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Agri exporters urged to target Russian market

THE GOVERNMENT said exporters — especially those in the agriculture sector — should set their sights on Russia where the opportunities for expansion are promising, a trade official said.

The head of the Philippine Trade and Investment Center’s London office and commercial attache Anne Marie Kristine C. Umali said on Tuesday during the National Export Congress in Pasay City that President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s pivot to non-traditional trade partners provides exporters with opportunities in new markets. 

“I’ve been to St. Petersburg and Vladivostok. There are vast opportunities. In fact, just last night, a buyer was looking to source coconut products. There are other opportunities for fresh pineapple and banana and others,” she added.

In October, the Department of Agriculture and its Russian counterpart signed a deal involving Russian purchases of agricultural products worth $2.5 billion. Last month, the Philippines and Russia also signed eight agreements related to trade and energy.

Ms. Umali said that as of 2016 Russia is 33rd in terms of total trade with the Philippines — the 39th largest export destination and the 32nd largest source of imports.

“I’d also like to note that total trade with them is only $234 million. There’s really a lot of room to grow,” she added.

She said the opportunities are also pressing due to the sanctions regime in 2014 which restricted food imports from the US, the European Union and selected countries.

“Just to note, we [also] have a GSP — generalized system of preferences — that exporters can also take advantage of. We have a Euro-Asian economic community (EuAsEC)… [This means] zero to reduced tariff rates [for selected products],” she added.

The GSP from EuAsEC  became effective in 2010, with the Philippines being one of the 103 developing countries that are beneficiaries of the program.

Some of the products which qualify for little to no tariffs are meat and seafood, dairy products, vegetables, fruits and nuts, coffee, tea, spices, rice, sauces and condiments, medicaments, natural rubber, wood products and imitation jewelry. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Preempting a looming power crisis

It is said that if hindsight is a perfect science, that makes scientists of our country’s national leaders and bureaucrats. In administration after administration, the would’ve-could’ve-should’ve syndrome has been a familiar affliction. Everyone — particularly those in the legislature and in Malacañang — have been experts on how a crisis would have, could have and should have been avoided if “someone” had acted promptly and efficiently.

Sadly, these buck-passers won’t admit that they could have and should have anticipated and acted on the crisis — but didn’t.

Well. Another crisis is looming. And this time it can be and should be avoided. It’s also an opportunity for this government to show that it knows how to manage national affairs, beyond liquidating drug suspects and conducting fruitless legislative investigations.

CNN Philippines has just run a five-part series on the threatening power crisis, entitled, “Powering the Future.” This time, it is a prospective rather than a retrospective situation confronting the government’s energy czars, as well as the legislature and President Rodrigo Duterte. A situation they can and should promptly act on.

Much has already been said about past power problems that plagued the country, going back to the administrations of presidents Corazon C. Aquino and Fidel V. Ramos. Our leaders should already have learned the bitter lessons from the insufferable brownouts, the corrosive effect on the national treasury, and the negative impact on the country’s investment prospects and infrastructure programs — lessons that ought to prompt them to act expeditiously and efficiently this time around.

The CNN reports are persuasive:

1. The country’s current dependable power reserve is very low at five to 10% compared to other Asian countries, like Singapore with reserves at 50%.

2. During summer, power outages become unavoidable as supply grapples with the seasonal spike in electricity usage. Offices and households need more cooling appliances, and establishments have to cope with increased tourism activities. These, on top of regular household and business power consumption.

3. The Philippines’ power demand has been increasing at a rate of five to eight percent annually, one positive reason being the country’s strong economic growth.

4. The country’s ambitious 2017 to 2022 infrastructure plans and the growth of the power-intensive manufacturing sector will further add pressure on supply.

5. What makes the chronic power supply problem worse is the near depletion of the Malampaya Natural Gas Facility which provides 30% of Luzon’s total capacity of 11,218 megawatts (MW). The facility’s gas reserves are expected to run out starting in 2024, posing a serious power supply shortfall.

