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New Kibawe-Kalilangan road in Bukidnon to cut travel time by half

THE 53.4-kilometer Kibawe-Kadingilan-Kalilangan (KKK) Road in Bukidnon, which is expected to cut travel time by half to one hour between the towns of Kibawe and Kalilangan, is almost complete, the Department of Public Works and Highways-Northern Mindanao (DPWH-10) announced yesterday. “With the completion of KKK Road, we expect to increase not just the economic activity in Region 10 but also to provide unhampered access to the thousands of motorists traversing the network,” DPWH Secretary Mark A. Villar said in a statement. The project is also seen to provide a better link between Bukidnon and Misamis Oriental. Under the 2018 national budget, P101 million was allocated for the last phase of the road project, which covers road paving and stone masonry of a 2.287-kilometer road section along the national road that will improve the Cagayan de Oro-Bukidnon link. Eight bridges along the entire road length were also included, namely: Malatipay, Manubiray, Kiorayag, Mig-asa, Kidangin, Ukitan, Mulita, and Apolang.

DENR orders relocation of gold ore mills in Compostela Valley

DAVAO CITY — BALL MILL facilities for gold ore extracted from Mt. Diwalwal in Compostela Valley have been given until this weekend to move out and transfer to a government-designated site as the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) is set to rehabilitate the Naboc River.
Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Officer Chamberlain J. Babiera, in a statement on Monday, said the ball mill operators agreed last month to the issuance of a cease and desist order (CDO) effective March 15.
“We will not be stopping their livelihood; we just want them to continue their operation at the Mabatas area,” he said, where government agencies can more closely monitor their operations.
The operators sought an extension of their stay in Mt. Diwalwal, but the Program Monitoring and Coordination Committee of the National Task Force Diwalwal declined the request, noting that they were already ordered to leave the area more than 15 years ago.
In 2003, then President now House Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo issued Executive Order No. 217, which, among others ordered the transfer of the ball mills to Mabatas as these were polluting the Naboc River with chemicals such as mercury.
The Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) said there are about 300 ball mills in the area.
Mr. Babiera said they will strictly implement the transfer and continue to monitor the area to ensure that the CDO is complied with.
“There has to be periodic monitoring on all plants issued with CDO as they might reopen after the issuance,” he said.
He added that the Department of Social Welfare and Development will also assist those who will be affected.
Patrick Kim Evangelio, the provincial government’s trade and industry specialist, earlier said that while gold production has been one of the main sources of livelihood in Compostela Valley, the local government has not been getting the appropriate revenues from the industry.
“Most of the mining activities in the province are small-scale and are not covered with permits. So, aside from not being able to pay their appropriate taxes, stakeholders do not even sell their produce to the legitimate buyer (the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas),” said Mr. Evangelio.
Most of the gold produced by small-scale miners are usually sold in the black market., he added.
A 1998 report by the MGB regional office placed Compostela Valley’s gold deposits at 36, 328,699 metric tons, one of the biggest in the world. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Local stocks climb ahead of another Brexit vote

