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Salas leads Indianapolis LPGA by two strokes

LOS ANGELES — American Lizette Salas had eight birdies in an eight-under par 64 on Saturday to take a two-stroke lead heading into the final round of the US LPGA tournament in Indianapolis.
Salas, who began the round tied for the lead with Park Sung-hyun and Ko Jin-young, had a 54-hole total of 21-under 195.
She was two shots clear of Park and South Korean Amy Yang, with defending champion Lexi Thompson alone in fourth a further three strokes back.
Park, who has a chance to topple Thailand’s Ariya Jutanugarn from the number one world ranking with a victory this week, had racked up eight birdies and was 21-under and in the lead when she double-bogeyed the par-four 16th, hitting her approach shot into the water.
The two-time major winner, seeking her third win of the season, parred the last two holes to complete a six-under par 66 that left her tied on 197 with Yang, who had seven birdies without a bogey in her 65.
Thompson climbed the leaderboard with an eight-under 64, her eight birdies including four in a row from the fourth through the seventh holes.
Rookie of the year contender Ko, who returned the waterlogged Brickyard Crossing Golf Course to complete her second round on Saturday morning, had five birdies and three bogeys in her third round 70 and shared fifth place on 201 with Japan’s Nasa Hataoka (68) and Mina Harigae (65). — AFP

Snedeker retains lead as weather halts Wyndham

WASHINGTON — Brandt Snedeker held a three-stroke lead at the Wyndham Championship in North Carolina on Saturday when the third round was suspended due to bad weather.
Snedeker had made two birdies in seven holes when nearby lightning prompted the stoppage and the weather prevented the action from resuming at the Sedgefield course in Greensboro.
The 30 players who did not complete the round were resume at 8 a.m. local time on Sunday, and officials expect to have the tournament completed by the scheduled finish.
Snedeker, on 16-under-par, leads by three from Brian Gay, who had completed 12 holes, with four others on 12-under.
Snedeker knows he will have to keep attacking to hold off the charging pack on a course that invariably yields low scores.
“If I get to 22-under-par, I think it’s hard for other guys to get there,” said the eight-times PGA Tour winner.
“I’m not saying it can’t happen, but that number seems to hold up here pretty well, so that’s kind of the number I have in my mind.”
Snedeker, who shot a 59 in the opening round before adding a 67 on Friday, made an unlikely birdie at the second hole on Saturday when his 60-foot downhill putt from off the green went in at considerable pace, the cup providing a perfect backstop.
“I was just trying to get close and got lucky there, made a bomb and got some good momentum going,” he said.
“Played some solid golf after that, nothing great. Didn’t hit enough fairways really to have a bunch of birdie opportunities, but kind of managed it really, really well.
“So two-under-par through seven holes and still got a lead, that’s all positive.”
He picked up another stroke at the par-five fifth, where he drained a 10-footer.
Michael Thompson was the clubhouse leader at 11-under after shooting 63, while Spaniard Sergio Garcia was also on 11-under after nine holes.
Snedeker is prepared for a long Sunday.
“Somebody’s going to make a run and go really low and my job is to try to match that as best I can,” he said. — Reuters

China’s Sun Yang launches Asian Games charm offensive

JAKARTA — China’s Olympic champion Sun Yang showed a softer side to his gnarly public image on Sunday by lavishing compliments on rival Japanese swimmer Kosuke Hagino at the Asian Games.
The towering Chinese topped the time sheets in the morning’s 200 meters freestyle heats in Jakarta in a leisurely one minute, 47.58 seconds before being reminded about an unseemly diplomatic row he sparked at the last Asian Games in 2014.
Furious after being ambushed by Hagino in the 200m free in Incheon, Sun branded Japan’s national anthem “ugly” — not the first time the three-time Olympic gold medallist has become involved in a war of words.
“Look, I think Hagino is a good guy,” Sun told reporters. “The way he swims the individual medley is an inspiration to me. We should be working together to raise the level of Asian swimming.
“Today was a good first swim, very satisfied. The Asian Games isn’t the biggest competition perhaps but it’s an important stepping stone towards the world championships and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.”
His part-time coach Denis Cotterell said the giant Chinese was pacing himself with further individual races to come in the 400m, 800m, and 1,500m free.
“That was just a very safe swim,” the Australian told AFP. “He was slow off the blocks and just did what he had to do.
“He’s got a long program so it’s early days,” added Cotterell. “We’ll know more about where he’s at the end of the meet.”
Hagino, who won Olympic gold in the 400m individual medley in Rio two years ago, failed to qualify for the 200m freestyle at this year’s Asian Games.
Jordan’s Khader Baqlah, who has trained alongside American stars Caeleb Dressel and Ryan Lochte at the University of Florida, posted the second quickest time behind Sun in 1:47.60.
Defending champion Daiya Seto qualified fastest for the men’s 200m butterfly final in 1:57.23 from fellow Japanese Nao Horomura, who also won his heat in 1:58.06, edging out India’s Sajan Prakash.
“I can definitely go quicker,” said Seto, who also won Pan Pacific gold in Tokyo earlier this month.
“It was about conserving energy. The key tonight will be to be brave and go for it.”
China’s Xu Jiayu went quickest in the men’s 100m backstroke heats, clocking 53.60 seconds with title-holder Ryosuke Irie of Japan winning his heat in 53.85.
China claimed the top two spots in qualifying for the women’s 200m backstroke final, with Liu Yaxin storming through to win her heat in 2:09.52, almost two seconds faster than Peng Xuwei.
Japan went one-two in the women’s 100m breaststroke heats with Satomi Suzuki is quickest in 1:06.92 from Reona Aoki (1:07.24).
China dominated the swimming competition at the 2014 Asian Games, winning 22 gold medals to 12 for closest rivals Japan. — AFP