6. Note that a power deficit of 100 MW can result in a one-hour daily rotational brownout.

So, how can these obvious problems be addressed and the looming crisis averted? Again, the CNN report proposes solutions that any reasonably intelligent and diligent bureaucrat would, could and should understand:

1. Build more power plants as soon as possible. This would, could and should ensure the steady supply of electricity needed to meet the growing energy demand.

2. Get rid of the disincentives for private sector investments in power plants, mainly, the red tape that unbelievably requires five years. COUNT THEM, FIVE YEARS to process an application for a permit to build a power plant. A power plant investor also needs to secure 162 clearances and 102 permits before any work can start on a facility. COUNT THEM: 162 CLEARANCES AND 102 PERMITS.

Mercifully, Senator Sherwin Gatchalian, who has had hands-on commercial and industrial management involvement and expertise, has filed a bill to nip the bureaucratic red tape in securing power plant permits. He proposes the Energy Virtual One-Stop Shop (E-VOSS), a Web site for all power plants in the country, that will allow a prospective investor to submit documents electronically, monitor the status and pay fees online.

The bill will also impose a 30-day deadline to approve a specific permit. The entire process will be shortened to one-and-a-half years, at the most. That’s still a long time in view of the looming crisis but infinitely faster than five years.

Another promising development is the technology-neutral policy that has been adopted by the Department of Energy. This policy promotes various energy sources such as solar, geothermal, wind and hydro, and also includes coal and oil. The objective is to make power supply cost-efficient and reliable.

This is good news for current and potential coal power plant investors. Coal-fired power plants generate a third of the country’s dependable power supply and coal happens to be the most abundant, most reliable and least-cost fuel in the country.

Concerns have been raised about coal, in view of the climate change crisis, but proponents say that the problem can be minimized, with strict observance of the conditions in the Environment Compliance Certificate (ECC), which covers pollution, waste water and tree cutting. The emergence of the so-called clean coal technology could also reduce carbon emissions.

Renewable and environmentally ideal energy sources, like solar and wind, while expensive and difficult to set up, offer the prospects of a more sustainable energy program in the long run. These should not be overlooked.

Anticipating the country’s power needs and promptly acting on them should be given high priority by the government. While hindsight is a perfect science, foresight is better proof of government efficiency and commitment to public service.

 

Greg B. Macabenta is an advertising and communications man shuttling between San Francisco and Manila and providing unique insights on issues from both perspectives.

gregmacabenta@hotmail.com

There are 159,766 dengue vaccine recipients in Central Visayas

THE DEPARTMENT of Health (DoH) in Region 7 (Central Visayas) has heightened surveillance of thousands of children who have received the controversial Dengvaxia vaccine. DoH-7 Director Jaime S. Bernadas said health personnel are gathering the profiles of at least 159,766 children, which is almost half of the total number of eligible recipients during the first round of vaccination. “We have alerted all our partners which are the local government units (through their respective) rural health units and city health offices to intensify surveillance of our children immunized,” Mr. Bernadas told reporters Monday, Dec. 4. The DoH central office has suspended the dengue vaccination program following analysis that the vaccine Dengvaxia poses risk to those without prior infection but have received it. Mr. Bernadas said concerned health units have also been notified of the suspension, and distribution of the vaccine has been put on hold. The second round of dengue vaccination was supposed to start this month in Cebu province, the fourth pilot area next to the three identified highly endemic regions, namely: Central Luzon, Calabarzon, and the National Capital Region. — The Freeman

Winnie-the-Pooh to bear all in London show

LONDON — Paddington Bear may have captivated cinema audiences this year, but another ursine star, Winnie-the-Pooh, will get his own show at London’s historic V&A museum this month.

Winnie-the-Pooh: Exploring a Classic which opens this week features around 230 works and artefacts dating from 1920 onwards, including original illustrations and manuscripts, such as E.H. Shepard’s first portraits of the honey-loving bear.

The exhibition is not the first examination of real-life inspirations for Winnie-the-Pooh this year, with a Hollywood film, Goodbye Christopher Robin, telling the story of A.A. Milne and his family while he was creating the character.