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter
LOCAL EQUITIES rose on Wednesday even as investors grappled with another make-or-break parliamentary vote on the Brexit.
The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) managed to close yesterday’s session 0.24% higher or 18.61 points to 7,766.15, despite sideways movement for most of the day. The broader all-shares index added 0.1% or 4.87 points to 4,800.67.
“The PSEi continues to trade sideways ahead of yet another make-or-break parliamentary vote on Brexit,” Eagle Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John Mangun said in an e-mail.
A series of votes are currently laid out for the British parliament in the coming weeks, ahead of a March 29 deadline for the UK to leave the European Union. The UK Parliament on Tuesday thumbed down Prime Minister Theresa May’s proposed agreement, raising fears of a no-deal exit that continues to be a cause for concern for financial markets worldwide.
The UK Parliament will once again vote on Wednesday for a no-deal withdrawal. Should that fail, it will vote again on Thursday on whether to delay the divorce.
On the other hand, Papa Securities Corp. Sales Associate Gabriel Jose F. Perez said the PSEi continued to move sideways due to a lack of catalysts, noting that turnover was only P4.7 billion, excluding block sales.
Some 1.38 billion issues switched hands valued at P5.14 billion, thinner than the previous session’s P5.70-billion turnover.
“The index might continue to trade sideways for the remaining days of the week on a lack of internal catalysts. Main drive could still remain to be significant moves in the US markets so watch out for those,” Mr. Perez said in an e-mail.
The PSEi bucked the negativity seen in Asian markets, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropping 0.99% or 213.45 points to 21,290.24. The Hang Seng index fell 0.39% or 113.42 points to 28,807.45.
Meanwhile, Wall Street indices were mixed on Tuesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 0.38% or 96.22 points to 25,554.66. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 index rose 0.30% or 8.22 points to 2,791.52, while the Nasdaq Composite index added 0.44% or 32.97 points too 7,591.03.
Locally, sectoral indices were equally split between losers and gainers. Property led those that ended in positive territory as it surged 0.92% or 35.74 points to 3,918.31. Financials rallied 0.88% or 15.39 points to 1,764.80, while industrials firmed up 0.83% or 96.10 points to 11,617.51.
In contrast, holding firms shed 0.71% or 55.05 points to 7,695.11. Mining and oil went down 0.03% or 3.11 points to 7,947.36, while services slipped 0.03 point to 1,568.57.
Decliners outpaced advancers, 101 to 82, while 60 names were unchanged.
Net foreign selling persisted at P110.51 million, albeit lower than Tuesday’s net outflow worth P348.84 million.

Nation at a Glance — (03/14/19)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.
Nation at a Glance — (03/14/19)

Peso rebounds on selling

THE PESO rebounded against the dollar on Wednesday as agent banks sold their dollars to temper market volatility.
The local unit closed Wednesday’s session at P52.55 versus the greenback, 15 centavos stronger than the P52.70-per-dollar finish on Tuesday.
The peso opened the session slightly weaker at P52.75 per dollar, slipping to as low as P52.86 intraday. However, it closed the session at its best showing.
Trading volume grew to $1.755 billion from the $1.744 billion that changed hands the previous session.
Traders interviewed yesterday said the peso appreciated against the dollar after days of volatile trading as agent banks tried to sell the greenback.
“I think the reason why we’re seeing lower close from yesterday was due to agent banks selling dollar-peso. We’ve seen aggressive offers hitting the bids of agent banks,” the first trader said in a phone interview yesterday.
“With that, we saw a slight improvement in the peso.”
Another trader said banks pushed the peso higher as they tried to quell market volatility seen in the previous trading sessions.
“We saw the dollar-peso moved around 57 basis points on Tuesday. Today it moved around 31. Maybe they’re trying to control the depreciation of the peso against the dollar,” the trader said on Wednesday.
Both traders meanwhile speculated that the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) intervened in the trading.
“I cannot confirm but probably it might be from the central bank. We don’t know for sure. But the movement looks like it’s from the agent banks,” the first trader said.
As the country’s monetary authority, the BSP sometimes conducts “tactical interventions” to temper any sharp swings that may cause the peso to appreciate or depreciate.
The trader added that market offshore is “bullish” given the pronouncements of new BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno.
“I think the market offshore is bullish, given the interview of Governor Diokno saying that the BSP might cut reserve requirements by one [percentage point] every quarter. He also said that the peso may trade between P52 and P55.”
In a television interview, Mr. Diokno hinted at the possible easing of reserve standards for banks once every three months, saying the central bank will “look at the data.”
He added that the local currency is still within the P52-P55 target of the government.
“If it’s P52-P55, we’re in the low end of the range. I guess in a way it gave a little bit of a reason for market players to try to buy dollar-peso,” the first trader added.
For today, the first trader expects the peso to move between P52.50 and P53, while the other one gave a P52.30-P52.80 range. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