Pinoy PWD chess players do well at Malaysian open

THE PHILIPPINES sent a team of differently-abled wood pushers to the 2018 Malaysian Open with nothing in mind but to use it to train for the Asian Para Games set in October in Jakarta, Indonesia.
It has paid dividends.
Wheelchair-bound FIDE Master Sander Severino downed FM Arif Abdul Hafiz of Indonesia to finish third in the blitz section of the nine-round tournament behind eventual champion Grandmaster Susanto Megaranto of Indonesia and second placer untitled Filipino Merben Roque.
The 32-year-old Severino — who was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy when he was a child but it has never stopped him from reaping honors for the country by being a multiple-gold medal winner in the ASEAN Para Games — actually wound up FM Yoseph Theofilus Taher of Indonesia, third seed GM Yuziang of China but emerged with the highest tiebreak to clinch No. 3.
Henry Lopez and Felix Anguilera, Severino’s teammates, and coaches James Infesto and FM Roel Abelhas likewise did well.
Lopez and Abelgas each ended up tied for 12th spot with 6.5 points while Anguilera and Infiesto wound up in the big group in the top 20 with six points apiece.
Visually impaired Redor Menandro and Arman Subaste wound up with five and four points, respectively.
Interestingly, the Severino-led team was 12th in the Team Rapid competition that was participated in by more than 50 teams.
They will play in the Open and Challenger Standard tournament that starts today.
“These will be an important part of our training as we shoot for the country’s first ever Para Asian Games gold,” said Severino in Filipino.

Bowlers boost PH gold medal bid in 3 int’l tourneys

AFTER A successful outing for the national youth bowling team in Michigan, junior bowler coach Biboy Rivera believes the young bowlers will boost Philippine bowling’s campaign in three remaining overseas tournaments this year.
Having taken a bronze medal in the boys’ team event in the 2018 World Bowling Youth Championship in Detroit, Michigan, USA, which was held from July 24 to Aug. 3, the Philippine Bowling Federation (PBF) is setting its sights on winning gold medals in the Indonesia Asian Games, the upcoming World Men’s Championship in Hong Kong, and the Asian School in Taiwan.
“A bronze that glitters like gold. I’m very happy and satisfied with their performance,” said the 44-year-old Rivera, referring to the recent performance of his boys youth team composed of Kenzo Umali, Merwin Tan, Praise Gahol, and Ivan Malig in the World Youth Championship.
“They surpassed my expectations in terms of unity, playing bowling, and behavior. We never expected to win — marami kasing malalakas (there were many strong teams) and this is an eye opener.”
The last time the Philippines won a medal in the World Youth Championship was in 1992, when Angelo Constantino captured the singles gold medal in Venezuela.
“So there is no other option but to go up. They feel and realize na kaya pala nila (that they are capable of it), so our next goal is gold. That’s our target in these next tournaments — gold,” added Rivera, who thanked the Philippine Sports Commission, Philippine Olympic Committee, Boysen, Cebuanna Lhuiller, PAGCOR, Smart, and Comfoods for their support to the bowlers.
Umali said the bronze medal achievement should motivate them in future competitions.
“It is something amazing that we achieved but it is not something that we should let get into our heads. That is something that [should] motivate us to continue playing the sports we love,” said Umali, noting they should raise the bar higher in the next tournaments.
“For the next tournaments, yes, we could [turn that bronze into a gold],” added Umali. “I think the next time we go out, we will be more confident and we will be more reassuring of ourselves.”
Umali and Tan are among the 12 members of the Philippine men’s and women’s team that will fly this week to Palembang, Indonesia to compete in the 2018 Asian Games under head coach Paeng Nepomuceno and his assistant Rivera.
Umali will then will join the youth team in the Asian School Championship in Taiwan on Sept. 30 to Oct. 9.
Then he and Tan will join Jomar Jumapao, Raul Miranda, Kenneth Chua, and Enzo Hernandez to compete in the World Men’s Championship in Hong Kong on Nov. 23 to Dec. 5.
Besides the World Youth bronze, the Philippine Bowling team under the program of the PBF also won the 53rd World Cup in Mexico under Krizziah Tabora last November, and two silver medals in the Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games last September in Turkmenistan.
For the Indonesia Asian Games, the bowling competition is set on Aug. 22 to 27. The men’s team is composed of Chua, Hernandez, Jumapao, Tan, Raoul Miranda and Umali, while the women’s team is made up of Dyan Coronacion, Alexis Sy, Liza Del Rosario, Lourdes, Arles, Lara Posadas, and Rachelle De Leon.