The V&A is hoping to attract more young families through its doors and one of the exhibition’s curators Emma Laws felt that Pooh, who turned 90 last year, was the perfect bear for the job. “Everybody loves Winnie-the-Pooh, he’s inter-generational, so this is a chance for everybody,” Laws told Reuters

In addition to memorabilia, the exhibition examines the real people and places behind the stories — Milne’s son Christopher who served as the inspiration for Christopher Robin, and Ashdown Forest in Sussex, which inspired the Hundred Acre Wood.

“Winnie-the-Pooh is a very simple, evocative sort of world in which you want children to be able to get fully immersed in the imagination of going into the Hundred Acre Wood,” exhibition designer Tom Piper said. “So we wanted to make it immersive in lots of different ways. So there’s digital immersion, but equally we’ve created huge hand-painted, five meter-high versions of the Hundred Acre Wood, (so) that you can really get the atmosphere of the place.”

Not everyone has such fond childhood memories of Pooh and his pals, however, Milne’s son Christopher wrote in a memoir that he had a difficult relationship with the character, and had suffered bullying at school as a result of the books. — Reuters

LaVar pulls son from college program

LOS ANGELES — LaVar Ball said on Monday he will withdraw his son LiAngelo from the college basketball program at UCLA in protest at his suspension for shoplifting in China.

LiAngelo was one of three UCLA players arrested in China earlier this month and later released after the intervention of Chinese President Xi Jinping.

He was later suspended indefinitely by UCLA over what became an international incident and led to a war of words been LaVar and President Donald Trump.

LaVar, however, told ESPN on Monday he was withdrawing his son from UCLA.

“We are exploring other options with Gelo,” LaVar told ESPN. “He’s out of there.” “I’m not sitting back and waiting. “He wasn’t punished this bad in China. We get back over here and the consequences were even stiffer than China. So basically they’re in jail here.”

LaVar said LiAngelo would not transfer to another school but would rather concentrate on entering the 2018 NBA draft.

LiAngelo is the younger brother of Los Angeles Lakers point guard Lonzo Ball, who joined the NBA powerhouse this year after playing one season at UCLA. — AFP

New SUVs set to head Peugeot PHL’s lineup

THREE SUVs — the all-new 3008, latest 2008 and the 5008, which had transitioned from its previous MPV version — is set to head Peugeot’s lineup in the Philippines. The domestic distributor of the French brand, Peugeot Philippines, said the release of all three models is “in line with the PSA Group’s global SUV offensive.”

Peugeot is part of PSA Group, the Paris, France-based manufacturer of automobiles and motorcycles under which Peugeot, Citroen, DS, Opel and Vauxhaul belong.

Calling the recently introduced models as “a new breed of SUVs,” Peugeot Philippines President Glen P. Dasig said the latest range ”represents the brand’s bold move into the future.”

Of the three models, the 3008 and the 2008 are already available in the Philippines. The 3008 was directly presented by Peugeot Philippines to its customers even before the model was launched — a novel marketing move Mr. Dasig noted is proving to be more effective for Peugeot’s niche market locally. The 5008, for its part, is scheduled to be launched in the “first quarter of 2018,” according to the executive, who added that pre-selling for the model will “start in January.”

The brand admitted it had arrived “late in the SUV game,” but this, according to Mr. Dasig, gave Peugeot the “advantage to rethink some conventional ideas and notions about the growing segment.”

UNIQUE FEATURES
The company said the models feature a “unique design language” to mark a compact frame that can be lengthened or shortened, depending on the vehicle in which it is used, while ensuring a spacious cabin. This, Peugeot said, allows its vehicles to “look athletic and agile on the outside while maintaining the same degree of space and comfort found on conventional SUVs.”

“Being design experts, Peugeot’s engineers have found a way to trim off the excess bulk that makes an SUV aesthetically big and imposing without sacrificing space. This contributes to a more distinct, svelte figure that forms part of a very attractive silhouette,” Mr. Dasig explained.

Standard in the new SUVs is Peugeot’s iCockpit, basically a control pod for the vehicles’ convenience functions, some of which can be customized to suit personal preferences.

ENGINE CHOICES
Two gasoline engines are initially offered with the new SUVs. The first is the 1.6-liter high-pressure turbocharged unit found on the 3008, while the other is the 1.2-liter Puretech three-cylinder engine that runs the 2008.