BSP chief mulls 4-point reserve ratio cut

NEWLY APPOINTED Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin E. Diokno is looking to cut the “very high” reserve standard for banks in four successive moves this year, even as he noted that local infrastructure projects remain well-funded even without injecting fresh liquidity.
The former Budget secretary-turned-central bank chief said on Tuesday that future cuts to the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) are meant to bring down the ultra-high regime, and not so much to provide stimulus for the state’s ambitious spending goals.
“We have enough money in the Treasury to fund those ‘Build, Build, Build’ projects, so there’s no need for monetary easing,” Mr. Diokno said in an interview with ABS-CBN News Channel.
“But if there’s a need, if we have to ease, it’s because our required reserve ratio is very high.”
The BSP slashed the RRR in two 100-basis-point moves in March and June 2018 that brought the mandatory reserves for universal and commercial banks to 18% of their total deposits.
“I think there’s room for monetary easing. It could be one percentage point every quarter for the next four quarters,” Mr. Diokno added.
“We’ll look at the data and see, because every time we reduce our reserve requirement by one percent, that translates to P90-100 billion in the economy.”
If implemented, the cuts would leave the RRR at 14% by early 2020.
The late Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. had set a goal to bring the RRR to single-digit level by 2023 to put it at par with regional peers and to reduce the cost of borrowing money.
Mr. Diokno said he will consider inflation in timing the next reserve reductions.
ING Bank N.V. Manila has said it expects the first RRR cut by May, noting that liquidity conditions have tightened in the aftermath of the government’s issuance of P235.935 billion retail Treasury bonds this month.
However, BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo has said that monetary authorities can trim the RRR again only if the year-to-date inflation rate falls below four percent and if there is “real tightness” in money supply, pointing out that recent term deposit auctions have proved otherwise.
Inflation has averaged 4.1% for the first two months against the central bank’s 2-4% target range for the year.
Meanwhile, Mr. Diokno stressed that “there is room” to lower benchmark interest rates amid declining inflation, but this will still be decided by the seven-man Monetary Board.
Last week, Mr. Diokno said he wanted to “expedite” the delivery of RRR cuts, but later on noted that it will also be subject to the body’s decision.
The key policy rate is currently at a decade-high of 4.75%, reflecting the cumulative 175 basis point increase in benchmark yields which took effect last year as the BSP sought to douse inflation expectations.
Coming from a nine-year-high 6.7% inflation rate in September and October, price increases have slowed for the fourth straight month to 3.8% in February, now a one-year low. It also marked the return to the 2-4% target band of the central bank.
From 5.2% in 2018, the BSP sees inflation settling at 3.1% this year.
“The inflation rate, it has gone down and inflationary expectations have also gone down,” Mr. Diokno said, adding that latest cues from the United States Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank also point to policy easing.
“All these we will factor in when we make a decision at some point. Maybe as early as this (month) or next month.”
Mr. Diokno will chair his first rate-setting meeting on March 21. Concerns about the El Niño-induced dry spell as well as the price impact of the shift to tariffs for rice from quantitative restrictions will also be considered, he added.
Market observers have said Mr. Diokno’s dovish and “pro-growth” tone are keeping rates low and the peso weak. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Merchandise trade starts 2019 with bigger deficit — PSA data