Hardaway, Scalabrine headline NBA 3X PHL

THE National Basketball Association (NBA) announced last week that NBA Legend Tim Hardaway, NBA Champion Brian Scalabrine, and the Detroit Pistons Flight Crew will attend NBA 3X Philippines presented by AXA from Aug. 25-26 at the SM Mall of Asia Music Hall.
The NBA 3X Philippines 2018 will showcase a 3-on-3 tournament featuring men’s and women’s teams combined with authentic NBA entertainment. Preliminary tournaments for NBA 3X Philippines 2018 began on Aug. 11-12 at Benguet State University and will continue on Aug. 18-19 at Don Bosco Technical Institute University to determine the participants in the playoffs at the SM Mall of Asia.
“It’s a great feeling to return to the Philippines and get reacquainted with the passionate Filipino fan base,” Hardaway was quoted as saying in a release. “NBA 3X celebrates the vibrant culture of basketball, which will be in full display for fans to experience throughout the weekend festivities.”
“Traveling to the Philippines for the first time is an exciting opportunity to experience how the game is played on this side of the world,” Scalabrine was quoted as saying. “As a basketball fan and analyst, I’m looking forward to interacting with the fans and sharing my knowledge with the talented athletes at the NBA 3X event.”
The competitive 3-on-3 tournament includes divisions for boys (under-13, under-16, under-18, and open category), girls (under-18 and open category), an invitation only Celebrity Division featuring popular local personalities, and a division exclusive to AXA employees and distributors.
For more information on NBA 3X Philippines 2018, visit www.nba3x.com/philippines, Facebook.com/philsnba and @NBA_Philippines on Twitter.

Acuña will have more chances at greatness

Ronald Jose Acuña Blanco, Jr. knows all about baseball’s unwritten rules. The latest in a long line of talents to hail from Venezuela, he grew up understanding the game and its nuances, and thereby pledging to act accordingly. It’s why, since he made his professional debut three years ago (and most definitely since making his first Major League Baseball start in April), he has seen fit to work hard, play hard, and refrain from celebrating his progress as if he were showing up the sport and its practitioners.
Considering Acuña’s knowledge of tradition, he may well have expected to be challenged Wednesday night. After all, he had homered in each of his last five games and, even more impressively, going yard leading off in the last three. As things turned out, the Marlins’ Jose Ureña had another, more direct plan; the right hander plunked him on the very first pitch with a whopper of a fastball clocked at 97.5 miles per hour. No initial attempts to protect the plate. No throws low and inside to make him back off. Just an out-and-out heater from the get-go.
Needless to say, the Braves protested, and to the point where manager Brian Snitker was ejected and benches were cleared twice. Meanwhile, Acuña managed to stay in the contest, but only until the second inning, when he felt stiffness in his left elbow as a result of the hit. Thankfully, post-match X-rays proved negative. But what if they showed a fracture that required him to miss time? What if the beaning resulted in worse? It would have been a blow to the franchise’s efforts to protect its division lead, not to mention his own career.
Naturally, Ureña insisted that the hit was unintentional, the result of a throw that simply got away. And, given the pitcher’s relative lack of control, it would have been a plausible explanation, too, had circumstances not made the purpose obvious. There wasn’t even a hint of subterfuge or an apologetic tip of the cap. Perhaps it’s why other Marlins distanced themselves from the move, indicating that the development was borne of a lone-wolf decision.
MLB officials wasted no time penalizing Ureña in a manner entirely consistent with previous practice. He was suspended for six games, which means he would miss two starts at most. And therein lies the rub: the standard punishment for players who do not trek to the field every day is a joke. Meanwhile, Acuña went about his business, going for a single in his next outing to extend his hitting streak but missing out on doing the same to his tally of homers.
At 20 and teeming with skill, Acuña would have more chances at greatness, of course. Sadly, it doesn’t feel the same for the MLB, which has suffered from a significant drop in interest of late, and which needs to protect its biggest names from the pitfalls of adhering to the familiar. It may be hard to break from tradition, but when the outcomes don’t buck a disturbing trend, doing the same thing over and over again is the very definition of insanity.
 
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994.

