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Communities hosting energy projects to receive payments via LANDBANK

THE Department of Energy (DoE) said it signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK) for the bank to receive payments from energy projects to their host communities.

“Setting up a trust account is a crucial step for these host communities to access and utilize these funds. Without an operational trust account, these communities may miss out on valuable support for local projects that could enhance infrastructure, education, health, and livelihood,” Energy Undersecretary Rowena Cristina L. Guevara said in a statement on Tuesday.

The DoE said some barangays, indigenous peoples or indigenous cultural communities in remote areas have yet to establish the required trust accounts under the Energy Regulations 1-94 (ER 1-94) Program.

ER 1-94 is intended to compensate communities for hosting energy projects.

Power generation companies contribute one centavo per kilowatt-hour of power for community electrification, livelihood, health, and environmental programs.

Under the MoU, LANDBANK has committed to waive service charges for accounts falling below the maintaining balance to ensure access to financial services.

The bank also committed to disseminate information about this special arrangement across its 607 branches and branch-lite units to ensure communities can access such services. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Budget bill elevated to Senate plenary

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE SENATE’S P6.352-trillion national budget bill has been sponsored out for plenary debate, with Congress expected to ratify the spending plan before its break in mid-December.

At Tuesday’s plenary session, Senator and Finance Committee chairperson Mary Grace Natividad S. Poe-Llamanzares said the budget bill features enhanced funding for health and education projects, including an additional P9.9 billion for teaching materials next year.

“Our primary investment is in our citizens, which includes additional funding for health, education, and livelihood. Our goal is to bring healthcare services closer to the people,” she said during her sponsorship speech.

She said the Senate committee added funding to the Department of Health to fund the construction of 700 rural health units, 300 local government units and DoH hospitals, and other clinics and health facilities next year.

The House of Representatives turned over its 2025 General Appropriations Bill to the Senate on Oct. 28.

In the 2025 National Expenditure Program — the document prepared by the National Government detailing its spending priorities before the budget is legislated — the Department of Budget and Management slashed the proposed funding for agriculture, health, and social welfare sectors by 4.7%, 7.6%, and 3.4%, respectively.

Ms. Poe-Llamanzares said the spending plan will also provide socialized housing for over 100,000 families next year, and fund fuel subsidies to over 20,000 public utility vehicle drivers, benefiting 40 million commuters.

She said the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the National Security Council, the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency, and the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) will also be getting budget increases this year.

“We will be supporting the PCG’s sea-based operations by helping them procure boats, fuel, oil and lubricant which they need to patrol the seas,” she said in the face of worsening tensions with China in the South China Sea.

The committee will also maintain the P35.19 billion allocated to the Commission on Elections to carry out and oversee the midterm national and local elections, as well as elections for barangays and youth councils, and those of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

For the agriculture budget next year, the Senate committee focused on funding irrigation and fertilizer subsidies. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

TNT to clash with Ginebra in Game 5 of PBA Governors’ Cup Finals

Game on Wednesday
(Smart Araneta Coliseum)
7:30 p.m. – TNT vs Ginebra (Finals Game 5)*
*Series tied, 2-2

AFTER GOING THROUGH peaks and valleys over four grueling games, holder TNT and challenger Barangay Ginebra proceed to Wednesday’s tiebreaker with the oft-used quote in mind.

Not too high, not too low.

For the Gin Kings, it’s about keeping their feet on the ground after hacking out back-to-back wins that leveled the PBA Governors’ Cup title series from 0-2.

For the Tropang Giga, it’s picking themselves up from the Games 3 and 4 fumble that prevented them from moving one W away from a repeat championship after their two-game running start.

“For us right now, never too high, never too low,” said Ginebra star Scottie Thompson.

“All we did was tie the series. It’s zero-zero now, (a virtual) best of three. So we can’t live off the last two games and just feel good about that. We got to stay forward-moving and forward-thinking,” said his coach Tim Cone.

TNT mentor Chot Reyes said it’s their turn in the pivotal fifth game set at 7:30 p.m. at the Smart Araneta Coliseum to try and swing the pendulum back to their side.

“Definitely, they have the momentum. But it’s the same thing with us. We had the momentum after (the first) two games and now we shifted,” said Mr. Reyes.