“The most impressive feature in our new SUV range can be found under the hood. I think we are having a resurgence of gasoline engines and today is the right time to take advantage of that opportunity,” Mr. Dasig said.

Meanwhile, the power plant choice for the upcoming 5008 has yet to be finalized pending Philippine government approval. Peugeot has a third engine option — the 2.0-liter HDi diesel.

Peugeot has set prices for the 3008 GT Line at P2.590, and for the 2008 at P1.490 million. No price for the 5008 has been announced. — Brian M. Afuang

Ocean tidal power JV flags need for state guarantees

H&WB ASIA PACIFIC (Pte Ltd) Corp., a Filipino-French joint venture (JV) building an ocean tidal power facility, has backed the creation of a single state-led guarantee agency.

“Ocean power needs strong government support. The kinetic energy of tidal currents produces stable electricity supply. This is real ‘grid smart’ technology because it can provide steady ancillary service supporting the transmission of electricity from generation to customers up to far-flung areas,” said Antonio A. Ver, president of H&WB Asia Pacific (Pte Ltd) Corp. in a statement.

H&WB and French marine energy technologies and engineering company Sabella SAS are jointly building a $25-million pilot phase of an ocean tidal power plant in San Bernardino Strait.

The project, under special purpose company San Bernardino Ocean Power Corp. (SBOPC), aims to boost the country’s renewable energy portfolio.

Mr. Ver said the government’s plan to put up a single government guarantee system, which was endorsed in October by the Governance Commission for Government-Owned or -Controlled Corporations for President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s approval, will bolster the chances of SBOPC getting the international funding.

H&WB said the project was shortlisted in May 2017 for possible financing under the fifth funding cycle of the International Renewable Energy Agency/Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (IRENA/ADFD).

ADFD requires a government guarantee letter and a guarantee agreement for loan applicants that are private entities such as SBOPC.

“The ADFD loan facility is an effective financing strategy for the San Bernardino ocean power plant and securing the funding will certainly accelerate the construction and development phases of the project and jumpstart the development of ocean energy,” he said. — Victor V. Saulon

Vivant, GBP ink deal for La Union coal-fired plant

A UNIT of listed firm Vivant Corp. has signed a pre-development agreement with Global Business Power Corp. (GBP) for a two-unit coal-fired power plant in Luna, La Union province with a combined capacity of 670 megawatts (MW).

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, Vivant said Vivant Integrated Generation Corp. (VIGC) and GBP have allocated P450 million for the activities under the pre-development agreement.

The two will jointly participate in the project through Lunar Powercore, Inc. in the project under a special purpose vehicle Global Luzon Energy Development Corp. (GLEDC).

GLEDC will undertake the financing, design, procurement, construction, testing, commission, operation and maintenance of the coal-fired power plant.

VIGC is a subsidiary of Vivant Corporation through wholly owned Vivant Energy Corp.

The project is part of GBP’s target to reach a capacity of 1,500 to 2,000 MW in five years, a goal that is around double its current 854 MW.

GBPC has a total gross capacity of 854 MW in the Visayas through subsidiaries Panay Energy Development Corp. (PEDC) with 314 MW, Toledo Power Co. with 182 MW, Cebu Energy Development Corp. with 246 MW, Panay Power Corp. with 104.5 MW, and GBH Power Resources, Inc. with 7.5 MW.

The total is a significant increase from its 185.5 MW capacity in 2003 when it was starting out as Mirant Global Corp.

In June, Alsons Consolidated Resources, Inc. announced GBP’s acquisition of a 50% stake in Alsons Thermal Energy Corp. (ATEC), which holds the Alcantaras’ baseload coal-fired power plant assets. ATEC owns 75% of the 210-megawatt (MW) Sarangani Energy Corp. coal-fired power plant in Maasim, Sarangani province. — Victor V. Saulon

Dedicated to Marawi’s fallen

LT. GEN Carlito G. Galvez, Jr., head of the Western Mindanao Command, receives his Peaceweaver award, which he dedicated to the 165 government forces who were killed during the five-month gun battle with the Daesh-inspired extremist groups in Marawi City. “I dedicate this award to the 165 soldiers who died in Marawi, I remember them who fought for the liberation of Marawi City,” Mr. Galvez said. The Peaceweaver award is bestowed annually by the Zamboanga City-based Inter-religious Solidarity for Peace to individuals or organizations in line with the week-long celebration of the Mindanao Week of Peace, set this year from Nov. 30-Dec. 6.

