already know the answer. The answer is really within us.

Why are we not involved? In many organizations, people are being slowly taken out of the equation because of cutting-edge technology. But I believe that even in this fast-paced world, we can make changes so that we enjoy our time at work and cultivate a feeling of belongingness within our organization.

MAP YOURSELF
If you want to feel involved in the world you’re inhabiting right now, an act of starting and believing is necessary. Stop thinking of what you could do and take the first step towards your goal. It’s like what gym trainers tell you on day one, “Take one step now and see the result one day earlier.” Do not be frustrated if your managers do not give you enough time to talk about your desires, they also have a lot on their plates. Make your own move and talk to them about your plans. Design your own path and live your workday achieving it.

MAKE YOURSELF RELEVANT
As my manager says, “Make yourself relevant because no one is safe.” It sounds like a threat but the person next to you in your office can probably do exactly what you’re doing — so what sets you apart? This should be the question driving us to go beyond what is required of us and aim for a better version of ourselves. Don’t forget your training, but don’t stop there. Be challenged every day and make your moment interesting.

NON-STOP QUESTING
Another old saying that we live by is “try and try until you succeed.” I’ve viewed this rule as: Try something new when you’re in your early 20s; find the distinct ability you’re good at in your 30s; develop the field you want to be in when you are in your 40s; finally, continue to improve yourself until you retire.

MONEY VS. GROWTH
I believe that one of the most heartbreaking moments in anyone’s career is having to continuously look for your payslip a week before it arrives. The feeling of an empty wallet can crush your soul. If you choose money over growth, be happy with your hard-earned cash and invest in your own capability. If you choose growth, be inspired by the things that you do to make the weight of your job lighter. Be in a field that offers opportunities to grow every time you tap that ID or badge in that gate. I chose growth for my first job. The pay is not competitive, but it led me to an opportunity three years earlier than planned.

Being in a position that we are not comfortable with takes a toll on our day. Identify the things you want to be known for and act on them. When you simply focus on what you want to do, time flies, and the one-minute rush before you clock out is just another minute in a fulfilling day.

 

Zandro Badua is an MBA student at De La Salle University’s Ramon V. del Rosario College of Business. This essay was written as part of the requirement in his Strategic Human Resource Management class.

zandro_badua@dlsu.edu.ph

How to do things right

By Raju Mandhyan

A YEAR ends and another begins. The best use of this turn of time is to measure performance and achievements. To look back, appreciate and learn or to look ahead, plan and then execute.

Every year, we make new plans, set goals, roll up our sleeves, and get to work. It is all a good thing and it is the only thing that makes sense to being human in a larger sense. Thus, some wise old man mentioned we are not human beings, we are human doings. Ha ha!

Talking about doing things and doing them right, here is a lovely story that pops up on the desktop of my mind whenever I put together a project, and plan to execute it.

The story was featured in one of the issues of Reader’s Digest in the late 1960s which I read as a kid in India. The article was titled “How To Eat an Ice-Cream Cone” written by Lawrence Rust Hills, author of How to Do Things Right by Bantam Books. The article was initially published in the August 24, 1968, issue of The New Yorker before being published in Reader’s Digest.

When you first get an ice-cream cone, Lawrence Rust Hills advises you to hold it gently somewhere in the middle with your thumb and three fingers and your pinky finger sticking out. Step away and stand apart from the usual crowd that surrounds the ice-cream vendor.

Size up the ice cream; do a quick scan of its weight, center of gravity, tilt and its melting state all in relation to the environment around you. Bend forward by 25 degrees and raise your elbow of the hand that holds the ice cream so your full arm is nearly parallel to the ground.

Survey the sides of the cone for dripping goblets and compare it to the bottom tip where there usually is a hole. The danger of an ice-cream crash landing is possible at either of these ends so do a quick mental assessment and choose which side to save first, the top of the bottom.

With the decision made, remain bent forward by a maximum of 25 degrees and then stick out your tongue, rapidly licking for damage control. Move rapidly from one end to another until the threat of falling is reduced, then straighten up and take a quick breath.