THE COUNTRY’s trade-in-goods deficit widened in January as exports declined and imports rebounded.
Preliminary data released by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) on Tuesday showed January’s trade deficit at $3.756 billion, bigger than the $3.752 billion deficit in December 2018 and $3.163 billion in January 2018.
Merchandise export sales in January amounted to $5.279 billion, 1.7% less than the $5.373 billion recorded in the same month last year.
At the same time, the country’s import bill grew by 5.8% to $9.035 billion in January from last year’s $8.536 billion.
Philippine trade year-on-year performance (January 2019)
In a statement, the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) noted January’s trade performance to be “largely due to a rebound in imports… supported by increases in the import values of consumer goods, capital goods, and raw materials and intermediate goods.”
EXPORTS
NEDA also noted lower foreign sales of manufactured goods and minerals that offset gains in exports of forest and total agro-based products.
Export of manufactured goods, which made up 82.9% of total sales in January, went down 2.5% to $4.375 billion from $4.488 billion in the same month in 2018.
However, electronic products bucked the trend as this grew 1.7% to $2.791 billion, with semiconductors contributing $2.037 billion, up 0.9% from $2.019 billion a year ago.
Outbound shipments of mineral products likewise declined 10.7% to $359.107 million from last year’s $402.147 million.
On the other hand, foreign sales of forest products surged by 116.3% to $24.485 million, followed by petroleum products with 60.8% growth to $46.146 million and total agro-based products with a 3.8% increase to $375.411 million.
IMPORTS
On the import side, purchases of major types of goods went up across the board except for mineral fuels, lubricant and related materials, which recorded a 9.9% decline in January to $820.543 million.
Leading growth among import categories during the month were consumer goods, which increased by 19.1% to $1.604 billion from $1.347 billion in January 2018.
Consumer goods comprised 17.8% of that month’s import bill.
Imports of raw materials and intermediate goods, which made up 39.3% of total imports, increased by 1.8% to $3.550 billion.
Capital goods, which made up 33% of the import total, grew 8.9% to $2.986 billion from $2.741 billion.
ASSESSMENT
Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, Union Bank of the Philippines, Inc. chief economist, in an e-mail attributed mineral exports’ weakness to the fact the government “has shown hostility in the past two years” towards the mining sector.
“Although this hostility seems to be waning, there has been no issued orders that could help propel recovery and growth of the said sector,” he said.
Furthermore, Mr. Asuncion ascribed the decline of manufactured goods exports to “weak perception” on the prospects of further trade, particularly in Asia, as well as the “inherent economic slowdown in major economies.”
“We know that China is one of the country’s major trading partners and it is the same China that is currently involved in trade issues with the United States,” Mr. Asuncion said.
ING Bank N.V. Manila senior economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said in a note that growth of consumer goods imports showed consumption “remains vibrant.”
However, he said capital formation “may have reached its peak” given slower growth of raw materials and capital goods.
UnionBank’s Mr. Asuncion expects weakness of the country’s exports to persist this year, even as “there is upside on the potential resolution of the US-China trade conflict through a possible trade agreement between the world’s largest economies…”
“Imports, on the other hand, are expected to continue to grow as inflation slows further and domestic consumption recovers. Furthermore, the continuing infrastructure development push will also continue to drive imports higher,” he added.
ING’s Mr. Mapa said that imports may continue to grow this year though “at a more subdued pace.”
“Elevated borrowing costs may have been hampering some of the capital expansion although, given the prospects for the economy, corporates and the government remain bullish with capital outlay plans announced,” Mr. Mapa said.
On the export side, Mr. Mapa hopes for a turnaround in exports this year given the growth in raw material imports needed for electronic products.
“With raw materials used for electronic exports growing by 5.1%, this could mean that exporters are building up on work in process and raw material inventory for a possible rebound in 2019 despite the US-China trade spat,” he said.
“However… the Philippine export sector will need to continue to build on sector-changing reforms to help boost productivity by enhancing supply chains and increasing standards. With the government’s ‘Build, Build, Build’ initiative seen to help boost efficiencies, perhaps the export sector can take advantage of this push and we can see the export renaissance that we’ve all been waiting for.”
Meanwhile, NEDA expects imports growth to be “constrained” given the delayed approval of the 2019 budget and the 45-day public works ban ahead of the May 13 midterm elections.
“The importation of raw materials is likely to be affected by the holdback in the implementation of numerous projects under government’s ‘Build, Build, Build’ program,” NEDA quoted its director-general, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, as saying.
Japan was the Philippines’ top export market for the month with a 16.8% share at $884.95 million, followed by the United States’ 15.8% share at $833.87 million and Hong Kong’s 12.2% share at $645.17 million.
In terms of imports, China was the Philippines’ top source of foreign goods with a 22.2% share of the total at $2.01 billion, followed by South Korea’s 8.7% share at $789.56 million and Japan’s 8.7% share at $789 million. — Lourdes O. Pilar

