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Leading the charge to an Electric future

Text and photos by Kap Maceda Aguila

ELECTRIC vehicles (EVs) have long crossed the divide of the conceptual to mass-production reality, but there remains a number of challenges to their adoption — from high cost to lack of charging stations. It thus has been a constant and loud refrain in markets like ours that a multi-sectoral push is needed to realize a more conducive environment for EVs.
Appropriately focused on the fostering of partnerships “to electrify public and private transport,” the 6th Philippine Electric Vehicle Summit was held recently in Pasay City. In a statement, Electric Vehicle Association of the Philippines (EVAP) President and spokesperson Rommel T. Juan said the two-day event is “all about building partnerships, aligning objectives, and taking collective action to facilitate further adoption of electric vehicles in the country.”
A presentation by Paulo Jose Mutuc, Frost & Sullivan mobility practice senior consultant for Asia Pacific, showed global resurgence of electric vehicles has been helped along by declining cost of EV batteries, which have slid below the $200 mark. Last year, global electric car sales surpassed one million units for the first time — reaching 1.2 million “with battery electric vehicles making up the majority of sales.” EVAP projects this number to rise to 1.6 million units by the end of 2018, with public charging stations estimated to reach 100,000.
Here in the country, some 1,400 e-jeepneys and e-trikes ply the roads in 19 locations, according to the Department of Trade and Industry’s Board of Investments. Not surprisingly, the “known” charging stations are also in these locations. EVAP envisions to have 200 of these in place by 2022.
Mr. Mutuc benchmarked five countries — Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, India, and Japan — with a more mature EV scene than our own. These are “developing domestic EV markets but interestingly enough are already looking into exports… [whether of vehicles or technology].”
OF RANGE ANXIETY AND OPPORTUNITIES
Regarding EV policy, end users ultimately help shape the discussion. “It’s pretty clear that range is the most well-regulated area — not surprising, as revealed by research and anecdotal evidence, because it’s what potential buyers primarily think about,” added the speaker. Meanwhile, battery attributes are displaying “so many standards at the moment, and we’re far from having harmonious standards across the board,” something “tricky” because of the variety of EVs countries and manufacturers want to roll out.
Consequently, even charging stations are far from hewing to a single design or norm, as “countries are more concerned about putting out the actual [facilities] than standardizing them.” This is also reflective of a relatively early stages of the industry early phases of the industry in this region.
With this in mind, Mr. Mutuc averred that the further development of the EV industry in whichever territory will be helped along by financial incentives — “increasingly becoming the preferred means of allowing more electric vehicles to be on the road in various countries.”
Frost & Sullivan forecasts global EV sales of 23 million by 2025; its present 2% share of the passenger vehicle market will reach 22%. This is expected to happen in concert with the mitigation of so-called “range anxiety.” Today’s batteries are now surpassing an output of 60 kilowatt-hours, allowing users to drive more than 300 kilometers with each charge. As earlier mentioned, EV batteries will continue to get cheaper — costing as little as $100 by 2020.
Domestically, Frost & Sullivan has tracked 16 pending legislative bills pertaining to hybrid and electric vehicles. Four important ones are keying in on non-fiscal incentives such as priority in registration and issuance of plate numbers, exemption from the Unified Vehicular Volume Reduction Program, and free parking.
“It’s not just finding out where the Philippines is in terms of the actual deployment of vehicles and infrastructure but also thinking about… how the industry can move forward,” maintained Mr. Mutuc.
NISSAN WELCOMES DISRUPTION
“There are lots of things happening in the world which are disrupting… the mobility market, the vehicle market, and the energy market — and [adding] pressure on governments and people,” began Nic Thomas, Nissan Motor Corp. director of electric vehicle unit.
During his presentation, the executive revealed an expected intersect by the middle of the next decade of the rising cost of developing internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles [which have to keep up with progressively stricter emissions regulations] with the lower prices of battery electric vehicles. “The tipping point is coming very soon,” he said, producing “massive acceleration of market.”
Governments are additionally putting the pinch on ICE vehicles to curb air pollution while granting incentives to EVs such as establishing low-emission zones, designating EV parking and lanes. This is happening in concert with the falling cost of renewable energy.
The company is ready for that. Nissan’s Intelligent Mobility program is intently looking at three aspects of future mobility: intelligent power, intelligent driving, and intelligent integration. On its website, Nissan Motor Corp. says that this is “already a reality in Nissans you can drive today — in cars that park themselves, watch what’s happening around you, and step in to keep you out of trouble. Now imagine a near future with cars that can actually learn from one another and EVs that recharge as they drive along, no strings attached. Nissan Intelligent Mobility is making all this, and more, part of a bold, bright tomorrow.”
Nissan is leading the charge with the Leaf, already the world’s bestselling EV with 350,000 units of the car’s first generation delivered. Mr. Thomas shared that 60,000 orders have now been placed for the new Leaf in Japan, the US and Europe, and he harped on the car’s reliability as well. “There’s no film on YouTube with a Nissan Leaf on fire,” he said, with a laugh. Nissan also holds the title for the most electric kilometers driven (4 billion).
For now, the focus for Nissan is in easing in a fully electric tomorrow with its so-called e-Power, “an ideal bridge between ICE and EV, it’s an EV driven by a petrol range extender,” said Mr. Thomas. But there’s no doubt as to the eventual destination. Nissan will release eight new electric vehicles by 2022 — promising a full range of vehicles both emission-less and exciting.

