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DoJ extends deadline for Lapeña’s counter-affidavit

By Vann Marlo M. Villegas, Reporter
THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DoJ) on Thursday allowed former Bureau of Customs (BoC) chief and now Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) Director-General Isidro S. Lapeña to submit on Feb. 21 his counter-affidavit to the complaint against him in connection with the shabu kept in magnetic lifters that slipped past the BoC during his watch in 2018.
Mr. Lapeña was supposed to submit his counter-affidavit to the complaint filed on Jan. 24 by the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI). But he was not able to attend the preliminary investigation on Feb. 11 due to “official duties,” according to his lawyer John Telan.
The NBI charged Mr. Lapeña with two counts each of graft, dereliction of duty, and grave misconduct in connection with the P2.4-billion shabu shipments kept in two magnetic lifters found at the Manila International Container Port in August 2018 and the P11-billion worth of the same illegal drugs placed in four magnetic lifters found in Cavite.
More than 50 others were also charged by the NBI. They have not yet filed their counter-affidavits and were also given until Feb. 21.
Mr. Lapeña resigned as BoC commissioner in August last year following the controversy over the importation of illegal drugs. He was appointed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte to TESDA on Oct. 25.
The DoJ on Jan. 30 consolidated the two complaints of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) filed in August and December 2018 and the NBI complaint. Only the NBI tagged Mr. Lapeña in the complaint.
The DoJ granted the motion for consolidation of the NBI “to avoid duplicity and/or possible conflicting resolutions over the same subject/incidents, i.e. the shipment/importation of six (6) magnetic lifter from Malaysia and Vietnam to Manila, and in the interest of justice.”

Gasoline higher by P.90/L this week, other fuel products also up

AFTER LAST week’s decline, the prices of petroleum products will resume their climb this week, with gasoline recording its biggest increase so far this year. Oil companies announced that prices of gasoline products will rise by P0.90 per liter (/L). Diesel brands will increase by P0.55/L, while kerosene will be up by P0.85/L. Most of the companies that sent their advisories as of late afternoon on Monday said they would impose the price hike at 6:00 a.m. today. Last week, they cut the per liter prices of gasoline, diesel and kerosene by P0.60, P0.35 and P0.20, respectively. So far this year, the prices of petroleum products reached their highest in the second week of January. With Tuesday’s increase, the year-to-date adjustments will stand at a net increase of P1.50/L for gasoline, P2.45/L for diesel and P1.55/L for kerosene. — Victor V. Saulon

Comelec warns candidates on election offenses as campaign period starts

THE COMMISSION on Elections (Comelec) has issued a reminder to candidates in the upcoming national and local elections that they can be penalized for prohibited campaign materials, even if these were supposedly put up by supporters without their knowledge.
Comelec, in a notice to candidates and party-list groups on Monday, said they must remove all prohibited forms of election propaganda at least 72 hours before the official campaign kick-off.
“Otherwise, said candidate or party shall be presumed to have committed the pertinent election offense during said campaign period for national candidates or for local candidates, as the case may be,” Comelec said.
The campaign period for national candidates will begin today, Feb. 12, while local candidates can start to officially campaign on March 29.
Prohibited political advertisements include materials not posted in designated common poster areas.
Materials posted in private properties without the consent of the property owner will also be considered an offense.
Based on Comelec rules, candidates under a political party can only spend P3.00 per voter while party-list groups and independent candidates can only spend P5.00.
SOURCE CODE
Meanwhile, the Comelec has also completed the international source code review for the transmission systems that will be used for the midterm elections on May 13.
During a press briefing on Monday, Comelec Commissioner Marlon S. Casquejo said their target transmission of votes in this elections is going to be higher than the 97% rate during the 2016 polls.
“Gusto namin itaas (We want to make it higher), which was near to 97% (in 2016). As much as possible, kung kaya namin (if we can make it) 100% or baka (maybe) 99%. ‘Yun talaga target namin (That is our target) so there will be more preparations and trainings,” he said.
The poll body live-streamed the final step in the process of the trusted build for Automated Election System (AES) software program for the Transmission Gateway software.
The trusted build is a process where a third party entity audits and assembles the source code or the readable text of the AES.
The trusted build was reviewed and assembled by American election software company Pro V&V.
The same company handled the trusted build for the election management system, vote counting machine, and the consolidation and canvassing machine. — Gillian M. Cortez