Philippines defense spending and the South China Sea

On Aug. 13, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief of Staff Gen. Carlito Galvez, Jr. admitted that China’s radio warnings to Philippine aircraft and ships in the South China Sea (SCS) are “a daily occurrence.”
The AFP leadership has actually been mum about this, giving only occasional admission of such China warnings until BBC, one of the international TV networks allowed by US Navy Patrol in one of its recent patrols at the SCS, reported that it was able to pick up China’s aggressive warning to a Philippine military aircraft supposedly flying nearby: “Philippine military the aircraft. I’m warning you again: Leave immediately or you will bear responsibility for all the consequences.”
BBC observed that China’s radio warning to the Philippine aircraft was less courteous compared to the US Navy aircraft which also received a China military warning.
The previous Aquino administration hauled China to the UN-backed Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in The Hague, Netherlands. It was a good move and on July 12, 2016 or less than two weeks into the Duterte administration, PCA rewarded the Philippines with a ruling that China’s 9-dash line has no basis in international law.
President Duterte, however, has never explicitly used and cited that PCA award and instead, tried to appease if not kowtow outrightly with the Beijing communist government.
This policy shift was reassessed during the Stratbase-Albert del Rosario Insitute (ADRi) forum last July 12. VP Leni Robredo, former DFA Secretary del Rosario, SC Associate Justice Antonio Carpio, UP Law Prof. Jay Batongbacal were among the speakers and they highlighted the lack of importance given by the Duterte administration on the value of such arbitral award.
In terms of defense spending, there is some change made by Duterte — there is marked increased in the proposed budget for the Army, Air Force and Navy and decline in the general headquarters (HQ) and other support units. Obligation budget refers to possible extension of service delivery and payment beyond the calendar year while cash budget refers to service delivery and payment within the calendar year with maximum extension of three months (see table 1).
Table1
Looking at the regional picture in defense spending, the World Bank’s World Development Indicators (WDI) has some interesting data.
In terms of absolute values of military spending, China is #1 hands down. Its GDP size (nominal) in 2016 was $11.2 trillion so 1.9% of it is $212.8 B, a huge amount (see table 2).
Table2
The Philippines’ military personnel and spending look small compared with its neighbors, but considering that it has little external defense capability and the main function of the AFP is internal defense like fighting the NPAs and ragtag separatist and Islamic fundamentalist groups, the spending looks big.
Other Asian countries have used both diplomatic and limited military engagement in facing China bullying in the SCS. Vietnam and Indonesia, for instance, have sank some intrusive Chinese fishing boats that are sometimes backed up by China Coast Guard boats.
The Duterte administration’s kowtow attitude to the China communist government is shameful. It should redeem itself by reasserting the Philippines’ ownership of those stolen islands and territories, have military coordination with the US Navy and have regular joint patrols in the area, among others.
 
Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is President of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia.
minimalgovernment@gmail.com.

Oslob and Responsible Tourism

Sustainable and responsible tourism is the cornerstone of Tourism Secretary, Bernadette “Berna” Romulo-Puyat’s, agenda as she spearheads the country’s tourism offensive. This is what she told a group of us in a recent press forum last month.
Her thrust could not be more appropriate. Following the Boracay catastrophe, we have witnessed how rapid development without planning can boomerang into an environmental disaster; how corruption in local governments can turn the most pristine of islands into a virtual septic tank; and how local governments can be incapable of managing large volume, high profile tourist destinations, both in financial and management terms.
Boracay was a painful lesson for us all. Not only will its closure cost us some US$900 million in foregone tourism revenues, it also displaced thousands of businesses, small and large, in the island. The environmental damage caused to Boracay’s flora, fauna and marine life has yet to be quantified.
Last week, I took my family to the Oslob to swim with the whale sharks. This was not the first time we visited the place — we were there in 2012 when it was still a low- key tourist site. Back then, the place was barebones rustic. The main reception was composed of a roofed pavilion some 400 square meters in size, equipped with two toilets and around eight shower stalls. It had a parking lot good for 25 cars. The entire facility was enough to process 100 daily visitors.
Today, Oslob has become a famed tourist destination. It now attracts up to 1,000 tourists daily and neither the pavilion nor parking lot have been expanded.
Tourists, mostly foreign, are bursting at the seams and spilling out into the streets where there is no sidewalk. Those waiting for their turn to board the paddle boats crowd the holding area that is neither roofed nor cemented. Mind you, there are hundreds of people waiting at the shoreline at any point in time.
The sheer number of tourists has made the place chaotic, not to mention, filthy. The beachfront is overrun and the stress on the environment is palpable. Due to the lack of toilets, I personally witnessed a Chinese couple who allowed their kids to relieve themselves by the trees. The waste eventually found its way to the ocean and eventually, to the whale sharks. No surprise, the water emits a foul odor.
The specter in Oslob is a two-pronged disaster. On one hand, the lack of infrastructure is damaging the environment at an accelerated rate. On the other, tourists are made to experience something that is less than pleasant. No doubt, this will redound to a degradation of the Philippine tourism brand.
The only bright spot is that the sea wardens are strict about how the tourist can interact with the whales.
The Cebu provincial government charges an entrance fee of P1,000 for every foreigner and P500 for locals. With the present number of visitors, collections can range anywhere from half a million to a million pesos a day.
The local government claims that 60% of revenues go to the Barangay Tan-awan boatmen and sea wardens, 30% to the municipal government and 10% to the barangay. Whether these ratios are accurate or not is another story. The point is, the revenues are substantial and are simply being divvied-up by the local officials without allotting funds to improve infrastructure.
Secretary Berna should look into this because it is another environmental catastrophe in the making. If left unattended, this tourism jewel will go the way of Boracay. The time has come for the national government to intervene.
SUMILON
The story is completely different in the island of Sumilon, 10 minutes away from Oslob by boat. Again, I was there in 2012 and recall how the beach was inundated by trash from the nearby islands of Dumaguete and Oslob.
Today, the beach is as clean as a virgin island with nary an article of waste in sight. Its white sand is most inviting amidst the contrast of its turquoise and royal blue waters. My family and I enjoyed our time on the sandbar and marveled at how clean it is, even underwater.
Seventeen of the 24 hectares of Sumilon island is managed by the Cebu-based Bluewater Group. There, they built a resort consisting of 31 casitas, three of which are villas, several dining pavilions, two swimming pools, a spa and a camping site. Bluewater is famous for how they honor Philippine architecture, customs and traditions. The Filipino themed resort is one all Filipinos will be proud of in terms of facilities, hospitality and of course, its food.
Bluewater has practiced responsible development since the commencement of its lease. A 4-stage sewer treatment plant was installed using technology from Europe. About 40 cubic meters of waste water is treated daily, for which clean, unpotable water comes out the other end. The processed water is high in minerals and used to irrigate the gardens and wild forests of the island.
Next month, Bluewater’s water desalination plant will be put online, negating the need to import water through barges from the mainland. The desalination plant is seen to reduce the resort’s carbon footprint by a considerable margin.
Carbon emission will be reduced even more significantly next year when the electrification of the island will be derived from solar panels.
EJ Barretto is the Resident Manager of Bluewater Sumilon. He belongs to the distinguished family of restaurateurs and hoteliers that counts icon Glenda Barretto as its matriarch. I asked EJ how he kept stray trash from surrounding islands from flowing into their shores, especially during the Amihan months.
There is no short cut, EJ said. The only way to do it is to physically block debris through nets and by nonstop cleaning. An army of cleaners sweeps the beach and its waters daily, at 5:30 a.m. Every week, an even bigger legion is mobilized to do their coastal deep water cleaning.
The results are obvious, the island of Sumilon is antiseptic and its natural beauty shines through with the absence of pollution or inundation. It is what Oslob should be.
ELIGIBLE FOR A SKÄL AWARD
I was so impressed by Bluewater’s responsible practices that I intend to nominate them to be Skäl’s Tourism Personality of the year for 2019. For those unaware, Skäl is a worldwide organization of tourism leaders of which I am a member. It is the oldest and most prestigious tourism organization founded in Paris in 1932.
This year’s awardees in the Philippines include Andrea Domingo of PAGCOR, Kingson Sian of Resorts World, Akihiro Hosoya of ANA Airlines, Joanne Rae Ramirez of the Philippine Star, Deedee Ledonio of Coltrans Exhibits and hardworking Eddie Monreal of the Manila International Airport Authority.
The importance of sustainable and responsible tourism development cannot be overemphasized. It is what will make the industry endure through generations while ensuring the best experience for our visitors. Oslob is on a slippery slope. Sec. Berna must give it due attention.
 
Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

A play for the budget

“What’s the play?” In Filipino-speak, “Ano ang laro?” It means there’s a lot of double-speak, so to try to understand, one will have to analyze actions versus words and ask the question heavily laden with negative connotations — what’s the hidden game plan?
In a business corporation, the question is not asked, because vision and mission statements are clear to all, as the management team stops to ponder: where are we now and where do we want to be — in a year, in three years, and in five years? They sweat through the SWOT — analyzing strengths, weaknesses (internal forces), opportunities and threats (external forces) to maximize resources towards the achievement of goals (strategic planning) and objectives (tactical planning).
When a business plans, there is only one “play” or motive for all in the team — what’s the bottom line going to look like? And the operating budget is based on the plans and programs for the year (as well as current portion of the longer-term). It would be a veritable projected Income Statement for the yearend. The capital budget (CAPEX) would be recorded on the cash flow statement under “investing activities” since it would be a cash outlay for that accounting period.
Wish that a government had as simple a planning and budgeting template as a business corporation. Yes, there is the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) whose “mission is to lead public expenditure management to ensure the equitable, prudent, transparent and accountable allocation and use of public funds to improve the quality of life of each and every Filipino” (https://www.dbm.gov.ph). The DBM formulates the overall resource application strategy for macro-economic policy, prepares the medium-term expenditure plan and formulates the annual national budget for submission and approval of the President before presentation to the Legislature for enactment into law.
Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno defined the macroeconomic assumptions that were the basis for next year’s budget, stressing that the government will continue to adopt an expansionary fiscal policy towards a growth target of 7% to 8% from 2018 to 2022 (bworldonline July 24). He announced the shift to “Annual Cash-Based Appropriations” wherein obligations or contracts for programs, activities, and projects entered into are limited to those that can be fully delivered by the end of the fiscal year. Thus the P3.757 trillion 2019 national budget (19.3% of projected gross domestic product) is the first-ever cash-based budget, approved “as presented” by President Rodrigo Duterte on July 23, the day of his State of the Nation Address (SONA).
“For the longest time, agencies’ budgets have followed two-year, ‘obligation-based budgeting,’ which disburses payments as obligations or commitments that may not necessarily be delivered within the same year. The problem with this setup is that agencies tend to enter into contracts before the year ends — just so they can commit to projects — even if they will not be completed within the same year. This also means that inspection, verification, and payment for the said projects are done even after the fiscal year when the contracts were awarded,” Diokno said at his media briefing (rappler.com Aug. 15). Cash-basis would give the government immediate claim for economic achievements and impact on GDP — good fiscal “photo-ops” for yearend.
But when the 2019 Budget went to the House of Representatives, members of both the majority and minority blocs opposed the cash-based budget. Committee on appropriations Chair Karlo Nograles argued that the new system, which would only allot resources for projects that could be initiated and finished within the year (compared to two years under the obligations-based form), will greatly lower capital or infrastructure spending of government agencies (CNN Philippines, Aug. 11). “The House proposal is that we increase the deficit, which, of course, is not acceptable to us,” Diokno said, adding that a bigger budget deficit may be unmanageable and posed a fiscal risk (inquirer.net, Aug. 15). “Maybe during election year, I’m speculating they (congressmen) want more projects in their districts. That’s natural if you are a congressman and you want to impress your constituents so you need more projects,” the Budget chief said (gmanewsonline, Aug. 15).
“We’re not talking of concessions … this is not a negotiation,” an obviously piqued Diokno said at a media forum. “If the House would not stand down, we are ready for a reenacted budget,” he added (Ibid.). “You know the present Speaker now, GMA (Gloria Macapagal Arroyo), on the nine and a half years that she governed, she had three reenacted budgets. If you remember that. So she is the master of the reenacted budget. No, we won’t abuse the power of the executive,” Diokno threatened (Manila Times, Aug. 15). Passing a reenacted budget means the current budget will be reused for the following year. This junks the planning efforts and allows executive discretion in the reallocation of funds, giving much room for corruption.
Senator Panfilo Lacson fueled the controversy even more by saying that there is some P130-billion pork barrel for some lawmakers hidden in the 2019 budget. He said “this could be the reason the House of Representatives is strongly opposing the proposed cash-based system for the 2019 national budget. This requires spending funds within the budget year. Lawmakers are in favor of an obligation-based budget, which can extend funding for up to two years,” versus only a one-year “commission” (CNN Philippines, Aug. 17).
Could alleged “opportunities” peculiar to each possibly be the difference why the cash-based budget is acceptable in the Senate, and not in the House of Representatives, some ask?
“We are supporting the DBM’s budget proposal,” Senate President Tito Sotto announced (CNN Philippines, Aug. 15). The usual voices in the Senate critical of Duterte are so easily supporting his budget (except for the extension period of three months-grace after the end of fiscal year to six months-grace for projects started near the end of the year and straddling the next year). Of course, to the Senators’ credit — the World Bank has endorsed the cash-based budget, in tandem with accrual reporting of financial standing, as the more realistic compliance and performance formats used in developing economies (http://www1.worldbank.org/publicsector).
But it was President Duterte’s spokesman Harry Roque who planted the thought, for whatever sympathy to be gained by his unusually detached boss, perhaps: “Let’s just say with the budget being rejected by Congress, we don’t know what ties we [will] have with the House now. We’d like to think that they continue to be close allies of the President, but apparently the change in leadership (Arroyo, presidential daughter Sara’s political ally?) has also brought in [a] different kind of relationship,” Roque said (Manila Times, Aug. 15).
Really, now. “Ano kaya ang laro? Wonder what’s the play?”
 
Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.
ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Reducing power plant carbon emissions by 70% is doable

My two previous pieces (BW, July 16 and July 23, 2018) discussed four flaws in the DoE’s current power development plan that led it to overestimate the country’s 2040 baseload requirements by more than 100%.
Another BW piece disputed my conclusion and claimed that there is no baseload bloat. I urge all readers to check for themselves the DoE planning flaws where the bulk of the bloat is coming from: ignoring declining solar and wind prices and assuming that baseloads will retain until 2040 their 70% share in the electricity mix; applying the 70% on total supply instead of peak demand only; and raising reserve requirements from two of the largest generating units on the grid to more than twenty.
My piece suggested that future DoE plans should focus on more flexible plants, that can be shut down once a day and whose output can be easily ramped up or down, rather than baseload plants which must run 24/7 to stay efficient. The overestimate means that the country can in fact afford to gradually decrease its fleet of fossil-based baseload plants, as the electricity sector’s contribution to the international effort to deal with climate change.
Having suffered through typhoon Yolanda and other recent extreme weather events, Filipinos feel in their gut what global warming and climate change mean. Thus, the Philippine government made an international commitment to do its share in greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction. This commitment in the Paris climate treaty reads as follows:
“The Philippines intends to undertake GHG (CO2e) emissions reduction of about 70% by 2030 relative to its business-as-usual (BAU) scenario of 2000-2030. Reduction of CO2e emissions will come from energy, transport, waste, forestry and industry sectors. The mitigation contribution is conditioned on the extent of financial resources, including technology development & transfer, and capacity building, that will be made available to the Philippines.”
The treaty was signed by President Duterte and ratified by the Philippine Senate in April 2017. This makes the treaty “part of the laws of the land.”
This piece quantifies what a 70% reduction of the BAU scenario means for the electricity sector, in terms of gigawatt-hours (GWh) of generation from fossil-based power plants, which are the sector’s main source of GHG emissions.
“Business-as-usual” scenario: 182,007 GWh
The Philippines generated 25,865 GWh of electricity from fossil-fueled power plants in the year 2000. By 2007, this had increased to 40,774 GWh, an average annual growth rate (AAGR) of 6.72%. The Renewable Energy Act was passed in 2008, so we will use the 2000-2007 AAGR as the BAU growth rate. Assuming that fossil-based generation continued at this same BAU rate until 2030, we get a projected BAU scenario by 2030 of 182,007 GWh. This is what we committed to reduce by 70%, to attain a “low-carbon scenario.”
“Low carbon scenario”: 64,280 GWh by 2022, 54.602 GWh by 2030
Reducing by 70% means retaining 30%. In effect, we committed to generate by 2030 no more than 30% of 182,007 GWh, or 54,602 GWh, of fossil-based electricity. We will call this ceiling the “low-carbon scenario.”
Our fossil-based generation at the end of 2017 was 71,181 GWh. Bringing this down to 54,602 GWh by 2030 means an actual reduction over 13 years of 23.3% from the 2017 level, or an average reduction of 2.02% per year.
The useful life of coal plants is 25 years, before they need to be rehabilitated. This means that if we let coal plants operate until the end of their useful life, without rehabilitating or replacing them, 1/25 or 4% of them will be retired each year. Our Paris commitment requires us to retire fossil-fueled power plants at the rate of 2% a year. This is half their natural attrition rate, leaving enough room for flexibility.
To get a sense of what our Paris commitment means specifically for the Duterte administration, the 2% annual reduction means around 64,280 GWh of fossil-based generation by 2022. This was our level of fossil-based generation in mid-2016, when President Duterte started his six-year term.
Thus, if the Duterte administration, by the end of its term, brings down our fossil-based generation to the same level as when it assumed office, we can meet our Paris commitment.
What about our growing electricity requirements?
We definitely do not want to sacrifice national development and our power needs for the sake of meeting our Paris commitment. So, the real question is: if we took the low-carbon path and reduced our fossil-based generation by 2% per year, can renewable energy (RE) and energy efficiency cover the balance?
The next piece will show that as of 2017, enough RE projects have already been approved by the DoE to cover the balance, with a few years to spare.
Thus, with the right policies, we can meet our growing electricity requirements and our Paris commitment too.
[Erratum: in the first two pieces of this series, I cited the Philippine Energy Plan 2016-2040 as source. The correct source is the Power Development Plan 2016-2040, which is part of the PEP.]
 