Again, bend forward by 25 degrees and work on the dollops of cream on top, licking it in laps as you swirl the cone around between the thumb and the fingers, pinky finger still sticking out. Round and round goes the ice-cream cone, as you occasionally check the bottom tip. In about two minutes, you will have balanced all the sides of the cream. The danger will have diminished, but is not totally gone.

Next, start taking kiss-like bites of the cream and give the top a gentle push with your lips. This will push the ice cream deeper into the cone where it is many times safer. You can now take a moment to look around if there’s competition beating you to winning the ice-cream eating challenge or if someone may snatch your business away.

You are now nearing a close. Gently continue nibbling and licking until the ice cream shrinks down to a size a bit bigger than your thumb. The deal is almost done. Because you were focused on the gentle handling of the ice cream, you haven’t realized you are now standing up straight, having relinquished your bent-down position some time ago.

The penultimate stage of this hearty ice-cream eating process is to hold the little cone up in air as you would hold up a glass of champagne for a toast. Then, let that cone drop down into your throat. Gulp, you have a close. Mission accomplished. You’ve done it — the ice-cream cone is happy and so are you, not just for the moment but for a long time after and until it is time for another ice-cream cone in this delicious journey of doing things right.

 

Raju Mandhyan is an author, coach and speaker.

www.mandhyan.com

After 14 years, Team Philippines is SEA Games overall champion anew

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

IT was mission accomplished for the Philippines in the 30th Southeast Asian Games after it formally claimed the overall championship at the end of competitions on Wednesday.

When the smoke cleared after the two-week battle in different sports disciplines, Team Philippines collared 149 gold, 117 silver and 121 bronze for a total of 387 medals to win the overall championship since 2005 and earn its second top finish in the history of the Games.

The 149 gold medals were four better than the previous SEA Games medal tally scored by Malaysia in 2017 and easily eclipsed the Philippine record of 112 in 2005 when the country also hosted the biennial regional sporting meet.

Finishing second was Vietnam with 98 gold, 85 silver and 104 medals, followed by Thailand (92-103-123), Indonesia (72-84-111), Malaysia (55-58-72) and Singapore (53-46-68).

Rounding out the field were Myanmar (4-18-51), Cambodia (4-6-36), Brunei (2-5-6), Laos (1-5-28) and Timor Leste (0-1-5).

Among the last to give the Philippines golds were men’s and women’s basketball, billiards and kickboxing.

Gilas Pilipinas reasserted the country’s dominance in the sport, bagging the gold for the 13th straight time and 18th out of 20 tries in the Games.

The all-Philippine Basketball Association squad defeated Thailand in the gold-medal game, 115-81, on Tuesday at the Mall of Asia Arena.

June Mar Fajardo led Gilas with 17 points and 13 rebounds with Christian Standhardinger adding 16 and 11 boards.

Guard Chris Ross had eight points and eight assists in a game that saw Gilas making a ferocious run in the third quarter to pull away, from which the Thais could not recover from.

After the match, Gilas coach Tim Cone said they were happy to win the gold but cautioned that the teams in the region have elevated their game, hence, the need for Philippine basketball to continue to evolve and improve.

“Southeast Asia is catching up and we have to bring our best players each time. We have to put in the needed basketball program moving forward,” said Mr. Cone on post-gold medal win.

Earlier in the day, the women’s team also bagged the gold medal, its first-ever in the SEA Games.

The Gilas women defeated Thailand, 91-71, in making the golden breakthrough.

Jack Animam paced the women’s squad with 21 points, followed by Janine Pontenjos with 16, Kelly Hayes and Ani Castillo with 11 each, and Afril Bernardino 10.

“I’m happy for the girls for what they have achieved. Hopefully their efforts will not go unnoticed and help the women’s game grow further,” said national team coach Pat Aquino.

In billiards, the duo of Rubilen Amit and Chezka Centeno won in the women’s 9-ball doubles on Tuesday at the Manila Hotel Tent.

Misses Amit and Centeno dominated Indonesia’s Fathrah Masum and Nony Andilah, 7-0, in the finals to claim another gold medal for the country’s billiards team.