Remember

A brief program of remembrance will hold on Feb. 16 at this memorial by sculptor Peter de Guzman at the Plazuela de Santa Isabel in Intramuros. It will be attended by families of those who died in Manila during the battle for its liberation from Feb. 3 to March 3 in 1945. James Scott, author of Rampage: MacArthur, Yamashita, and the Battle of Manila, will be the guest speaker at the gathering. The epitaph on the memorial, written by National Artist for Literature Nick Joaquin, begins with, “This memorial is dedicated to all those innocent victims of war.”

Chinese in taho incident faces assault, disobedience charges

THE 23-YEAR old Chinese national who threw a soya drink at a police officer was formally charged before the Mandaluyong City Prosecutor’s Office on Sunday.
“The charges such as Direct Assault, Disobedience to Agent of Person in Authority and Unjust Vexation to the ‘Undesirable Alien’ has been confirmed by the Inquest Prosecutor ACP Herbert Abugan,” said the Eastern Police District in a statement on Sunday night, Feb. 10.
Jiale Zhang, a fashion design student, threw her cup of soya pudding to a police officer at the Metro Rail Transit-3 Boni Station on Saturday after she was scolded for not following the ban on any form of liquids at all train stations.
According to police authorities, Ms. Zhang was brought to the Mandaluyong City Prosecutor’s Office at 5 p.m. of Sunday to undergo inquest proceeding with the assistance of a public lawyer. The suspect’s private lawyer, Zandra C. Respall, arrived later on.
Philippine National Police (PNP) Director General Oscar D. Albayalde, meanwhile, reminded foreigners to strictly follow the country’s laws and ordinances.
“They have to respect our culture, the way we [also] respect their culture and the laws of the land. Kung talagang pinagbabawal then talagang dapat tayo sumunod (If it is really prohibited, then we should just follow) because this is part of our security measures,” said Mr. Albayalde in a chance interview with reporters on Monday at Camp Crame.
Following the recent bombings in Mindanao, the management of MRT and Light Rail Transit in the capital implemented a ban on liquid materials, which could be used for explosive materials.
The train station incident has been linked to discussions on Philippine-China economic and security relations, especially on social media platforms, given the continued tension over contested waters.
Department of Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro L. Locsin, Jr., however, said in a post online that the Chinese national is “not encroaching” on Philippine territory.
“She was flinging taho, not encroaching in our national territory. She has a visa, which she will lose, but oh well… brain explosion,” said Mr. Locsin in one of his latest in a series of tweets on the issue.
Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Zhao Jianhua, meanwhile, called out Ms. Zhang for “bad behavior.”
“All Chinese here in the Philippines should abide by local regulations and laws,” Mr. Jianhua said in a text message to News5 on Monday. — Vince Angelo C. Ferreras

Inter-agency group formed for tighter watch on illegal drugs passing through Iloilo seaports

THE SEAPORT Inter-Agency Drug Interdiction Task Group for the Western Visayas Region (SIADITG-VI) has been formed to tighten the watch on illegal drugs that come through seaports in Iloilo, once tagged by the President as one of the worst narcotics areas in the country. “One of our biggest challenges, like any other regions, is the topography of our island,” said Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) Regional Director Alex M. Tablate during the agreement signing on the new group. The SIADITG-VI is composed of representatives from the regional offices of PDEA, Bureau of Customs, Coast Guard, Philippine National Police-Regional Maritime Unit, Maritime Industry Authority, Philippine Ports Authority, National Intelligence Coordination Agency, and Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources. Mr. Tablate said they want to send out the message to “transient” drug peddlers that Iloilo ports, especially the Iloilo International Port in Iloilo City, is closely guarded. “With the initial salvo that the different local enforcement units have initiated resulting in the arrest of high-valued targets and the conduct of HIOs (high impact operations) which indeed made a difference, it is also high time now for us to adopt initiatives and measures in protecting and safeguarding our port of entries,” he said, “We expect more apprehensions and in the upcoming activities, the mobilization of our personnel will be much easier.” — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