Washington holds glam art awards Trump skipped

WASHINGTON — The Kennedy Center Honors celebrated a star-studded group of artists and performers Sunday in a gala that took on decidedly political overtones with the presidential box sitting conspicuously empty. It was one of just a handful of times in 40 years that a sitting US president skipped the event, and seen as the first not caused by a crisis or travel.

Norman Lear, known for his sitcoms including The Jeffersons and All in the Family that shed light on prejudice and social ills, seized on his moment in Washington to cite “equal opportunity” and “equal justice” as “the promises of this country.” “Deep in our hearts, we still have promises to deliver,” said the 95-year-old World War II veteran, who received the lifetime artistic achievement award. “I want to call to attention in this room, with these people.”

President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania were not attending to avoid “political distraction” after several honorees said they planned or would skip the traditional White House reception preceding the event. That decision came as the administration sank deep into political turmoil after Trump failed to definitively condemn the role of white supremacists in violent Virginia protests that ended in bloodshed. But the move infused the usually non-partisan cultural celebration at the Kennedy Center Opera House with a decidedly political flavor.

The posh annual awards program — one of the US capital’s preeminent social events — this year honored Cuban-American singer Gloria Estefan, dancer and choreographer Carmen de Lavallade, Lear, rapper LL Cool J, and musician Lionel Richie.

LL Cool J’s nod marked the first time a hip-hop or rap artist has taken home one of the Kennedy Center’s rainbow ribbon medals. The event, to be broadcast Dec. 26 on CBS television, featured performances from singers Stevie Wonder and Chaka Khan, rapper DMC and ballet dancer Misty Copeland.

At an annual State Department dinner on Saturday lauding the performers, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson emphasized the role of the arts in championing free speech, saying this year’s class of awardees “affirm the American value of free expression to the whole world.”

Estefan, the Latin pop star known as “the conga queen” who immigrated from Cuba, alluded to political tensions over immigration. “My dad brought us here to live in freedom and to live in a country that allows everyone to be who they are,” she said. “We all have to stand up for what this country is.”

Hip-hop trailblazer LL Cool J, 49, told the dinner “you’re looking at what every young black man in the inner city could be if they were given the opportunity.” He later praised the Kennedy Center for acknowledging rap as a “high art,” telling journalists “I think they’ve embraced hip hop in a big way.”

Richie, now 68 and known for his slew of soulful hits including “All Night Long,” “Hello,” and Endless Love,” was all smiles as he entered the Kennedy Center, calling art “a unifier.”

The graceful De Lavallade — who like Lear had promised to shun the White House reception — strode the red carpet with perfect posture cultivated by decades of port de bras. The 86-year-old doyenne of dance, who charmed Paris alongside fellow renowned performer Josephine Baker in the 1960s, disparaged the administration’s efforts in past months to eliminate federal arts funding and voiced satisfaction that the president had bowed out. “I’m used to taking directions; I’m a team player — and this is the first time I said ‘no,’” she said, referencing her boycott threat. “I feel wonderful about it.” — AFP

Champions roll

Last weekend was a busy one for the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) with a number of teams/schools crowned as champions for various tournaments in Season 80.

Among those newly minted teams are the Adamson University Pep Squad which topped the cheerdance competition (CDC) last Saturday and the National University Lady Bulldogs as the women’s basketball champions and Ateneo de Manila University Blue Eagles with the men’s hoops title last Sunday.

Adamson winning the CDC was history-making as it marked the first time the San Marcelino-based school has claimed the title for the event which has become a marquee competition in the UAAP in the last decade.

Banking on a retro-inspired performance that saw it crisply executing its routine, the Adamson Pep Squad proved itself one of the deserving teams to vie for a podium finish in a field that was pretty much competitive than in any time in recent years.