It was a golden double for both Misses Amit and Centeno, with the former also winning the women’s 9-ball singles event and the latter bagging the women’s 10-ball singles title.

Also victorious was kickboxer and mixed martial arts professional Gina Iniong, who topped the women’s -55kg light kick division with a 3-0 victory over Thailand’s Apichaya Minkhwan on Tuesday at the Cuneta Astrodome.

“Our efforts and sacrifices did not go to waste. I’m so happy because this was my first time to compete for the country in kickboxing,” said Ms. Iniong.

It was the second gold for the sport of kickboxing, which made its Games debut this year.

The last event for the SEA Games was men’s beach handball on Wednesday where the Philippines finished with a bronze medal.

ATHLETES TO MEET PRESIDENT DUTERTE
Meanwhile, Team Philippines is set to meet President Rodrigo R. Duterte after its successful SEA Games campaign.

Set for Dec. 18 in Malacañang, athletes will be honored and given their incentives.

Republic Act 10699 provides for cash incentives for winners of the SEA Games to receive P300,000, P150,000 and P60,000, respectively, for gold, silver and bronze finishes.

The President is expected to give out additional incentives of P250,000 for gold, P150,000 for silver and P100,000 for bronze medalists.

The Philippine Olympic Committee also committed additional P300,000 for gold medals won.

“We were all hoping and praying for this, but it is still a sweet surprise now that it is actually happening. I am so proud of our athletes. All of them deserve our respect and love,” said Philippine Sports Commission chairman and SEA Games chef de mission William Ramirez in a statement.

The 30th SEA Games was formally to close later yesterday with a closing ceremony at the Athletics Stadium in New Clark City in Capas, Tarlac.

Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee chairman and House Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano was to lead the ceremony to start at 6 p.m. and see special awards handed out.

The ceremony would also see the Philippines turning over the hosting duties to Vietnam which will welcome athletes in the region in 2021.

AFC Cup 2020 group stage contenders revealed

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

GROUPINGS for the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup 2020 were officially revealed on Tuesday at the draws held at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Included in the teams playing in the nine groups are top local club football teams Ceres-Negros FC and Kaya FC-Iloilo, who are hoping to do well in the initial stage of the ASEAN zone of the competition to advance to the next round.

The group play starts in February.

Philippines Football League champion Ceres-Negros FC is drawn in Group G, along with Vietnam’s Than Quang Ninh and Indonesian champion Bali United. They will be joined by the winner of the playoff between Laos’ Master 7 FC and Cambodia’s Preah Khan Reach Svay Rieng FC.

The three-time PFL champion will also compete in the qualifying round of the AFC Champions League in January where it will need consecutive victories against three different teams to make the group stage.

First up will be Myanmar champion Shan United whom it will meet for the second time in the preliminaries on Jan. 14. The winner of the first match will earn the right to face Thailand FA Cup champion Port FC. Japan League Runners-Up FC Tokyo waits in the final playoff round.

Should the team find its way to the group stage, it will face South Korea’s Ulsan Hyundai, China’s Shanghai Shenhua, and Australia’s Perth Glory in Asia’s elite football competition.

Ceres-Negros will be competing in its sixth straight year in continental competitions.

KAYA IN GROUP H
Kaya, meanwhile, will be playing in Group H in the AFC Cup with Singapore’s Tampines Rovers, Indonesia’s PSM Makassar, and Myanmar’s Shan United.

The grouping could still change, however, as Tampines Rovers and Shan United qualified for the preliminary round of the AFC Champions League.

If said teams do well in the Champions League their spots will be given to other teams.

Regardless of the teams they will face, Kaya acknowledges that its road would not be an easy one.

“It’s a tough group again as usual. We go back to Indonesia, we visit Myanmar, and Singapore,” said Kaya stalwart Ali Borromeo, who represented the team in the draw.

But he expressed excitement on taking on the challenge, saying “Considering that we have our core guys in the squad still, and that it’s our third time in AFC Cup competition, we should be up to par this time. We should be ready to go in February. I hope we get the team chemistry going by then, and we should be on track.”