Consumer group, Zamboanga City residents file graft case vs NEA, Zamcelco

A CONSUMER group along with two homeowners associations in Zamboanga City have filed a graft complaint before the Office of the Ombudsman against officials of the National Electrification Administration (NEA) and officers of the city’s electric cooperative.
In a statement on Monday, National Association of Electricity Consumers for Reforms, Inc. (Nasecore) said its Zamboanga City chapter filed the complaint over the alleged anomalous procurement of the investment management contract for the debt-ridden Zamboanga City Electric Cooperative, Inc. (Zamcelco), which was approved by NEA.
The case was filed on Feb. 6, 2018 against NEA Administrator Edgardo R. Masongsong, board members Rene M. Gonzales and Alipio Cirilo Badelles, and Department of Energy Undersecretary Felix William B. Fuentebella, who also serves as NEA alternate chairman.
The Zamcelco board of directors are also named in the complaint.
NEA and Mr. Fuentebella did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the complaint.
The complainants alleged that NEA approved the award of the investment management contract to a bidder despite their knowledge of irregularities in the bidding process that violate NEA rules and issuances.
On Aug. 31, the board of Zamcelco awarded the contract to the joint venture of Crown Investments Holdings, Inc. and Desco, Inc. for the management and operation of the utility, and solve its financial woes.
Zamcelco has debts of more than P2 billion in debts to its power suppliers.
Nasecore said its 14-page consolidated complaint-affidavit was filed by Marissa E. Aizon, its Zamboanga City chapter president, together with W.S. Mountain View Homeowners Association, Inc. and Capok Village Homeowners Association, Inc.
The complainants said despite knowing the alleged irregularities committed by the Zamcelco board in the bidding process, the NEA board still approved the contract “thus giving undue advantage and preference to declared bidder to the prejudice of the member-consumers of the electric cooperative.”
The complaint also charged the NEA officials with gross misconduct “for their blatant disregard of their duties as regulators” of electric cooperatives “by refusing to ensure that their transactions and actions are above board and in accordance with law, regulations and issuances.”
Ms. Aizon also charged Mr. Masongsong for violation of Republic Act No. 6713 or the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees for refusing to act on her letter-request. — Victor V. Saulon

Davao City’s traffic light system undergoes rehabilitation

DAVAO CITY’s local government and motorists are banking on the ongoing rehabilitation of the 10-year old traffic signal light system to improve the worsening road congestion. “The city has entered into a P10-million contract with Abratique and Associates for the rehabilitation of the traffic signalization,” City Transport and Traffic Management Office Dionisio C. Abude said. Davao’s existing system was a P1-billion project that includes a Traffic Monitoring Center housed at the Public Safety and Security Command Center building, along with the Central 911. Abratique & Associates is a Los Angeles-based engineering consultancy firm that specializes in the design, maintenance, and deployment of emerging transportation management system solutions and traffic control technologies. Mr. Abude said the rehabilitation work includes the traffic lights in the 64 intersections in the city. “We only have 17 working cameras along the 64 intersections and enhancing that will help us in the efficient management of traffic,” he said. Mark Pacatang of Abratique & Associates said they are doing the rehabilitation work during off-peak hours to minimize traffic disruption. — Carmencita A. Carillo

EastMinCom find 30 landmines allegedly planted by NPA

THE MILITARY’S Eastern Mindanao Command (EastMinCom) reported that it unearthed 30 landmines in various areas, allegedly planted by the communist armed group New People’s Army (NPA). Major General Felimon T. Santos Jr., EastMinCom head, said the buried explosive devices were found by troops between January and early this month, mainly in parts of the provinces of Compostela Valley and Surigao, and Butuan City. Mr. Santos said the NPA have continued to use landmines even if this is a violation of the International Humanitarian Law. “The leadership of NPA are all lip service, they always pretend to respect International Humanitarian Law, but in truth and in fact, they are the number one violator of this law. These landmines that were captured from them is a manifestation of their wanton disregard of IHL and the safety of the communities,” he said. The 1997 Mine Ban Treaty specifically prohibits the use of landmines in war as well as ordered states to destroy their stockpiles. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Nation at a Glance — (02/12/19)

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 — (02/12/19)

Ups and downs in the oil industry

In the Philippines, there remains solid demand for a variety of petroleum products that are still largely imported.