Philippine trade year-on-year performance (January 2019)

THE COUNTRY’s trade-in-goods deficit widened in January as exports declined and imports rebounded. Read the full story.
Philippine trade year-on-year performance (January 2019)

Revenue bureau releases draft tax amnesty rules

THE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has published draft rules on availing of the tax amnesty for delinquencies in specific cases, which will give eligible taxpayers one year to settle all outstanding payments and avoid tax evasion cases.
The state’s biggest tax collection agency posted a draft revenue regulation (RR) on its Web site this week.
This is treated as one set of implementing rules for Republic Act No. 11213, or the Tax Amnesty Act signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte last month.
With the measure, the government hopes to raise P21.26 billion as Filipinos avail of the amnesty, which would allow them to pay back taxes without being charged in court and without compounding penalties for delayed settlement.
This will account for bulk of the P27.541-billion revenue to be drawn from the “truncated” tax amnesty law, together with the provision for estate tax amnesty.
“All persons, whether natural or juridical, with internal revenue tax liabilities covering taxable year 2017 and prior years, may avail of Tax Amnesty on Delinquencies within one year from the effectivity of these regulations,” the draft regulation read.
The RR defines a delinquent account as involving unpaid taxes of taxpayers who have been given final assessment notices or formal letters of demand from the BIR, as well as those who have applied for compromise settlement with the bureau but have failed to settle due to doubts on the assessment or their “financial incapacity.”
The amnesty will also cover those with pending tax evasion charges before the Department of Justice, prosecutor’s office or the courts.
The new law sets varying amnesty rates for delinquencies charged on the basic tax.
Unremitted withholding taxes will still have to be settled in full.
For delinquent accounts and assessments which have been deemed final and executory, taxpayers will need to pay the equivalent of 40% of the basic tax assessed. Those with tax cases that have been deemed final and executory by courts will have to settle 50% of the basic assessment, while those with pending criminal cases can choose to settle beforehand and pay 60% of the tax assessment.
Anyone looking to avail of the amnesty will have to file an application with BIR offices by submitting a tax amnesty return, an acceptance payment form and a certificate of tax delinquency issued by the bureau.
Non-large taxpayers must file their forms before their respective revenue district offices, while large taxpayers will have to submit these to the Large Taxpayers Division Office where they are registered.
Upon receipt of such forms, the BIR has 15 calendar days to issue an authority to cancel assessment, which will then mean that the tax amnesty application has been accepted.
“The tax delinquency of those who availed of the tax amnesty under these regulations, upon full compliance with all the conditions set forth hereof, shall be considered settled, and the criminal case in connection therewith and its corresponding civil or administrative case, if applicable, is terminated,” the proposed RR reads.
The Finance department has said that the implementing rules will be published between March and April, in keeping with the 90-day requirement set by law. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Central bank sees FDI net inflows steady in 2019