Chooks-To-Go extends Manok ng Bayan mission with MPBL tie-up

CHOOKS-To-Go’s mission of helping promote nationalism through sports got added dimension with its recently inked partnership with the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL).

Formally unveiled on Tuesday at the Edsa Shangri-La Hotel in Mandaluyong City, Chooks-To-Go hopes that through its tie-up with the burgeoning basketball league its “Manok ng Bayan” push gets to reach more people, instilling nationalism and improving one’s life through sports.

Bounty Agro Ventures, Inc. (BAVI) President Ronald Mascariñas said they are very excited with their coming together with the MPBL, describing it as a “formidable” partnership anchored on a shared vision of excellence, integrity and love of country.

The partnership is for five seasons with Chooks-To-Go vowing to help the MPBL grow the league than what it is today.

“The MPBL is the true home of the Manok ng Bayan, we are committed to sponsor this league for five years,” said Mr. Mascariñas during his speech at the launch of their partnership with the MPBL.

Since 2016, Chooks-To-Go has been sponsoring a number of athletes and sports — basketball, volleyball, chess and triathlon.

In 3×3 basketball it has done a lot in gaining for the country a chance to make it to the Olympics next year through steady tournaments locally and helping athletes compete in tournaments abroad.

For MPBL founder and owner Manny Pacquiao, the entry of Chooks-To-Go into the league as a partner is a welcome development and a recognition of their efforts as an organization since setting up shop in 2017.

“As the father of the MPBL, I’m very happy that Chooks-to-Go has recognized the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League as a solid league with a bright future ahead of it. It is integral in MPBL’s vision to be the league for every Filipino. And with you (Chooks-To-Go), we will be able to help more Filipinos,” Mr. Pacquiao said.

Adding, “This is just the beginning of a strong and long partnership between the MPBL and Chooks-to-Go.”

As a league, the MPBL has 31 teams competing, representing different parts of the country.

League officials said that more teams could be added as the MPBL moves forward. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Budapest Gambit

Do you notice lately that all the openings are starting to look the same? On the kingside it is either the Berlin (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6) the Petroff (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6) or the Giuoco Piano (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5). On the queenside we usually get the Queen’s Gambit Declined (1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 d5 4.Nc3), the Catalan (1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.g3 d5 4.Bg2) or various forms of the London System (1.d4 and 2.Bf4) or Torre-Trompowsky (1.d4 and 2.Bg5).

I believe though that with the rising popularity of Rapid and Blitz tournaments the games are going to get sharper and we will start seeing more gambits again. The English GM Michael Adams won a lot of quickplay tournaments in the 80s and his advice to young players was always to keep his pieces active, even at the cost of one or two pawns. He explained that the mistakes are going to come anyway, so better make sure your pieces have active so as to maximize their “swindling potential.”

The 23rd Hoogeveen Chess Festival took place from Oct. 10–17 this year. Alongside the main tournament was a 6-game match between 16-year-old Alireza Firouzja (Iran 2702) and Jorge Cori (24 years old, Peru 2671).

The well-known chess journalist Peter Boel wrote about how this match ended in New in Chess Yearbook #133:

“There is a strange FIDE rule that says that if you play a match and if you have already won it, then the final game(s) of that match is (are) not rated. In 2016 this became a topic in one of the Hoogeveen matches, when Nigel Short had already beaten Hou Yifan, and then made sure he couldn’t lose any rating points in the final game. This doesn’t sound very cocky, but then again your concentration tends to slacken if victory is already in the pocket. Short duly lost that final game to Hou Yifan.

“When new chess superstar Alireza Firouzja (2700+ at 16) had already won his match with Jorge Cori Tello this year at 3.5-1.5 in truly fabulous style, he asked chief arbiter Frans Peeters to verify that their final game would indeed not be rated. When Peeters affirmed this, the Iranian said ‘OK, then we can go wild tomorrow!’ And that’s what happened.”

Cori, Jorge (2671) — Firouzja, Alireza (2702) [A52]
Hoogeveen Matches 2019 Hoogeveen, Netherlands (6.2), 26.10.2019

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5!?

The Budapest Gambit.