According to the Department of Energy (DoE), demand for those products amounted to 83,621 thousand barrels (MB) in the first half of 2018, the most recent period for which figures are publicly available. It increased 1.6% from 82,277 MB from the same period in 2017.

“This can be translated to an average daily requirement of 462 MB compared with last year’s level of 454.6 MB,” the agency said on its Web site.

Diesel oil demand in the first half of last year rose 5%, while demands for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and gasoline went up 10.5% and 2.4%, respectively. Only fuel oil demand experienced decline by 10.9%.

Diesel oil made up a huge chunk of the product demand mix at 42%. Gasoline accounted for 23.4%, LPG 11.8%, kerosene/avturbo 10.5%, fuel oil 5.9% and other products 6.3%.

By the end of June 2018, the actual crudes and petroleum products inventory of the country stood at 21,844 MB, an equivalent of 46-day supply. This figure was 12.1% lower than 24,854 MB or a 51-day supply equivalent recorded by the end of June 2017.

DoE noted that a minimum inventory requirement (MIR) was put into effect by the government on account of the risks facing the downstream oil industry, from geopolitical instability to supply delivery problems affecting calamity-stricken localities.

“Current MIR for refiners is in-country stocks equivalent to 30 days while an equivalent of 15 days stock is required for the bulk marketers and seven days for the LPG players,” the department said.

It added that upon the effectivity of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law, it ordered oil companies to sell their old stocks, or those that they possessed by Dec. 31, 2017, at the old excise rate or at zero rate tax for diesel product.

The country imported more crude oil in the first half of 2018 (41,747 MB) than it did in the same period in 2017 (36,016 MB). Saudi Arabia was the top supplier of the commodity to the country; 15,754 MB or 37.7% of the total came from the country. It was followed by Kuwait (24.6%), United Arab Emirates (18.6%) and Russia (8.4%).

The crude oil imports totaled $2,915.1 million. The amount was 54% higher than the previous year due to higher cost, insurance and freight (CIF) price per barrel, which hit $69.827 in the first half of 2018 compared with $52.559 in the first half of 2017.

A total of 45,403 MB of petroleum products were imported in the first of 2018, down 6.1% from first half of 2017’s 48,348 MB. Imported diesel oil fell 8.3%. Imports of gasoline and fuel oil also declined, by 3.7% and 17.8%, respectively. Only LPG import increased, albeit only by 2.2%.

Diesel oil accounted for 39.8% of the product import mix. Gasoline had the next highest share of 17.8%, followed by LPG with 15.3%. Kerosene/avturbo comprised 10.1% of the total, fuel oil 6% and other products 11.1%.

“Total gasoline import reached 41.1% of gasoline demand while diesel oil import was 51.5% of diesel demand. LPG import, on the other hand, was 70.5% of LPG demand. Total product import was 54.3% of the total products demand,” DoE said.

Total oil import bill rose to 34.4% in the first half of 2018 to $6.312 billion, and a depreciating peso was partly to blame because it rendered more expensive the shipments of crude oil and finished petroleum products.

DoE said, “This was attributed to the combined effects of higher import cost and increased import volume of crude oil vis-a-vis last year.”

Total product import cost went up 21.2% to $3,396.7 million at an average CIF cost of $74.812 per barrel from $$2,802.3 million at an average CIF cost of $57.962 per barrel. “The increase was attributed to higher import cost this year and increase in the volume of total imports,” the department said.

It also noted that the average dollar rate during the first half of 2018 was $51.974, higher than the average rate of $49.928 during the comparable period in 2017.

Meanwhile, the country exported more petroleum products in the first semester last year — 7,888 MB, up 33.2% from 5,920 MB.

“Vis-à-vis last year, condensate, the top exported product for the period increased by 43.7%. Gasoline, toluene and mixed C4 exports also rose by 49.8%, 40.8% and 18.7%, respectively. Meanwhile, 782 MB of fuel oil and 192 MB of reformate were exported this year versus nil export of first half last year,” DoE said.

Condensate made up 26.7% of the total export mix. Propylene accounted for 12.4%, gasoline 11.4%, naphtha 10.7%, pygas 10.4%, fuel oil 9.9%, mixed C4 7%, mixed xylene 4.6%, toluene 3.1%, reformate 2.4%, benzene 1.4% and LPG 0.1%.