“And that’s the finals, that’s basketball. In a seven-game series of two very good teams, the momentum can really shift both ways. They have the momentum now (and) we have to find a way to stop it.”

Using its dreaded defense and led by Best Import Rondae Hollis-Jefferson’s (RHJ) blue-collar work, TNT thoroughly dominated the series opener, 104-88, and quickly followed it up, 96-84.

But tapping into their famous NSD (never-say-die) spirit, Justin Brownlee and the Gin Kings countered hard, 85-73, and 106-92, to make it all square.

In the Game 4 pull-around, Mr. Brownlee finally found his touch from the outside. Moreover, the Gin Kings utilized two weapons that were hardly felt in their first two losses — Stephen Holt, who has assumed the role of RHJ defender and fired 18 with five steals and Maverick Ahanmisi, who shot two triples and a four-ball in a similar 18-point performance.

“They’re really finding their groove, they’re being able to make great reads on their offense and executing their offense well. So it’s incumbent upon us to be able to play better defense,” said Mr. Reyes after Ginebra breached 100 points for the first time in the Last Dance.

“And we need some of our other guys, especially our bench to step up and we hope that we can be better on defense so that we can still have a chance in this,” he added.

Notes: Game 4 was a big hit both in live attendance and TV audience. The 16,783 fans on hand at the Smart Araneta Coliseum marked the largest live crowd since the record 54,589 of Game 7 of the Commissioner’s Cup finals in 2023 at the Philippine Arena. On TV, the game drew a rating of 4.7% on NUTAM (National Urban Television Audience Measurement) and 4.1% on PHINTAM (Philippine National Television Audience Measurement). This also paved the way for RPTV to climb and rank No. 3 in the ratings. The game peaked at 5.34% or viewers of 3.89 million. — Olmin Leyba

3 teams scramble for position at UAAP double header

Games on Wednesday
(Mall of Asia Arena)
10 a.m. – FEU vs DLSU (women)
12 p.m. – NU vs UST (women)
3:30 p.m. – FEU vs DLSU (men)
6:30 p.m. – NU vs UST (men)

REIGNING CHAMPION De La Salle University presses up bid for a top-seed finish while three more teams scramble for positions in the crucial double header of the UAAP Season 87 men’s basketball on Wednesday at the Mall of Asia Arena.

The Green Archers, already in the Final Four since before the long break, gained a free hand from Far Eastern University’s (FEU) win over University of the East (UE) to clinch a top-two finish and the other twice-to-beat at 10-1.

But the dribblers from Taft will not be contented from that alone with a handsome chance to go for the No. 1 spot in the homestretch with three games left, starting against the streaking FEU Tamaraws (4-7) at 3:30 p.m.

Holding on to dear life at No. 4, University of Santo Tomas (5-6) then plunges to battle at 6:30 p.m. against National University (NU) (3-8), which gained a shot in the arm off a 67-47 upset against University of the Philippines (9-2) to stay in the thick of the Final Four race.

“We’re always gonna focus on what’s in front of us,” said coach Topex Robinson, whose wards did not take a break in leaving no stone unturned for an approaching title defense bid.

Well, the Tamaraws are, especially in a last-ditch hurrah marked by a big 59-51 win against UE that gave La Salle a free passage to the Top-Two finish and twice-to-beat bonus.

After a 0-5 start, FEU gained ground late in the first phase before winning three of their last four games in the second round to catch up with Adamson University at No. 5 with similar 4-7 slates.

Another win would put them on the doorstep of the Final Four, with the fourth-running UST Tigers figuring in an expected dogfight against the NU Bulldogs, who came from a morale-boosting win against the Fighting Maroons.

“In order for us to be the next team on the top of the hill, we have to be able to do this,” said FEU mentor Sean Chambers as the Morayta-based squad gave La Salle fits in the first round, 68-62.

“We have to match them. We’re going to show up with the mindset that if we play our game, we have a chance to win that game.” — John Bryan Ulanday

Top seed Sabalenka reaches semis at WTA Finals with 6-3, 7-5 win over Paolini

ARYNA SABALENKA — REUTERS

WORLD NUMBER ONE Aryna Sabalenka secured a semifinal berth at the WTA Finals by beating Italian fourth seed Jasmine Paolini 6-3, 7-5 on Monday to stay unbeaten in the purple round-robin group.