3.dxe5 Ng4

[3…Ne4 is the Fajarowicz Variation where Black concentrates on the rapid development of his pieces and gives up chances to recover the pawn on e5. This has its own body of theory which we will not be taking up here]

4.Nf3

This is known as the “Adler” Variation because of the game Adler vs. Maroczy from 1896, the first record of the Budapest Gambit. I will show you this game later as the opening plan chosen by White still very often occurs in modern club tournaments.

4…Bc5 5.e3 Nc6 6.Nc3 0–0

Black is hoping that White will waste a move on h2–h3 before he takes the pawn on e5.

7.Be2 Re8

The Hungarian tactician Richard Rapport won a nice game with 7…Ngxe5 8.Nxe5 Nxe5 9.0–0 a5 10.Kh1 d6 (I could be wrong, but maybe Black is better off with 10…Ra6 11.f4 Rd6 12.Qc2 Nc6) 11.f4 Nc6 12.b3 Re8 13.Rf3 Bf5 14.Rg3 Re6 15.Bd3 Bxd3 16.Qxd3 Nb4 17.Qd2 Qe7 18.e4 Qh4 (with the idea of 19…Qxg3! 20.hxg3 Rh6 mate) 19.Rf3 Nc2! 20.Rb1 (20.Qxc2 Qe1+ and mate) 20…Qe1+ 21.Qxe1 Nxe1 22.Rg3 Rg6 23.Nd5 Rxg3 24.hxg3 c6 25.Be3 Nd3 26.Bxc5 cxd5 27.Bxd6 dxe4 Black is better and went on to win. 0–1 (60) Gelfand, B. (2777)-Rapport, R. (2691) Wijk aan Zee 2014.

8.0–0 Ngxe5 9.Nxe5 Nxe5 10.b3 a5

Securing his bishop’s position on c5 and preparing to develop his a8–rook to h6 via a6.

11.Bb2 Ra6 12.Qd5

Trying to provoke Black’s …d7–d6 which cuts off Black’s rook’s access to the kingside.

12…Ba7!

Looks awkward but he does not want to block the rooks’ transfer to the other side.

13.Ne4

Here is a nice game with this line: 13.c5 Rh6 14.Ne4? (the idea behind this move is that 14…Qh4 is met by 15.Bxe5 and the h2 square is protected. The problem here is that Black has a very strong rebuttal) 14…c6! 15.Qd4 (the queen has to defend his e4–knight. For example if he plays 15.Qd2 then Black has 15…Qh4! with a double attack on e4 and h2) 15…d5! 16.Ng3 b6! 17.cxb6 Bxb6 18.Qc3 Qh4 19.h3 Bxh3 20.gxh3 Qxh3 21.Rfd1 Qh2+ 22.Kf1 Rf6 0–1 Polovodin, I. (2460)-Miezis, N. (2350) Moscow 1992.

13…Rh6 14.Qxa5?!

Decentralizing his queen. He should have gone for 14.Bxe5 c6 (Cori has to give back the piece but he is for choice as to how he will do it) 15.Bf6! gxf6 16.Qd3 f5 (to her his queen quickly to h4) 17.Ng3 (17.Nd6? Qc7 loses the knight because of the mate on h2) 17…Bb8 18.Rad1 d5 19.cxd5 Qh4 20.h3 Bxg3 21.fxg3 Qxg3 22.Rf3 Qe5 23.dxc6 Rxc6 both sides have their chances.

14…Bb6 15.Qa8!

Looks stupid but is actually a clever move. You see if the queen has gone to c3 then 15.Qc3 Qh4 16.h3 Qxe4 wins a piece. But with the queen on a8 then 15.Qa8 Qh4 16.Bxe5 and the black rook cannot retake on e5 because of the back rank mate.

15…d6 16.c5 Qh4 17.Bxe5

[17.h3 Qxe4 18.cxb6 Rg6 White’s king cannot survive this]

17…dxe5 18.f3

Pushing the other pawn won’t work: 18.h3 Bd7 19.Qxb7 Bc6 20.Qa6 Bxe4 21.cxb6 Bxg2! Black wins

18…Qxh2+ 19.Kf2 Rg6 20.Rg1 Bd7 21.Qa3 Bh3 22.Bf1 f5 23.Qa4 <D>

POSITION AFTER 23.QA4

We now enter a critical stage in the game. White is threatening mate with Qxe8.