However, the total crude oil exports of the country, which came from the Galoc oil field in Palawan, also known as Palawan Light, fell slightly from 704 MB to 690 MB.

Earnings from petroleum exports increased significantly by 51.5% to $633.1 million from $417.8 million.

And for the first half of 2018, the net oil import bill of the country stood at $5,678.8 million, up 32.8% from $4,227.4 million.

Refueling the oil industry through tech

Like many other industries, the oil industry is undergoing a digital shift. Oil companies are now seeing the profound impact of technology in improving productivity, reducing costs and increasing revenues. Apart from reigniting progress, rapid advances in technology, in the years to come, are expected to engineer further growth in this multi-billion industry.

According to Strategy&, the global strategy consulting team at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), the Oil and Gas Industry is facing an intense pressure to improve operational efficiencies as lower oil prices continue to crimp margins. The firm said that since 2014, the capital expenditures on exploration has dropped by 26%, which shifts the focus to maximizing production and throughput by “sweating” existing assets.

“While the industry continues to swing between highs and lows, the operational nature of the business has remained relatively constant. Achieving a breakthrough on production performance demands a fresh perspective on field operations,” Strategy& said in a report titled “Improving oil and gas efficiency through digital,” noting that digital transformation has the critical capability to accelerate operational efficiency and drive margins.

“The need for operational efficiency coupled with maturing technologies represent an inflection point for disruption. The traction of technology trends such as analytics, robotics, sensors, and control systems offers companies the opportunity to accelerate field automation in a pervasive manner,” Strategy& said.

At present, it can be observed that digital transformation is picking up the momentum, helping industry players in a variety of ways.

NeoSystems, a firm providing software solution for managing company’s safety and compliance processes, said that affordable technology, for instance, enables oil companies to gain a competitive advantage.

“Necessity breeds innovation, and in the oil and gas landscape, the major driving force behind the search for new and innovative technologies is the economic downturn that shell-shocked many companies starting in 2014 or 2015. Oil and gas companies are looking to integrate solutions and technologies that will give them a competitive advantage, provide critical insight into core business practices and operations, and above all, reduce costs,” NeoSystems said in its Web site.

“Fortunately, innovative technology is becoming increasingly affordable, and we will see more and more oil and gas companies have access to digital technologies such as real-time data streams, mobile technology and embedded sensors, keeping them constantly updated on their operations.”

Meanwhile, considering data as one of the biggest assets of oil companies, they are becoming more reliant on data analytics to optimize profits.

Using a digital platform to manage, measure, and track all of the data coming from all departments and all operations all over the oilfield, according to NeoSystems, have helped oil and gas companies gained valuable insight and maximized their quality and output.

“With data flowing around the oil field, digitization enables oil and gas companies to reduce costs associated with unplanned downtime and employee injury or illness, while simultaneously reducing risks,” the software solution provider said.

A study conducted by Kimberlite, an international oil and gas market research and analytics firm, showed that oil and gas companies are experiencing an average financial cost of $49 million every year due to unplanned downtime. Operators using a predictive, data-based approach, on the other hand, experience 36% less unplanned downtime than those with a reactive approach, which can result in $17 million dropping to the bottom line annually on average.

Moreover, with the utilization of real-time data, where information are processed quickly and are shared in real time, industry players are now more agile in adapting challenges and different market conditions.

“Effective use of digital technologies can help a company become more productive, efficient, and agile, with the meaningful real-time data and insight to make precise business decisions and reduce financial costs where it matters,” NeoSystems said.

Real-time updates on the conditions of equipment, pipelines, and mechanical systems have also enabled oil and gas companies to instantly determine the root causes of machinery failures, malfunctions and defects, thus helping them be more efficient in their overall operations.

While technology was able to catch up with what the industry needs, the industry itself still lags behind in leveraging some of the advancements.

As for Fotech Solutions Limited, a firm that develops distributed acoustic sensing solutions for the oil and gas, pipeline, and security markets, the oil and gas companies have been too slow to seize the opportunity presented by digitization.

“As emerging technologies continue to reshape the landscape of other legacy industries, the oil and gas industry has generally been more cautious and slower to embrace change,” Fotech said in its Web site. — Mark Louis F. Ferrolino

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