Roberto Verzola is a senior fellow of Action for Economic Reforms. He is currently president of the nonprofit Center for Renewable Energy and Sustainable Technology (CREST). The German foundation Friedrich Ebert Stiftung published in 2017 his book Crossing Over: The Energy Transition to Renewable Electricity (second edition, PDF is online).

Federalism unlikely now but still relevant — analysts

THE SHIFT to federalism is now unlikely to move ahead within President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s term, but its significance as a continuing public issue remains, analysts sought for comment said.
The answer to the viability of federalism may also be gleaned from recent statements on this subject by two of the country’s top officials, one of them being Mr. Duterte himself.
Mr. Duterte used to warn about the urgency of transitioning toward federalism, saying the alternative is war. But there was none of that bleak forecast in his State of the Nation Address on July 23, when he still pitched his advocacy of federalism but this time merely saying in part that it was “a distinct honor and privilege to have received earlier from the Consultative Committee (Con-Com) that I created, the draft Federal Constitution that will truly embody the ideals and aspirations of all the Filipino people.”
“I am confident that the Filipino people will stand behind us as we introduce this new fundamental law that will not only strengthen our democratic institutions, but will also create an environment where every Filipino — regardless of social status, religion, or ideology — will have an equal opportunity to grow and create a future that he or she can proudly bequeath to the succeeding generations,” Mr. Duterte also said.
Mr. Duterte’s report to the nation followed on the heels of a rating update on July 20 by credit-watcher Moody’s Investor Services, which also flagged the Philippines’ shift to federalism as a potential “downside risk to the country’s institutional and fiscal profile.”
By this time too, federalism as a government agenda fared poorly in the surveys by both Pulse Asia and the Social Weather Stations, besides encountering resistance in the Senate.
The other top official on which the fate of federalism depends is former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who was installed Speaker of the House of Representatives on the day of Mr. Duterte’s report to the Nation.
Soon after being elected House Speaker, Ms. Arroyo continued to pitch federalism and subsequently filed a resolution that deferred to the Senate on the matter of separate voting on charter change by the two chambers of Congress.
But in an exclusive interview with ABS-CBN last Thursday, Ms. Arroyo now said that “it (charter change) might not probably be completed in my remaining time in office, especially (since) there will still be a plebiscite.”
“I hope to move it forward as far as I can during my time as speaker,” Ms. Arroyo also said in that interview. “I hope those who follow after will pick up from where we left off in this Congress.”
ECONOMIC MANAGERS
Ms. Arroyo’s remarks follow in the wake of Mr. Duterte’s own economic managers flagging the costs of federalism, as well as statements by business groups reaffirming their concern over that agenda.
Finance Carlos G. Dominguez III, testifying on Aug. 8 at a national budget briefing by the Senate, said the draft federal constitution could lead to “irreversible economic consequences” such as a widened budget deficit, downgraded credit ratings, reduced funds for the administration’s Build, Build, Build program, and massive job cuts in the government sector.
Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, who was also at that briefing, reaffirmed his earlier remarks last month about the economic cost of federalism, but was contradicted at the time by the Palace.
“It’s possible to change. But when? It’s not now. But…what is the best time to talk about federalism? It’s today. Because if you go around the country, nobody even knows exactly the basic technicalities of federalism,” University of Santo Tomas (UST) political science professor Marlon M. Villarin said in a phone interview last Friday when sought for comment.
In an e-mail reply to questions, Ateneo Policy Center research fellow Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco said: “It may not be moving along as planned, but they cannot just give up. Remember, federalism is a campaign promise of President Duterte.”
As of last Wednesday, Aug. 15, Mr. Duterte continued to pitch his advocacy, urging stalwarts of the ruling PDP–Laban to unite in “advancing federalism.” His spokesperson, Harry L. Roque, Jr. also said in a press briefing last week that the President is “exploring all options” in his federalism agenda.
“The way I look at it, what (Mr.) Duterte really meant is that within his term he wants the people to start talking about the possibility of shifting to federalism,” Mr. Villarin said. “Because if we will only understand how the Duterte administration takes the discourses pertaining to federalism, it seems that they keep on saying ‘I want this now.’ But the ‘now’ condition should not be literally understood. [He is saying that] we need to have a drastic change in our system now, but he just wants to open popular discourses.”
“We don’t take the statement of (Mr.) Duterte literally, but somehow we need to take it seriously,” he also said.
Also sought for comment, Consultative Committee (ConCom) Senior Technical and Media Officer Conrado I. Generoso said, “The process is going to happen within the term. You have to set up the foundations. You have to set up the minimum mechanisms for it to take place by 2022.”