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter
FOREIGN direct investment (FDI) net inflows this year will likely match 2018’s level, two senior central bank officials said, citing the May 13 midterm polls and rollout of more infrastructure projects as factors prospective investors will be watching.
FDI net inflows slid by 4.4% to settle at $9.802 billion in 2018 from $10.256 billion the preceding year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Monday.
The amount also settled below the BSP’s $10.4-billion forecast.
New BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said that decline is “nothing to worry about,” noting that it was because of non-recurring investments in the energy sector back in 2017 which led to a 33% drop in equity capital in 2018.
He added that FDIs this year will likely clock in at $10 billion or more, driven by strong appetite.
“There’s a lot of interest in this country. The Philippines is probably going to be one of the fastest-growing countries in this part of the world,” Mr. Diokno said in a television interview.
The BSP sees FDI net inflows reaching $10.2 billion this year, as of November estimates.
The new central bank chief added that he sees seven percent economic growth this year, which would match the low end of the state’s 7-8% target but is definitely better than last year’s 6.2%.
He noted that delays in enacting the 2019 national budget could hamper growth prospects.
The country is currently operating on a reenacted 2018 budget, leaving new programs and big-ticket infrastructure projects unfunded.
Separately, BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said that monetary authorities expect FDI net inflows to steady from 2018.
“For 2019, FDIs are projected to be broadly the same as that in 2018, although this will be reassessed in April/May,” Mr. Guinigundo said in a text message.
“There are ‘pull’ factors coming from sustained positive developments in the economy and continuation of PPP (public-private partnership) projects that were approved in previous years, but there also elements of uncertainty from the proposed fiscal incentives rationalization bill and the upcoming 2019 midterm elections that may lead to investors’ wait-and-see stance.”
Foreign business groups attributed the weaker investor appetite last year to jitters over higher commodity prices, the proposed changes to the tax perks regime and global trade tensions.
The May 13 polls will also play a key role for the government’s legislative agenda, given that it will replace half of the 24 Senate seats, the entire House of Representatives, as well as mayors and governors at the local level. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Manila Water eyes new source in Cardona to augment supply

By Victor V. Saulon, Sub-Editor
MANILA WATER Co., Inc. is counting on a new water source in Cardona, Rizal plus stop-gap measures such as deep wells and a cross-border flow agreement with the other water concessionaire to help ease the water shortage being felt within its east zone concession.
“At least throughout summer, we will have below-normal conditions. After summer, we will continue trying to develop new sources. We will probably have to update you again towards the latter part of summer,” Geodino V. Carpio, Manila Water chief operating officer, said in a press conference at its head office in Quezon City on Tuesday.
He said Manila Water sought to clarify the “misinformation and contradicting opinions” on the water shortage afflicting Metro Manila’s east zone, but not the west zone under Maynilad Water Services, Inc.
“It’s not about inability to manage El Niño. It’s simply about demand outpacing the constant supply,” he said. “El Niño exacerbates the situation.”
Mr. Carpio said the Cardona intake facility in Laguna Lake is expected to add 31 million liters per day (MLD) within the month before reaching 50 MLD by month’s end and hitting its full capacity of 100 MLD by August.
Deep wells will add about 30 MLD more, while discussions are in place with Maynilad for a cross-border flow of 32 MLD to help ease the shortage.
Mr. Carpio clarified that although Angat Dam continues to deliver the usual 46 cubic meters per second (CMS), which translates to 4,000 MLD, only 1,600 MLD is allocated to Manila Water and flows to La Mesa Dam, which the company counts as among its source of reserve water.
The water then flows to the Balara treatment plant before distribution to households. Along the way, some water is lost, although the company had been able to trim this non-revenue water down to 10-12%.
The water supply, however, has lagged behind the 1,740 MLD required by water users — a customer count that continues to increase after exceeding the allocated amount in 2016.
‘APPEAL FOR PATIENCE’
“I appeal for patience,” Mr. Carpio said as he called for consumers to continue conserving water. “As the economic development of a city accelerates, in many ways also the consumption ng bawat tao (of every individual).”
Mr. Carpio said the shortage may have been worsened when customers hoarded water after the company’s advisory on a possible outage in certain areas.
“We need to constrain demand, so we have to reduce pressure,” he said about the company’s plan to refill the reservoirs.
Meanwhile, Randolph T. Estrellado, Maynilad chief operating officer, confirmed Mr. Carpio’s statement that their companies are discussing a cross-border deal on water flow.
He said cross-border sales are included in the concession agreement “so terms are not the issue.”
“Issue is more [on] timing as bulk of the available water will come from the completion of our [second] Putatan treatment plant in Laguna Lake in April… Other cross-border locations will also involve some pipelaying as these have been abandoned in the past,” Mr. Estrellado said.
Metropolitan Waterworks Sewerage System (MWSS) maintained its call for everyone to save water and help ease the water shortage as El Niño has varying impacts such as delayed onset of rainy season.
Based on figures from the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), La Mesa Dam’s water level as of 6 a.m. on Tuesday was at 68.85 meters, down from its normal level of 80.15 meters.
The MWSS previously said that the onset of the dry season and rising customer demand does not mean that a water shortage looms for residents of Metro Manila and nearby provinces unless there is disregard for water conservation before the rainy season.
Separately, Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol placed the damage so far brought about by El Niño on palay was around P377.85 million, and on corn at P86 million. He said these crops are heavily vulnerable to dry spell or drought.
“According to PAGASA in their latest bulletin the effects of El Niño will wane in the southern Mindanao area and northern Luzon area by the end of April towards May. In other parts of the country, especially the western part, El Niño will continue until the first two weeks of December,” he said. — with report from Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