23…Rd8?

Clearly Firouzja wanted to cut off White’s king’s escape, but the next move shows it to be a mistake. He had to play 23…Kf8! 24.cxb6 (24.Ng5 Rxg5 25.Qh4 f4 26.Qxg5 h6 27.Qh4 fxe3+ 28.Ke2 Qxg1 with the win) 24…fxe4 25.Qxe4 (25.bxc7 Qg3+ 26.Ke2 exf3+) 25…Qg3+ 26.Ke2 Rxb6 when Black still with the advantage.

What is the difference between protecting the rook with 23…Kf8 and 23…Rf8? The latter does not work and you will see why later.

24.Rd1! Rf8

[24…Rxd1 25.Qe8#]

25.Qc4+?

We have gotten the same position as when Black could have played 23…Rf8. It does not work because the Black king is on g8 and can be checked after 25.Ng5! Rxg5 26.Qh4 f4 27.Qxg5 Bxc5 28.Bc4+ the rook on g1 is already defended and after 28…Kh8 29.Ke2 Bxe3? 30.Rd8 White even mates.

25…Kh8 26.Qf7

[26.Ng5 no longer works: 26…Rxg5 27.Qh4 Bxc5 28.Qxg5 f4 Black is the one winning]

26…Rg8 27.Ng5

[27.cxb6 fxe4]

27…Rxg5 28.cxb6 cxb6 29.Qc7 h6 30.Rd8 Qg3+ 31.Ke2 Rxd8 32.Qxd8+ Kh7 33.Qxb6 0–1

Cori resigns because he is losing major material after 33.Qxb6 e4! for example: 34.f4 Rg6 35.Qd4 Bg4+ 36.Kd2 Qf2+.

Here is the Adler-Maroczy game I promised earlier, including a quick theoretical to guide you through some pitfalls:

Adler — Maroczy,Geza [A52]
Budapest, 03.02.1896

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ng4

White’s main moves now are 4.Bf4, 4.Nf3, and giving back the pawn right away with 4.e4.

4.Nf3

This is the first record of someone using the Budapest Gambit. Look at the name of the player of the white pieces and you will understand why this continuation is called the “Adler.”

4…Bc5 5.e3 Nc6 6.Qd5

White should have just let the pawn go with Nc3 or Be2.

6…Qe7 7.Nc3 Ngxe5 8.Be2 d6

The reason why the Budapest can be deadly especially in fast time controls is because it is a lot easier to play with Black than with White, but for you to succeed you must remember a few basic patterns. Take note that Black’s bishop went to c5 (or b4) first before his queen went to e7, and now the e5–knight is attacking white’s pawn on c4, and he will likely win it with …Be6.

9.Ne4 Be6 10.Qd1 Bb4+ 11.Bd2 0–0–0!

Careful! There is a trap here: 11…Nxc4? 12.Bxb4 Nxb4 13.Qa4+ Nc6 14.Bxc4 White has won a crucial piece.

12.Bxb4 Nxb4 13.Qb3

Castling will lose his c4–pawn to 13.0–0 Nxf3+ 14.Bxf3 Bxc4 so Adler defends his c4–pawn. It appears that he does not have time for this.

13…Nxf3+ 14.Bxf3 d5 15.Nd2 dxc4 16.Nxc4 Rd3 17.Qa4 Bxc4 18.Qxa7? Nc2+ 0–1

It is mate next move.

You really should give the Budapest a try. If nothing else it will give you lots of hours of enjoyment.