The 26-year-old is on the brink of clinching the year-end number one ranking. A win over Elena Rybakina in the final group match on Wednesday or a loss from her rival, Poland’s Iga Swiatek, would seal the year-end top spot for the Belarusian.

Sabalenka’s win combined with Chinese Zheng Qinwen’s earlier 7-6(4) 3-6 6-1 victory over Rybakina ensured the top seed will finish first in her group regardless of her final result on Wednesday, making her the first player to reach the final four.

Australian Open and US Open champion Sabalenka also won her opening match in Riyadh against seventh seed Zheng. The Chinese player and Paolini, with 1-1 records, both remain in contention for the semis and meet on Wednesday.

Swiatek is the only player who can overtake Sabalenka. The 23-year-old, who plays Coco Gauff on Tuesday, needs to retain her title undefeated and hope Sabalenka loses her remaining matches in order to claim the year-end number one spot.

“I’m proud of myself. Not only myself, my team,” Sabalenka said after her win. “We were able to overcome a lot of things. To be able to show such great tennis and become world number one, It’s teamwork. It’s not only me.”

“Nobody sees the behind the scenes work. But they do a lot for me. I really appreciate them for everything they do for me. This is motivation for me to keep winning on this court. Those guys deserve to be called the best team ever.”

Sabalenka is the first player to reach back-to-back semis at the WTA Finals as world number one since Serena Williams in 2013-2014.

Zheng, 22, notched her first career win over 25-year-old Kazakh Rybakina in their third meeting, bouncing back from her loss to Sabalenka to become the second Chinese player after Li Na to win a match at the Finals since they started in 1972.

Rybakina suffered her second defeat, having arrived in Riyadh with fitness issues. Zheng, by contrast, came into the event after winning titles in Palermo and Tokyo plus Olympic gold in Paris.

“I’m really happy to win this match because I’d never beaten her before and she’s one of the greatest players right now on tour,” Zheng said.

“Even though I had a chance in the second set and didn’t take it, I’m happy I came back in the third set and stayed focused.” — Reuters

DLSU battles UST at Shakey’s Super League semifinals

DLSU LADY SPIKERS

Games on Wednesday
(Rizal Memorial Coliseum)
3:30 p.m. – CSB vs UP (classification)
6 p.m. – La Salle vs UST (semis)

UAAP powerhouse squads De La Salle University (DLSU) and University of Santo Tomas (UST) dispute the first finale ticket in the knockout semifinal showdown of the 2024 Shakey’s Super League Collegiate Pre-season Championship on Wednesday at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum.

Action kicks off at 6 p.m. with the Lady Spikers and the Golden Tigresses eyeing to arrange a championship battle against either reigning champion National University (NU) or unbeaten Far Eastern University (FEU), which collide on Saturday in the other semis pairing.

At 3:30 p.m., NCAA champion College of St. Benilde and University of the Philippines duel in the first phase of the classification stages that also feature Ateneo de Manila University and University of the East on Saturday for the same schedule as the NU-FEU game.

But the spotlight for now is on La Salle, which has swept its way to the semis of the prestigious pre-season tourney to shore up its redemption bid after losing its throne in the UAAP last year.

La Salle set a date with Santo Tomas following a 25-18, 25-20, 20-25, 20-25, 17-15 escape act against archrival Ateneo to maximize its twice-to-beat edge as the No. 1 seed in Pool E.

The Golden Tigresses, second seed in Pool F, also made the most out of their bonus and followed suit with a 25-22, 25-21, 25-21 sweep of the University of the East, boosting their own revenge goal after a pair of bridesmaid finishes to NU in both the UAAP and SSL. — John Bryan Ulanday

Underdog Pinay 5 to host Asean Women’s Futsal Championship

IT’S going to be a tall order against more established rivals in the Asean Women’s Futsal Championship but host Philippines expressed readiness to take it head on.

“The national team is preparing well and we’re 100% confident,” player Isabella Bandoja said, speaking on behalf of the Pinay 5 in a presscon Tuesday with coach Vic Hermans, team manager Danny Moran and Philippine Football Federation President John Gutierrez.

At 59th in the FIFA women’s futsal rankings, the Pinay 5 will go into the Nov. 16 to 21 competition at the PhilSports Arena as the underdogs versus world No. 6 Thailand, No. 11 Vietnam, No. 24 Indonesia and No. 37 Myanmar.