Despite tirades, Duterte wishes tycoon Lucio Tan ‘a thousand years more’

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Tuesday, July 17, wished Philippine Airlines, Inc. (PAL) chairman Dr. Lucio Tan “a thousand years more” on his 83rd birthday despite his previous tirades against the Filipino-Chinese tycoon.
Last year, Mr. Duterte said that his administration would go after the country’s flag carrier PAL over its alleged unpaid fees amounting to P7.3 billion. The President also linked Mr. Tan to destabilization efforts against him.
“Sir, may God grant you a thousand years more of your life. Happy birthday, Mr. Tan. You are 83 years old and still a success story on all fronts,” the President said in his speech at the unveiling ceremony of PAL’s Airbus A350 and A321 Neo at the Villamor Air Base in Pasay City on Tuesday evening.
He added: “This milestone would not have been possible without the decisive leadership of Dr. Lucio Tan, who is celebrating his 83rd birthday today. Dr. Tan, I wish you a happy birthday and may you continue to be endowed with good health, countless blessings and greater success in all endeavors. Today marks a momentous achievement not only for PAL, but for the entire country as well.”
“I commend the airline for its efforts to deliver quality flight experience to all its passengers by modernizing its fleet, expanding its reach and providing wholehearted care that is distinctively Filipino,” he also said.
Mr. Duterte also thanked PAL and Cebu Pacific Air for helping the government in the repatriation of the distressed Filipino workers from Kuwait last February. “Let me just express my profound gratitude to the two airlines that helped the government during the Kuwait stressful moments, not a crisis… I requested, though we had the money then, Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific to fly to Kuwait and bring in some of our countrymen who were there in distress,” he said.
The President noted that PAL’s recent “accomplishments and existing initiatives will encourage more people to travel to the Philippines, thereby boosting our tourism industry.”
“Do remember that you serve as a gateway to the beauty of our islands and the vibrancy of our culture. The tourism sector is full of exciting opportunities that do not only showcase our unique heritage. In fact, it is also a crucial instrument for the development of the livelihood of our citizenry,” the President also said.