A giant girl at Art in the Park

A 20-FOOT inflatable sculpture of a girl hugging a goat and a four-foot tall perfume bottle are some of the artworks to be displayed at this Sunday’s Art in the Park fair at the Jaime Velasquez Park in Salcedo Village, Makati.
The girl hugging a goat, titled Alone But Not Lonely, is a 2018 work by Palawan-based artist Yeo Kaa. It was previously shown at the Yavuz Gallery in Singapore and, according to Ms. Kaa, is a self-portrait and a representation of how she realized that despite living alone after a break-up she felt “alone but not lonely.”
“I have a pet goat. I bring it with me whenever I travel,” Ms. Kaa told the media during a March 5 press conference in Salcedo Village, Makati.
The 29-year-old once described her works as a “rainbow with dark colors” as they are often grim and haunting images done in pastel colors evoking children’s book characters.
She will also be presenting new colorways of her five foot-tall dolls though she said she’s not sure if she will sell them.
While the massive sculpture — which will be displayed on top of a gazebo in the park — is not for sale, Ms. Kaa will be selling hexagonal tiles for P1,500, though she admitted that the workshop that does her tiles had a fire so she has to start again and aims to have 100 pieces ready for the fair.
Aside from Ms. Kaa’s inflatable, perfumer Oscar Mejia III is presenting an installation called Enigma of Scent, a four-foot tall perfume bottle with a bubble machine which will emit a citrusy fragrance.
“Our sense of smell is the most mysterious of all, as it can perceive both the tangible and the intangible,” Mr. Mejia said during the press conference.
Called an “affordable art fair” as the works on sale are capped at P50,000, Art in the Park is now on its 13th year. The fair on March 17 will feature 56 exhibitors including galleries, art collectives, independent art spaces, and schools, among others.
Last year’s one-day art fair welcomed 13,000 people, two of whom unwittingly scored valuable pieces — an unsigned Benedicto “BenCab” Cabrera painting and an unsigned Manny Garibay.
“Things in this country sometimes don’t seem to last. I want [Art in the Park] to last long and for people to know there’s a reliable event that’s going to be there every year that they can look forward to and know what to expect, like new art by young people and certain favorites of theirs,” Lisa Ongpin Periquet, founder of Art in the Park and Art Fair Philippines, told BusinessWorld during the event.
Aside from Ms. Kaa and Mr. Mejia, the other artists featured this year are painter and photographer Zean Cabangis and artist/designer Leeroy New who will be presenting pieces from his Aliens of Manila project.
Art in the Park, which is known for it relaxed atmosphere, will have jazz trio Soulful Mood play throughout the day while the Bleu Rascals, the Philippine representative to the 28th International Blues Challenge in the US, will play their “spirited take on the blues” for the evening’s special performance.
The fair will also have a variety of food tents (including vegan).
Art in the Park will be held on March 17 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. at the Jaime Velasquez Park in Salcedo Village, Makati City. Part of the proceeds of the fair will go to the Museum Foundation of the Philippines in support of its projects and programs for the National Museum of the Philippines and its network. Entrance to the fair is free. — Zsarlene B. Chua