That it eventually was named as the winner was not at all surprising for it was truly one of the best performances that day, considering as well how even rival schools were seemingly smitten by its performance.

Also winding up on the podium were the University of Santo Tomas (UST) Salinggawi Dance Troupe, which finished first runner-up, and the University of the East (UE) Pep Squad, second runner-up.

With the win, Adamson joined UST, Far Eastern University, University of the Philippines and National University (NU) as the only schools to have won the event in its 23 years being featured in the UAAP.

Good for Adamson, and the league and fans in general, for we have more teams to watch out for in the coming years.

Also making history of their own were the NU Lady Bulldogs, who claimed their fourth straight UAAP women’s basketball title by sweeping the UE Lady Warriors in their best-of-three finals.

Winning 79-68 in Game Two on Sunday, the Lady Bulldogs not only claimed the title for Season 80 but they also extended their UAAP winning streak to 64 games dating back to 2014.

Steadiness and dedication to perfection could not be more stated for the Patrick Aquino-coached Lady Bulldogs in this impressive run of theirs.

Players have come and gone but NU has remained steady in UAAP women’s hoops which speaks a lot of the kind of program they have installed there in Bustillos.

In Game Two, the Lady Bulldogs were tested by a resilient UE team, led by Ruthlaine Tacula, but the former stayed the course despite struggling here and there to hack out the championship-clinching and streak-continuing victory.

It was a total team effort for NU with finals most valuable player Trixie Antiquera leading with 19 points, Rhena Itesi had a double-double of 15 points and 13 rebounds and Ria Nabalan 14 points.

Season MVP Jack Animam only had nine points but grabbed 23 rebounds, further testament to the depth of the team.

Scary still, the Lady Bulldogs are not about done and set to continue to lord it over in the coming seasons.

Then there are the Blue Eagles, deserving winners in what I consider to be one of the best finals series in the UAAP in recent years.

Well I am pretty sure most of you saw how things unfolded between the latest chapter on the rivalry on the basketball court of Ateneo and De La Salle University, it is still worth underscoring the “beauty” of it all for how much drama it presented both and off the court and how heroes abounded in the series.

Ateneo’s Thirdy Ravena was a deserving finals MVP for his do-it-all ways; Isaac Go was clutch through and through; and the Eagles as a team was the better in this chapter.

This is not to say La Salle did not make a good account of itself, far from it actually for amid the “issues” the Archers claimed to have hounded them all season long they put themselves in a solid position to repeat as champions.

The Eagles just produced the stops and shots that were needed in the finals all told, and now they are back on top.

Indeed, last weekend was a delight to be UAAP fan for the “winning” setting it had.

Well-deserving champions were crowned, and congratulations to them. Now looking forward to what the second semester holds for the UAAP.

 

Michael Angelo S. Murillo has been a columnist since 2003. He is a BusinessWorld reporter covering the Sports beat.

msmurillo@www.bworldonline.com

Porsche wagon, Audi SUV win categories in European auto awards

THE Porsche Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo and Audi Q5 topped their categories in the Golden Steering Wheel awards, recognized as one of the most prominent in the European automotive industry.

In a statement, Porsche said its Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo bested seven competitors in the Sports Car category, where the large four-door vehicle with a “shooting brake” wagon rear end impressed judges with its mix of performance, comfort and practicality.

Porsche Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo
Porsche Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo

For its part, Audi said the all-new Q5 took the top spot in the Large SUV category. The brand’s best-selling model has set new standards in the B segment of premium SUVs through its best-in-class drag coefficient, light weight, modern engines, Quattro all-wheel drive system, driver-assist systems, infotainment and connectivity equipment, and air suspension.

The automakers explained that readers of German automotive trade magazine Auto Bild, its 20 European sister publications, and the German newspaper Bild am Sonntag have determined nominations among the new cars presented for the awards this year. Competing in five categories were 42 models, 20 of which made it to the final round after the reader poll was held. The 20 vehicles were then judged by experts that included race drivers, engineers, designers, connectivity specialists, critics and all the top editors Auto Bild’s European sister publications, who determined each category’s winner.