Mr. Yusingco said: “It is not just the apprehensions expressed by our top economic officials. We are not ready for federalism because we really started seriously talking about this idea just last year. We are, in fact, in the thick of sifting through the nitty-gritty of this system of government. I think we need a couple more years to get a strong grip of what federalism truly means.”
‘TIMING’
Political science professor and ConCom member Edmund S. Tayao said in a phone interview when sought for comment, “If it’s a question of timing, what would be your indicators that it’s not [yet] time to change the form of government? Maybe you have indicators to suggest that some preparations are needed or some levels of development are needed before the shift of government to federalism.”
He added: “In fact, the more important consideration is why do you even have to change the form of government when you have already achieved some changes or some improvements in the way things are?”
But Mr. Tayao also said, “How can you expect entirely different results using the same setup?”
In a mobile message, Asian Institute of Management economics professor Emmanuel A. Leyco said: “I think the building storm against federalism coming from the business sector, the government’s own economic team and now an international credit rating agency should be enough for the President to rethink the shift to federalism.”
For Mr. Yusingco, the “challenge now for federalism proponents, including the Puno Consultative Committee, is to address the concerns raised by our country’s economic and finance managers.”
“They have to offer another path to federalization that will not bring our country to economic ruin,” he added.
For Mr. Tayao, the ConCom has already “done” its job, and “it’s now up to Congress or whichever body later that will be formed.”
Also sought for comment, ConCom Subcommittee on Economic Reforms chair Arthur N. Aguilar said in a phone interview that the fate of the federal constitution they drafted “will depend on the composition of the Senate next year,” after the midterm elections.
But the campaign to promote federalism throughout the country “will continue,” he said.
“But as far as ConCom is concerned, our job is done. We will still continue to clarify our views. We will have to participate in any effort that would improve our draft, in filling up the gaps and clearing up what is not clear,” Mr. Aguilar added.
‘PRESIDENT’S POPULARITY’
Also sought for comment, social science assistant professor Marlon B. Lopez of the Mindanao State University-Tawi-Tawi College of Technology and Oceanography is hopeful that federalism “will push through, given the President’s popularity.”
“Yes, given his popularity among the masses, he has massive support. He also has enough support at the House of Representatives but I doubt at the Senate, which can be very critical of this move,” Mr. Lopez said in a phone interview.
“Although I doubt that the masses really understand the concept of federalism,” he also pointed out. “But, still, given his popularity, it will really move forward.”
He cited the people in Tawi-Tawi, for one, “are not yet aware of what federalism is.”
“The federalism literacy is not yet incorporated in the curriculum. The academe, as of now, is not yet moving towards federalism literacy….But whether it will push through, I believe it will really happen,” Mr. Lopez said.
He added, “What’s marketable here (in Tawi-Tawi) is not really the federalism itself, but the President. He is very vocal about federalism, and he is pushing for it. Hence, it will push through even though they do not understand what it is.”
Mr. Villarin, for his part, said: “Education is a key. When we speak of education, we don’t only speak of how the people should be knowledgeable about these changes in the system but rather it will also involve how we should include the major stakeholders in our country when it comes to shifting to federalism,…even the indigenous members of the society. Because we have to remember that any changes in the Constitution affect the political, economic and social culture of the people.”
On the concerns of the President’s economic team, ConCom member Mr. Tayao said: “It is the prevailing setup that you are going to change. So, how can you say that this is going to be detrimental when your basis is the prevailing setup? When you do economic analysis, you should be able to do prospective economic analysis…”
He added, “From the very start, we have been recognizing the importance of the economy and the fiscal part of federalism. It’s, in fact, the heart and soul of federalism that requires substantial studies. It’s not something that we had to guess. We really had to intensively study it and factor in so many different conditions… In the whole process, we were consulting the economic managers. Sadly, they barely responded. Let’s say for the sake of argument that the criticisms of the economic managers are well and sound, but it could have been averted if they at least assisted with all our requests with them….But that did not happen.”
It is Congress that will now determine the fate of federalism, with this agenda now in its hands.
Sought for comment last Saturday, House Majority Leader Rep. Rolando G. Andaya, Jr. pointed out, “The resolution calling for a voting of both houses be done separately is still in the period of debate.”
But he also said, “Together with the Senate stand and the initial PR stunt of Ms. (Mocha) Uson, (Communications assistant secretary), I think it is safe to conclude that House Speaker Gloria M. Arroyo’s sentiment will come to fruition.” — Arjay L. Balinbin, with Gillian M. Cortez and Charmaine A. Tadalan