 

Bobby Ang is a founding member of the National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) and its first Executive Director. A Certified Public Accountant (CPA), he taught accounting in the University of Santo Tomas (UST) for 25 years and is currently Chief Audit Executive of the Equicom Group of Companies.

bobby@cpamd.net

Growing Hawks

The Hawks finally put the ball through the hoop with 31.1 ticks left in overtime yesterday. Prior to Cam Reddish’s short stab, they proved unable to score in 10 straight offensive sets dating back to the last minute of the fourth quarter. And through seven missed field-goal attempts, two trips to the charity stripe, and two turnovers, they managed to snatch defeat from the throes of victory. They hitherto looked to be en route to reaping the benefits of 47 minutes of outstanding hoops in hostile territory, only to get in their own way and ultimately absorb their 18th setback in 24 outings so far through their 2019–20 campaign.

To be fair, the Hawks were up against the red-hot Heat, and at the raucous American Airlines Arena to boot. Under the circumstances, they knew well enough to match the invariable never-say-die disposition of the competition from beginning to end. Unfortunately, they were unable to meet the challenge; that the outstanding coverage on top scorer and playmaker Trey Young compelled them to turn to other sources of points made the endeavor even more difficult. With pressure building and the set-to on the line, it was as if they suddenly succumbed to the very thought of exceeding themselves.

A loss is a loss, of course, and yesterday’s will simply be another in a long line throughout a long season. And even as the official ledger will show a close encounter that turned into a blowout, it discounts the effort the Hawks exerted versus bona fide contenders. They just didn’t have enough to close the deal — certainly not in the face of record firsts by the host Heat. Not with Jimmy Butler going for 18 rebounds and Bam Adebayo putting up 30 as part of their side-by-side triple-doubles. Not with Duncan Robinson exploding for 10 triples. And not with head coach Erik Spoelstra staying flawless in nine homestands.

For the Hawks, there are no silver linings to an unproductive stop. They were hopeful on opening tip, having just claimed a convincing win over the Hornets at Spectrum Center. They wound up crestfallen and contemplative, admittedly crushed by their failure to make a statement. Nonetheless, the season is young. There will be more opportunities, and, if nothing else, yesterday’s experience should prove instructive the next time they find themselves in a similar situation. They’re growing — perhaps not as fast as they’d like, but enough to cast moist eyes on a brighter tomorrow.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Peso weakens on US-China issues

THE PESO weakened against the dollar on Wednesday due to mixed signals from the US and China on the new set of tariffs on Chinese goods set to take effect this month.

The local unit closed at P50.81 against the greenback on Wednesday, depreciating by 7.5 centavos from its P50.735-a-dollar finish on Tuesday, according to data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened Wednesday’s session at P50.70 versus the dollar. Its weakest showing was at P50.87 while its intraday best against the greenback was at P50.695.

Dollars traded climbed to $782.8 million from the $742.36 million seen on Tuesday.

Analysts said mixed signals from headlines on the US-China trade war affected the peso’s performance for the day.

“The trading movement was on the back of comments that there could be a delay for the tariff [set on Dec. 15] but the US side said there could be no such thing,” a trader said in a phone call, noting that the peso-dollar movement continued to be sideways.

The said mixed signals have resulted in the dollar rising against other major global and Asian currencies, according to Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort.

“The peso exchange rate closed weaker amid market concerns that the scheduled tariffs on [the] additional $160 billion of US imports from China could proceed on Dec. 15,” he said in a text message.

Reuters reported that White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said that the final decision for the tariffs will be on US President Donald J. Trump.

“Either way we’re going to be in a great place … The president loves them (the tariffs). If we get a great deal, we’ll be in a good place as well. But it will be the president’s decision,” Mr. Navarro said in an interview with Fox Business Network as reported by Reuters.

The White House’s top economic and trade advisers, including Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, Larry Kudlow, Peter Navarro, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are expected to meet in coming days with Mr. Trump over that decision, according to a source interviewed by the news wire.

For tomorrow, both Mr. Ricafort and the trader expect the peso to range from P50.65-50.90 versus the dollar. — Luz Wendy T. Noble with Reuters

Stocks rebound ahead of China tariff deadline

THE Philippine Stocks Exhange — TIAGO ARNAIZ

SHARE prices bounced back on Wednesday as the deadline to impose US tariffs on Chinese products inched closer while the Fed meeting drove investors to Philippine stocks.