“Against tough teams, we’ll do our best to give a good result for the Philippines,” she added.

Mr. Hermans, a Dutch futsal coaching legend tapped by long-time futsal patron Henry V. Moran Foundation to help grow the game in the country, has assembled a crack 16-member team for this mission.

Joining ace striker Ms. Bandoja in the squad are Filipinas mainstay Alisha del Campo, Cathrine Graversen, Mykaella Abeto, Samantha Hughes, Kayla Santiago, Vrendelle Nuera, Princess Cristobas, Lanie Ortillo, Claire Lubetania, Agot Danton, Jada Bicierro, Althea Rebosura, Hazel Lustan, Louraine Evangelista and Angelica Teves.

The tourney will serve as kickoff of the Pinay 5’s one-year buildup for their stint in the grandest stage — the inaugural FIFA Futsal Women’s Cup in November next year that the country is also hosting.

“This is the first stage. We’re the lowest ranked team and it would be a very tough journey. But like I said, the journey has risks, challenges and we’re here to face them and I think with the right team, with the right combination, with our mutual help with the PFF, we can achieve a lot,” said Mr. Moran. — Olmin Leyba

LPU Pirates neutralize SSC-R game plan to keep their ship afloat

Games on Wednesday
(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
11 a.m. – EAC vs San Beda
2:30 p.m. – UPHSD vs Mapua

LYCEUM of the Philippines University (LPU) coach Gilbert Malabanan had already mapped out a plan that he hoped would neutralize San Sebastian College-Recoletos’ (SSC-R) run-and-gun game — attack inside relentlessly.

It worked.

Drawing strength from its height and heft, the Pirates rammed the smaller Stags, 93-85, on Tuesday that kept their ship afloat in the tight NCAA Season 100 Final Four race at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

LPU’s persistence to pound it inside produced Mr. Malabanan the desired results as it forced SSC-R to foul aplenty that led to the latter making a killing from the foul line where it drilled in 27 of the 38 it attempted there.

LPU captain Renz Villegas waxed hot with 25 points while John Barba contributed 20 in helping power the Pirates to their seventh victory against eight setbacks and back in the semis hunt.

The Stags sputtered to 4-11. — Joey Villar

Korda clinches LPGA Player of the Year award with three events left

AMERICAN world number one Nelly Korda has clinched the LPGA’s points-based Player of the Year award with three events left in the 2024 season, the top women’s professional golf circuit said on Monday.

The 26-year-old Korda has claimed six victories in 2024 and had three additional top-10 finishes. At one point during the year Korda won five consecutive tournaments, a run she capped by securing her second major title.

Korda, who missed the fall Asian swing due to a minor neck injury, also represented the United States in the women’s golf competition at the Paris Olympics and was part of the winning team at the Solheim Cup. — Reuters

Cavs 8-0 start

It may well be too early in the season to contend that the Cavaliers will be among the handful of bona fide contenders for the hardware. After all, they’re just a tenth into their 2024-25 campaign, and eight games do not 82 make. That said, there have shown more than enough to back up the claim that they’re for real. They’re certainly better than their immediate past selves, never mind that they did little to tweak a roster pundits believed had to be shored up in the offseason. Instead, they opted for a coaching change that, even this early, has made them look like geniuses.

Indeed, newly installed bench tactician Kenny Atkinson has worked wonders on the Cavaliers’ offense. Resolving to hit the ground running, he chucked their backcourt-heavy predilections in favor of more egalitarian sets that have made them far less predictable. More importantly, they have translated their faster pace into efficient point production. Donovan Mitchell and Darius Garland remain instigators, but have happily ceded usage in favor of supposed liabilities Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. Meanwhile, erstwhile starter Caris LeVert has figured well as a reserve, with less touches but relatively better output.

To be fair, the Cavaliers are due for some regression. As the rest of the league becomes more familiar with their improved style of play, and as opponents get to prepare for effective counters, they will find themselves bereft of the element of surprise that has helped them through their 8-0 start. The flipside, of course, is that the confidence they continue to build will translate to precise execution even under pressure. Repetitions beget success, especially in the crunch.

For the Cavaliers, consistency will be the determinants of their lasting power. They have upped their three-point attempts significantly, but have been so judicious as to likewise hike up their percentages. And because their defense has remained stout, they boast of a point differential that is well in the double digits. They’re having fun to boot — proud of a run the wine and gold haven’t seen in nearly half a century, but cognizant of the fact that they’re merely laying the groundwork for the real work that lies ahead.

 

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

Chinese group accused of hacking Singapore telco

FREEPIK

SINGAPORE Telecommunications Ltd., Singapore’s largest mobile carrier, was breached by Chinese state-sponsored hackers this summer as part of a broader campaign against telecommunications companies and other critical infrastructure operators around the world, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The previously undisclosed breach was discovered in June, and investigators believe it was pulled off by a hacking group known as Volt Typhoon, according to the two people, who asked not to be identified to discuss a confidential investigation. Officials in the US, Australia, Canada, the UK and New Zealand — the “Five Eyes” intelligence-sharing alliance — warned earlier this year that Volt Typhoon was embedding itself inside compromised IT networks to give China the ability to conduct disruptive cyberattacks in the event of a military conflict with the West.

The breach of Singtel, a carrier with operations throughout Southeast Asia and Australia, was seen as a test run by China for further hacks against US telecommunications companies, and information from the attack has provided clues about the expanding scope of suspected Chinese attacks against critical infrastructure abroad, including in the US, the people said.

In an e-mailed response to queries from Bloomberg News, Singtel didn’t directly address questions about the alleged breach. “We understand the importance of network resilience, especially because we are a key infrastructure service provider,” the company said. “That’s why we adopt industry best practices and work with industry-leading security partners to continuously monitor and promptly address the threats that we face on a daily basis. We also regularly review and enhance our cybersecurity capabilities and defenses to protect our critical assets from evolving threats.”

A spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Liu Pengyu, said he wasn’t aware of the specifics, as relayed by Bloomberg, but that in general, China firmly opposes and combats cyberattacks and cybertheft.

Read More: US Investigating Breach of Telecoms by China-Linked Hackers

The US is currently battling its own suspected Chinese attacks of political campaigns and telecommunications companies. Officials have described the telecom breaches as one of the most damaging campaigns on record by suspected Chinese hackers and one that they are still seeking to fully understand and contain.

In the US telecommunications attacks, which investigators have attributed to another Chinese group called Salt Typhoon, AT&T, Inc. and Verizon Communications, Inc. are among those breached, and the hackers potentially accessed systems the federal government uses for court-authorized network wiretapping requests, the Wall Street Journal reported in early October. US intelligence officials think the Chinese hacking group that Microsoft Corp. dubbed Salt Typhoon may have been inside US telecommunications companies for months and found a route into an access point for legally authorized wiretapping, according to a person familiar with their views.

AT&T declined to comment. Verizon didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Through those intrusions, the hackers are believed to have targeted the phones of former President Donald Trump, running mate JD Vance and Trump family members, as well as members of Vice-President Kamala Harris’ campaign staff and others, the New York Times has reported.

In the case of the alleged Singtel breach, one of the people familiar with that incident said the attack relied on a tool known as a web shell.

In August, researchers at Lumen Technologies Inc. said in a blog post they assessed with “moderate confidence” that Volt Typhoon had used such a web shell. A sample of the malware was first uploaded to VirusTotal, a popular site for security experts to research malicious code, on June 7 by an unidentified entity in Singapore, according to Lumen researchers. The web shell allowed hackers to intercept and gather credentials to gain access to a customer’s network disguised as a bona fide user, they said.

The hackers then breached four US firms, including internet service providers, and another in India, according to Lumen researchers.

General Timothy Haugh, director of the National Security Agency, said in early October that the investigations into the latest telecommunications breaches were at an early stage. Later that month, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said they had identified specific malicious activity by actors affiliated with the Chinese government and immediately notified affected companies and “rendered technical assistance.”

A spokesperson for the National Security Council last week referred to the “ongoing investigation and mitigation efforts,” but directed further questions to the FBI and CISA.

Singtel uncovered the breach of its network after detecting suspicious data traffic in a core back-end router and finding what it believed was sophisticated, and possibly state-sponsored, malware on it, according to the other person familiar with the investigation. The malware was in “listening” mode and didn’t appear to have been activated for espionage or any other purpose, the person said, adding that it reinforced a suspicion that the attack was either a test run of a new hacking capability or that its purpose was to create a strategic access point for future attacks.

PHILIPPINE TELCO HACKED?
There is evidence that Salt Typhoon reached the US at least as early as spring 2024, and possibly long before, and investigators tracking the group think it has infiltrated other telecommunications companies throughout Asia, including in Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, according to two people familiar with those efforts.

The National Security Agency (NSA) has warned since 2022 that telecommunications infrastructure was vulnerable to Chinese hacking. Volt Typhoon has been active since at least mid-2020, having attacked sensitive networks in Guam and elsewhere in the US with a goal of burrowing into critical infrastructure and staying undetected for as long as possible.

The hacks by both Chinese Typhoon groups have alarmed Western officials and raised concerns about the number and severity of backdoors — a way to get around security tools and gain high-level access to a computer system — that China has placed inside critical IT systems. Those entry points could be used to conduct espionage or prepare the battlespace for use in a potential military conflict with the West.

Chinese hackers have long been accused of conducting espionage attacks against the US — including, most notably, the theft of security clearance applications for tens of millions of US government workers held by the Office of Personnel Management. But officials say the latest hacks go a step further and in some cases suggest China may be amassing capabilities to disrupt or degrade critical services in the US and abroad.

Paul Nakasone, a retired general who led the NSA for nearly six years until February, told reporters in October that the latest telecommunications hacks by Salt Typhoon were distinguished by their scale, and that the two Chinese groups represent a tremendous challenge for the government. “I am not pleased in terms of where we’re at with either of the Typhoons,” he said. — Bloomberg

World’s first wooden satellite, developed in Japan, heads to space

TAKAO DOI, a former Japanese astronaut and professor at Kyoto University, holds an engineering model of LignoSat during an interview with Reuters at his laboratory at Kyoto University in Kyoto, Japan, Oct. 25, 2024. — REUTERS

KYOTO — The world’s first wooden satellite, built by Japanese researchers, was launched into space on Tuesday, in an early test of using timber in lunar and Mars exploration.

LignoSat, developed by Kyoto University and homebuilder Sumitomo Forestry, will be flown to the International Space Station on a SpaceX mission, and later released into orbit about 400 km (250 miles) above the Earth.

Named after the Latin word for “wood,” the palm-sized LignoSat is tasked to demonstrate the cosmic potential of the renewable material as humans explore living in space.

“With timber, a material we can produce by ourselves, we will be able to build houses, live and work in space forever,” said Takao Doi, an astronaut who has flown on the Space Shuttle and studies human space activities at Kyoto University.

With a 50-year plan of planting trees and building timber houses on the moon and Mars, Mr. Doi’s team decided to develop a NASA-certified wooden satellite to prove wood is a space-grade material.

“Early 1900s airplanes were made of wood,” said Kyoto University forest science professor Koji Murata. “A wooden satellite should be feasible, too.”

Wood is more durable in space than on Earth because there’s no water or oxygen that would rot or inflame it, Mr. Murata added.

A wooden satellite also minimizes the environmental impact at the end of its life, the researchers say.

Decommissioned satellites must re-enter the atmosphere to avoid becoming space debris. Conventional metal satellites create aluminum oxide particles during re-entry, but wooden ones would just burn up with less pollution, Mr. Doi said.

“Metal satellites might be banned in the future,” Mr. Doi said. “If we can prove our first wooden satellite works, we want to pitch it to Elon Musk’s SpaceX.”

INDUSTRIAL APPLICATION
The researchers found that honoki, a kind of magnolia tree native in Japan and traditionally used for sword sheaths, is most suited for spacecraft, after a 10-month experiment aboard the International Space Station.

LignoSat is made of honoki, using a traditional Japanese crafts technique without screws or glue.

Once deployed, LignoSat will stay in the orbit for six months, with the electronic components onboard measuring how wood endures the extreme environment of space, where temperatures fluctuate from -100 to 100 degrees Celsius every 45 minutes as it orbits from darkness to sunlight.

LignoSat will also gauge wood’s ability to reduce the impact of space radiation on semiconductors, making it useful for applications such as data center construction, said Kenji Kariya, a manager at Sumitomo Forestry Tsukuba Research Institute.

“It may seem outdated, but wood is actually cutting-edge technology as civilization heads to the moon and Mars,” he said. “Expansion to space could invigorate the timber industry.” — Reuters