Porsche Mission E concept becomes the Taycan road car

PRODUCTION of Porsche’s first purely electric is set to begin in 2019, the company said in a statement.
The car, based on the company’s Mission E concept vehicle, is called Taycan, which Porsche said means “lively young horse,” referencing the one on the Porsche crest.
Powering the Taycan are two permanently synchronous motors with a system output of over 600 hp. This is estimated to propel the car to 100 kph in under 3.5 seconds and to 200 kph in less than 12 seconds. Maximum range is forecast to more than 500 kilometers.
“Our new electric sports car is strong and dependable; it’s a vehicle that can consistently cover long distances and that epitomizes freedom,” said Oliver Blume, chairman of the executive board at Porsche AG.
Porsche said it plans to invest more than six billion euro in electric-powered mobility by 2022, doubling the expenditure it had originally planned. Of the additional three billion euro, some 500 million euro will be used for the development of Taycan variants and derivatives, around one billion euro for electrification and hybridization of the existing product range, several hundred million euro for the expansion of production sites, plus around 700 million euro for new technologies, charging infrastructure and smart mobility.

Wife of new Maute terror cell leader nabbed in GenSan

THE POLICE arrested here on Monday morning the wife of the new leader of the Maute terror group in a series of operations that left a wanted bomb-maker dead. According to Senior Superintendent Raul S. Supiter of the city police office, arrested Nafisah Pundog, spouse of Owaida Marohombsar, also known as Abdulmajib and “Abu Dar,” is now tightly guarded to forestall a possible rescue by the Islamic State-inspired militants. Ms. Pundog is reportedly married to the elusive Abu Dar, the Maranao figurehead of about 50 or so remnants of the Maute terror group holding out in the forested hinterlands of Lanao del Sur, a province of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. The Western Mindanao Command in Zamboanga City and its component-unit covering Lanao del Sur and Marawi City, the 103rd Brigade, had separately confirmed that Marohombsar assumed leadership of the Maute terror group after the death of its founders, siblings Omarkhayam and Abdullah Maute, in encounters with soldiers in Marawi City in October last year. — PHILSTAR
>> See the full story on https://goo.gl/xNmJMY

Nation at a Glance — (07/18/18)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

The new BMW M5 has all-wheel drive


ALL-WHEEL drive. Seems only proper that the sixth-generation BMW M5 — which on July 15 made its Philippine debut suitably surrounded by supercars of varying makes — is capable of allocating grunt to all four wheels rather than just the rear ones, as the case had been in all previous M5s. The latest car is the most powerful rendition of the model yet, and the added traction guaranteed by all-wheel drive should raise the M5’s performance level as the engine’s output is transmitted to the tarmac more effectively than ever.
Yet the new M5 sticks to the model’s brief by still coming with four doors, a well-appointed cabin that could easily seat five, plus a huge trunk. And all this while wearing relatively subtle styling — only those who know can tell it apart from the regular, higher-variant 5 Series.
Here are key items that mark out the new M5:
• 4.4-liter V8 engine with a twin-scroll turbocharger, evolved from the previous M5, now makes 591 hp and 750 Nm. It is fitted with an eight-speed automatic transmission with Drivelogic. BMW said it shifts quickly and has “optimal ratio spacing” that isn’t only good at efficiently spreading engine output over a wide rev range but also improves fuel consumption, too.
• All-wheel drive system called M xDrive is always switched on, along with the dynamic stability control (DSC). But different driving modes vary handling characteristics, including a rear-wheel drive setting with the DSC off.
• Drive settings can be switched to Comfort, Sport and Sport Plus, each of which alters the behavior of the Drivelogic, the M-specific variable damper control with electronically controlled shock absorbers, and the power steering.
• M-specific exterior pieces are functional rather than cosmetic. These include a front apron with large air inlets for the cooling systems and the brakes; wider fenders (with signature “M gills”) to accommodate larger wheels; carbon fiber-reinforced plastic roof which lowers the car’s center of gravity and reduces weight; aerodynamic side mirrors; a rear diffuser; a rear spoiler; and various other aerodynamic appendages.
• Staggered-size, light-alloy, 20-inch wheels with split spokes are fitted with 275/35 R20 tires in front and 285/35 R 20 at the rear. Wheels are 9.5 inches and 10 inches wide, fore and aft, respectively.
• Cabin features include M leather steering wheel with shift paddles and electrically adjustable sport seats which promise to secure the driver and passengers in place during hard maneuvers.
• Price is set at P14.790 million.

Richard Mille RM 11-02

Richard Mille RM 11-02
INDEPENDENT high-end watchmaker Richard Mille, partner of the Le Mans Classic since it began in 2002, has been creating special pieces to mark each edition of the motor racing event. For the 2018 edition, held in early July, Richard Mille unveiled the RM 11-02 Le Mans Classic. Without doubt a piece of haute horlogerie, the flyback chronograph bears the colors of the competition not only on the movement, but also on its white case band and the rubber collar of its crown. Also on the dial is the Le Mans Classic logo, along with the number 16, indicating the start time of the endurance race. The RM 11-02 Le Mans Classic is limited to 150 pieces.
MOVEMENT: RMAC3 automatic in grade 5 titanium incorporating a variable-geometry rotor, annual calendar, UTC display, 24-hour flyback chronograph and countdown feature
CASE: White ceramic with carbon TPT with skeletonized dial
BRACELET: White ceramic

Dashboard (07/18/18)

Shell forum
Pilipinas Shell executives, industry partners toast their efforts.

Pilipinas Shell holds technology forum

PILIPINAS Shell Petroleum Corp. (PSPC) said the 2018 Shell Technology Forum saw representatives from the government, academe and various industries talk about developments in the business sector, as well as to “push for innovation and cooperation” among industry players.
The company said that among the products presented were the Shell Card, which aims to provide mobility solutions to fleet customers (such as roadside assistance) and the upcoming Shell Telematics, a GPS device for vehicles which collect data like performance reports, driver behavior, and fuel consumption.
Shell at the forum also highlighted its FuelSave Diesel with Dynaflex detergent technology, which a company official described as “designed to help provide better fuel economy, improve engine efficiency, and increase load pulling power when needed in heavy-duty diesel engines.”


Isuzu truck
Isuzu officials Joseph T. Bautista (left) and Hajime Koso with an EXZ truck.

Isuzu displays new jeepney in bus, truck show

ISUZU Philippines Corp. (IPC) said it displayed not only its lineup of “versatile cargo haulers,” but also its version of the modernized jeepney at the Philippines Bus & Truck Show 2018 held on July 13-15 in Pasay City.
IPC’s display included the Isuzu NMR C/C, QKR and EXZ trucks. But the company said highlighted was its jeepney “built to meet, if not exceed, the government’s standards and specifications for the Public Utility Vehicle Modernization Program.”
The Isuzu jeepney is based on the brand’s QKR77 cab-and-chassis platform. Its passenger compartment in the rear was designed and manufactured by three local companies specializing in building vehicle bodies. The jeepney’s passenger door is on the right side, facing the sidewalk, and its other features include panoramic windows and windshields, full-body insulation with GeneQ shield, automatic door closer, ECE-compliant head lamps, and provisions for persons with disabilities.
The jeepney is also fitted with LCD/LED monitors, electronic signage, fire extinguishers, GPS navigation system, a CCTV, dashboard and back-up cameras, and the BEEP automatic fare collection system.


Ferrari PortofinoFerrari Portofino gets Red Dot design award

THE V8-powered Ferrari Portofino GT has received the Red Dot: Best of the Best award for its “ground-breaking design,” the car maker said in a statement. It noted this is the fourth consecutive year Ferrari has received the design award for one of its new models.
Ferrari described the Portofino as an “elegant and versatile convertible which features a retractable hard top together with class-leading performance and luggage space.”
The company noted the Portofino follows the “unmistakable design and ground-breaking technology” of the Ferrari 812 Superfast, which it said redefined the language of a front engine Ferrari, as well as the FXX-K Evo, which features an evolved aero package.

The car is not the star

I’ve attended more car launches than my deteriorating memory can accurately recall, but I can confidently proclaim last Sunday’s BMW M5 debut as the most amusing one. It wasn’t because of production value. In fact, there were no fog machines, no balletic dancers, no executives descending from the rafters. There was only a simple backdrop that visually framed the car and the podium beside it. Quite a spartan setup for the arrival of a P14,790,000 high-performance German sedan, to be honest.
And yet the place was packed with petrolheads who were so loaded they managed to transform the venue’s parking lot into a mini version of the Geneva Motor Show without really trying. Driving to the San Miguel Corp. (SMC) compound for the event were wealthy owners of Ferraris, Lamborghinis and McLarens. On a Sunday. At seven in the morning. In heavy rains. Purportedly to attend a car launch. But surely, this wasn’t the M5’s irresistible appeal at work here.
No, the members of the so-called Supercar Club showed up to the affair for one reason only: to show their support for Ramon S. Ang, the car-crazy SMC president who acquired the BMW distributorship from Palawan Governor Jose Alvarez last year — and then proceeded to change the company name to SMC Asia Car Distributors Corp. (SMCACDC). Along the way, he poached Lexus Manila sales director Spencer Y. Yu, the same guy who had sold him mass-market Japanese vehicles during the latter’s stint at Honda Makati as a young car salesman. Mr. Yu officially became SMCACDC’s president last July 1.
If stories circulating about him are anything to go by, that’s how Mr. Ang operates. He rewards people for their loyalty, and he gets them to do his bidding. If RSA tells you to pack up your things at your current employment and asks you to look after one of his business units, you do exactly that. At least that’s what Mr. Yu did when he severed his ties with Lexus and, by extension, Toyota and George S. K. Ty.
By all accounts, friends never say no to Mr. Ang. Take CATS Motors’ Rene G. Nuñez, for instance. As president of a Mercedes-Benz dealership, he should be running as far away from any BMW gathering as he humanly could. On Sunday, not only was Mr. Nuñez one of the special guests, he also lent a couple of his classic M5s for the BMW model’s multi-generation display in the driveway.
Ah, and there was Carlos Gono, the owner of the AutoPlus Sportzentrium garage shop whom RSA fondly referred to as his “kumpadre” in his speech. It was Mr. Gono who personally invited many of the affluent supercar owners in the guest list. He and Mr. Ang go a long way back — apparently all the way back to when RSA was still running a car shop of his own. The Big Boss never forgets. He remembers who his friends were before he became a three-letter power acronym that sends top bankers quaking in their boots, and he relies on them for the occasional support he could otherwise buy with his loose change.
With Mr. Ang now at the helm of the BMW business in the Philippines, expect a major migration of customers from rival luxury and premium brands. This is not just a typical executive leading a car company — this is one of the boys, a true car nut who happened to hit the big time beyond anyone’s wildest imagination. When he takes the microphone and says the M5 is faster than your Ferrari or Lamborghini, you don’t feel insulted. You feel good. Because Ramon S. Ang wants to sell you a car. Which means he wants to do business with you. And anyone who has done so has only gratitude to express.
The M5 breakfast meeting offered a peek into how it’s going to be from this point on: car guys taking selfies with the BMW chief, grown men lining up for a chance to chat with him, prospective buyers wishing he could sell them on that new X model. Ramon S. Ang will be a traveling rock concert for the Bavarian brand.
Other car company bosses will market their products to you based on spec-sheet merit. RSA will make you want to buy a BMW M5 without the need to mention its 600-hp V8 engine and all-wheel-drive sure-footedness. You’ll get one because you’re hoping that maybe — just maybe — you could get into his circle and swap motoring stories with him, interspersed with business lessons here and there.
If you’re lucky, you could even be someone he’d demand loyalty from. A fate I’m sure brings many rewards with it.

Philippines’ top trading partners for imports (May 2018)

By Mark T. Amoguis, Researcher
The country’s main source of merchandise goods in May was China, cornering 20.3% of the total import bill that month. South Korea and Japan followed with 10.3% and 9.5% shares, respectively.
Print

Philippines’ top trade partners for exports (May 2018)

By Mark T. Amoguis, Researcher
The United States was the top market of Philippine-made products in May, contributing $840.15 million to total exports. It was closely followed by Hong Kong and China with receipts from these economies reaching $796.47 million and $761.40 million, respectively.
Print

Japan’s growing plutonium stockpile fuels fears

Tokyo — Japan has amassed enough plutonium to make 6,000 atomic bombs as part of a program to fuel its nuclear plants, but concern is growing that the stockpile is vulnerable to terrorists and natural disasters.
Japan has long been the world’s only non-nuclear-armed country with a programme to reprocess spent nuclear fuel from its power plants into plutonium.
On Tuesday a decades-old deal with the United States which allows Japan to reprocess plutonium was renewed, but the pact can be terminated by either side with just six months’ notice.
Plutonium reprocessing is meant to create a new and emissions-free fuel source for resource-poor Japan, but the size of its stockpile has started to attract criticism, even from allies.
Plutonium can be used to create nuclear weapons. Although Japan has vowed the material would never be used for military purposes, it has now amassed vastly more plutonium than it can use, since many of its nuclear plants are still offline after the 2011 Fukushima disaster.
Experts warn the growing stockpile could be dangerous in case of a natural disaster, like the earthquake and tsunami that set off the Fukushima meltdown, and is also an attractive target for terrorists.
They also fear the reserve could encourage other regional powers, including China, to press for a similar reprocessing capability, boosting the amount of weaponisable plutonium in Asia.
And some even warn that North Korea could point to the stockpile as an excuse to avoid denuclearising.
This month Japan’s government vowed for the first time to “tackle a reduction in plutonium stocks” but gave no roadmap.
The country’s Atomic Energy Commission reportedly plans a self-imposed cap on the reserve, which now stands at 10 tonnes inside the country, with another 37 tonnes in Britain and France for reprocessing.
Costly and complicated
“Promising to stop increasing the stockpile is the least they should commit to,” said Tatsujiro Suzuki, former vice chairman of the commission.
“What they really need to do is set a clear goal for reduction,” Suzuki told AFP.
“It’s time for Japan to fully review its nuclear recycling program.”
The stockpile has attracted concern in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, which forced the shutdown of all of the country’s nuclear plants.
Only some have resumed operations, and their fuel requirements fall far short of the stockpile Japan has already amassed.
Despite that, the government has continued work on a decades-long multi-billion dollar project to build a new reprocessing plant, using French and local technology.
Most reprocessing is currently done overseas, mainly in France, and Japan has struggled with technical problems at the new facility.
The planned reprocessing plant, in Aomori in northern Japan, has so far cost around $27 billion, but the technical problems mean there is no sign of an opening date despite decades of work.
Experts say reprocessing plutonium into fuel is up to ten times as expensive as producing uranium dioxide fuel.
“Japan’s plutonium separation is very costly and has no economic or environmental benefit,” said Frank von Hippel, a Princeton University professor who researches nuclear arms control and policymaking.
Regional race
Tokyo’s reprocessing programme also runs the risk of sparking a regional race, warned Thomas Countryman, a former US State Department official for arms control and non-proliferation.
“In the region, it is not in the interest of the United States or Japan or the world to see South Korea or China imitate Japan and enter the field of civilian reprocessing,” he told Japanese lawmakers last month.
“This would increase the risk to nuclear security, that is, the risk terrorists or criminals might divert plutonium, and it would increase regional competition in a technology that offers more risks than it does benefits,” he added.
China is already pushing for its own reprocessing capacity with the help of French and Russian partners, while South Korea has been researching reprocessing technologies but faces objections from environmentalists.
Japan, the only nation in the world to have suffered an atomic bomb attack, insists it would never use its plutonium for military purposes.
The reserves are subject to monitoring by the International Atomic Energy Agency, which has not raised public concerns about the stocks.
But some activists fear Japan views the stockpile as a way of keeping its options open on nuclear weapons.
“Japan appears be caught up in the idea that in an emergency it can produce nuclear weapons with its reprocessing technology,” said Hideyuji Ban, co-director of the Citizens’ Nuclear Information Centre, an anti-nuclear NGO. — AFP

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