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) advanced 50.23 points or 0.65% to close at 7,786.41 Wednesday, while the broader all-shares index gained 13.65 points or 0.29% to 4,623.66.

“Investors switched back to Philippine equities as others waited for the looming 15 Dec. tariff deadline. Market jitters left Wall St. in the red last night as a result,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a mobile message Wednesday.

US President Donald Trump is scheduled to decide on Dec. 15 whether the country will roll back or allow tariffs on Chinese products to move forward. The uncertainty pushed investors away from US equities Tuesday, leaving the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq Composite index to decline 0.10%, 0.11% and 0.07%, respectively.

But Mr. Limlingan noted Asian equities still ended higher Wednesday pending the conclusion of the Federal Open Market Committee’s two-day meeting. China’s Shanghai SE Composite index rose 0.24%, South Korea’s KOSPI index rose 0.36% and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index rose 0.68%.

In the Philippines, four subsectors rose Wednesday, led by property, which was up 58.62 points or 1.43% at 4,152.45. Industrials gained 29.25 points or 0.30% to 9,560.49, services added 15.14 points or 1.01% to 1,501.95 and financials were up 13.67 points or 0.73% at 1,885.88.

Mining and oil fell 41.48 points or 0.55% to 7,471.67 while holding firms declined 25.58 points or 0.33% to 7,588.03.

Trading volume was 666.15 million issues worth P5.29 billion, up from Tuesday’s 525.65 million issues worth P3.87 billion.

Most-active stocks were Metro Pacific Investments Corp. and DMCI Holdings, Inc. — the listed investors behind embattled Maynilad Water Services, Inc. They fell 13.08% and 13.39%, respectively.

Gainers outnumbered decliners, 98 to 86, while 53 were unchanged.

Foreign investors remained net sellers Wednesday, but the net outflows narrowed to P471.74 million from P563.90 million Tuesday. — Denise A. Valdez

Farmers receive P3B worth of rice seeds

MORE than 300,000 bags of inbred seeds worth P3 billion have been given out to 46 provinces under the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF), the Agriculture department said on Wednesday.

In a statement, the agency said 282 municipalities and cities nationwide benefited from the program. The seeds accounted for 16% of the total 2.11 million bags that will be distributed in 985 cities in 57 provinces, it said.

These areas have an annual planted area of more than 500 hectares for the dry season 2019 to 2020, which began in October and will end in April, the agency said.

The 2 million bags of seeds will be planted in about 1 million hectares of riceland, which is expected to increase the yield to as many as six tons per hectare in high-yielding provinces by 2024, Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said in the statement.

The P3-billion seed distribution is one of the components of the P10-billion rice fund, which is financed by tariffs on rice imports.

The program aims to cut the country’s rice production cost of about P12 per kilo to make it more globally competitive.

Other components include P5 billion for rice farm equipment, P1 billion for credit assistance and P1 billion for developing farmers’ skills. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Gov’t poised to beat anti-poverty goal by 2022

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte’s government can lift more people out of poverty than originally targeted by the end of his six-year term in 2022, one of his economic managers said on Wednesday.

The poverty incidence could be cut to 11% in the next three years, better than the government’s original goal of 14%, he said at a briefing.

“If you let poverty incidence, which is 16.6% now, drop by 2.23 percentage points a year, then we will hit, I think, something like 11% or even less than that,” Ernesto M. Pernia said.

The poverty incidence dropped to 16.6% in 2018 from the revised 23.3% in 2015, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. That translates to 5.9 million Filipinos lifted out of poverty.

Poverty incidence among Filipino families also declined to 12.1% in 2018 from 2015’s 17.9%.

Mr. Pernia, who also heads the National Economic and Development Authority, said the agency will adjust its targets for 2022 to complement economic growth that has aided the lower poverty incidence.

“I think we will probably change our target for the midterm update of the Philippine Development Plan, from 14% by 2022,” he said “We’ll change it to 10% to 12% to be sure,” he said.

Finance Undersecretary Gil S. Beltran this week said several laws have been passed that would further bring down the poverty level. These include tax reform, infrastructure spending, rice tariffication, free college education and cash assistance to poor households. — Gillian M. Cortez

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT