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12 in a row for Cavs as Love, James gore Bulls

CHICAGO — Kevin Love and LeBron James provided the firepower as the Cleveland Cavaliers notched their 12th straight win with a 113-91 blowout over the Chicago Bulls on Monday.

Love had 24 points and 13 rebounds while James weighed in with 23 points, seven rebounds and six assists as the Cavs improved to 17-7.

Cleveland can equal their franchise record for consecutive victories if they beat Sacramento at home on Wednesday.

The Cavs also benefited from 24 points from Dwyane Wade while Jeff Green finished with 14.

Chicago, however, were left reflecting on a ninth straight loss which has seen them slip to 3-19.

Kris Dunn was their top-scorer with 15 points on a night when the home team got little change from the visiting Cavaliers.

Robin Lopez and Justin Holiday both scored 14 points for the Bulls, with Lauri Markkanen adding 13.

Holiday sank a buzzer beater to reduce the Cavaliers lead to 86-71 heading into the final quarter, but Cleveland upped the scoring pace to cruise home.

CURRY INJURY FEAR AS WARRIORS STUNS PELICANS
Stephen Curry scored 31 points but hobbled off with an injury as the Golden State Warriors mounted a second half comeback to defeat the New Orleans Pelicans 125-115 in a bruising battle on Monday.

For the second time this season, the Warriors overturned a 20-point halftime deficit to clinch a decisive victory.

Monday’s win came at a cost though, with Curry leaving the court late in the game after suffering what looked like a nasty twist of his right ankle.

Curry limped off to the locker room for treatment with just under a minute left with the Warriors leading, 120-113.

Moments earlier, Warriors star Kevin Durant had been ejected for the third time this season after clashing with DeMarcus Cousins.

Cousins appeared to connect with a glancing head-butt during an on-court confrontation before both players were tossed.

Durant’s ejection and Curry’s injury were the final twists of an absorbing encounter which saw the Pelicans surge into a 69-49 half-time lead at the Smoothie King Center in Louisiana.

Jrue Holiday led the scoring for New Orleans with 34 points with E’Twaun Moore adding 27 points.

Cousins had a double-double with 19 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists but ultimately Golden State reeled in the Pelicans with a dazzling second-half display.

The Warriors won the third quarter 39-22 and outscored New Orleans 37-24 in the fourth quarter.

With Curry adding 31, Klay Thompson was the next highest scorer with 22.

Both Durant and Draymond Green had 19 points each. Green pulled down nine rebounds and contributed seven assists as the Dubs improved to 19-6.

IRVING, CELTICS OVERPOWER ANTETOKOUNMPO
Kyrie Irving led the way with 32 points as the Boston Celtics overcame a virtuoso performance from Giannis Antetokounmpo in a 111-100 win over the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday.

Antetokounmpo top-scored with 40 points but Boston edged clear thanks to Irving and Al Horford, who weighed in with 20 points, nine rebounds and eight assists as the Celtics improved to 21-4.

Rookie Jayson Tatum added 17 — including 14 in a first quarter hot streak — while Aron Baynes also reached double digits with 10.

Irving made 13-of-24 from the floor, including 19 points in the second half.

Irving’s haul included a decisive run of five points in a row as Boston led by seven with around 1 minute and 30 seconds remaining.

The victory was Boston’s 11th in their last 12 home games.

Meanwhile, Greek star Antetokounmpo was left reflecting on a third straight 30-point game.

The 22-year-old small forward went 14-for-24 from the floor and also had nine rebounds, four assists and four turnovers.

Antetokounmpo was one of five Bucks players to reach double figures, with Khris Middleton adding 19, Eric Bledsoe 18, Nate Snell 11 and Malcolm Brogdon 10.

BOOKER IN POINTS AGAIN AS PHOENIX STUN SIXERS
Devin Booker produced another bumper points spree as the Phoenix Suns claimed a deserved road victory against the Philadelphia 76ers on Monday.

Booker, who scored 38 points in a losing display against the Boston Celtics on Saturday, exploded for 46 points as the Suns completed a 115-101 upset.

It was the second highest individual points total of the 21-year-old’s career following his 70-point display against Boston last season.

Booker shot 17 of 32 from the floor while draining five of eight three-point shots. Phoenix improved to 9-16 with the victory as the Sixers fell to 13-10.

Booker was backed by T.J. Warren, who bagged 25 points for the visitors.

J.J. Redick led the scoring for Philly, while Joel Embiid added 22 points and 12 rebounds for a double-double.

Australian star Ben Simmons finished with 20 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. Simmons said earlier he had felt “pretty sick” after coming down with symptoms of flu.

Phoenix were in control throughout, jumping into a 17-point lead in the first half before taking a 93-79 advantage with just over 11 minutes left.

A 13-point Redick blitz raised hopes of a Sixers fightback but two crucial Booker three-pointers gave Phoenix breathing space.

LIVINGSTON, GAME OFFICIAL SUSPENDED AFTER CLASH
Golden State Warriors guard Shaun Livingston was suspended for one game, while NBA game official Courtney Kirkland will be benched for one week after their on-court bust-up, the league announced Monday.

Livingston and Kirkland clashed during a disputed non-call in the second quarter of the Warriors’ blowout win over Miami on Sunday.

The duo bumped heads, leading to Livingston being handed a technical and tossed from the game. — AFP

Sereno accuser scolded again

LAWYER Lorenzo G. Gadon was scolded anew by lawmakers presiding over the House inquiry on his impeachment case against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno.

Mr. Gadon had alleged over the weekend that an “oligarch” is bribing senators with P200 million each to acquit Ms. Sereno when the Senate tries her after her impeachment by the House of Representatives.

Some senators had criticized Mr. Gadon for his allegations ahead of an expected Senate trial.

On Tuesday’s hearing by the House committee on justice, Ako Bicol party-list Representative Alfredo A. Garbin, Jr. criticized Mr. Gadon’s allegation “which affects the integrity of this impeachment committee” and casts “aspersions to the would-be justices of this impeachment complaint,” the congressman said.

He told Mr. Gadon to “keep his mouth shut if he cannot verify or reveal to us this oligarch [and] the source of this P200 million.”

Committee chairperson and Oriental Mindoro Representative Reynaldo V. Umali said that should the impeachment complaint reach the Senate, Mr. Gadon will be asked by the senators to explain his allegation.

Antipolo City Representative Romeo M. Acop, for his part, cited to Mr. Gadon the story of “The Boy Who Cried Wolf.”

“Kung mas marami pa kayong sinasabi na mga bagay na hindi totoo, eh baka ’yung mga tao mismo na nakikinig dito sa ating proceedings ay hindi na maniniwala po sa inyo” (If you’re saying more things that are not true, the people listening here might not believe you anymore.), Mr. Acop said.

Quezon City Representative Vincent P. Crisologo for his part said, “Perhaps we should ask Mr. Gadon, please shut up your mouth… para ’di naman tayo mapasama (sa) mga proceedings dito (so that our proceedings here won’t be compromised).”

Mr. Gadon in response said he saw no reason to be cited in contempt because he personally denied the possibility of senators receiving the alleged payoffs. “Sinabi ko po doon, your honors, that ako mismo hindi naniniwala dahil sabi ko nga, hindi naman siguradong papayag ’yung mga senador na sila ay iba-bribe,” he said. (I said then, your honors, that I myself don’t believe [what I just claimed] because, like I said, it can’t be that the senators will allow themselves to be bribed).

In the end, Mr. Gadon was asked to submit a written explanation why he should not be cited for contempt.

Also on Tuesday, Court Administrator Jose Midas P. Marquez testified that the Supreme Court, under Ms. Sereno’s watch, failed to act upon any application of spouses of deceased judges and justices for survivorship benefits from October 2015 to Nov. 6, 2017.

Mr. Marquez said that he didn’t get any reply from the Chief Justice when he wrote her in January 2017, recommending urgent action on the claims of the aging spouses of the late magistrates.

Mr. Marquez shared the information with the committee chaired by Oriental Mindoro Representative Reynaldo Umali.

Among Mr. Gadon’s accusations are that Ms. Sereno delayed the release of survivor benefits, until widows of judges and justices grow old, get sick, and die of waiting for financial assistance — among them, 94-year-old Dolores Colayco, widow of a Court of Appeals justice.

Mr. Marquez narrated that he had received requests to expedite the resolution of applications for survivorship benefits from October to December 2016, such as one from a friend of the 94-year-old Colayco.

He said Ms. Colayco’s friend sent him seven text exchanges from Nov. 2, 2016 to Dec. 16, 2017 to follow up on the application of the aging widow, who needed the benefits for her living and medication expenses.

This prompted Mr. Marquez to write a letter to Ms. Sereno on Jan. 12, 2017, informing the Chief Justice that from 2010 to September 2015, the high court approved 271 applications for survivorship pension of spouses of judges who retired or died before the effectivity of Republic Act 9946 on Feb. 11, 2010.

This law states that upon the death of a justice or a judge, his or her surviving spouse will be entitled to receive all the retirement benefits that the deceased would have received if he or she had not died. The law says that the spouse will continue to receive it until his/her death or remarriage.

Continuing to cite from his letter, Mr. Marquez said that since it had been more than a year since the Supreme Court’s last action on pending applications for survivorship pension, and since majority of the spouses are beyond 80 years old (their ages ranged from 79 to 98 years old), there was a compelling need to expedite the actions on 29 of the applications.

As most of them were in poor health, they might not be able to avail themselves of the benefits due them, which was why Mr. Marquez said he recommended that the high tribunal treat the matter urgently and make a definitive ruling on it.

But Mr. Marquez said his letter allegedly fell on deaf ears, “Wala pong nangyari doon eh, wala pong sagot (Nothing happened to it, there was no reply).”

Mr. Marquez said that before, if a surviving spouse wanted to have survivorship benefits, he or she would just have to go to the Office of the Court Administrator and file an application, which would then be studied by an office whose only job was to receive these applications.

Once the requirements were complete, the Office of the Court Administrator would then recommend whether to grant or deny the application, which would then be submitted to the Office of the Clerk of Court en banc.

However, this is no longer the case now, according to Mr. Marquez.

RA 9946’s retroactivity clause, which states that “The benefits under this Act shall be granted to all those who have retired prior to the effectivity of this act,” caused conflict.

Were the spouses of the justices or judges who died before Feb. 11, 2010, the date of effectivity of RA 9946, still entitled to survivorship benefits?

Mr. Marquez explained that in the 271 applications, the Supreme Court said yes — affirming that the spouses would still receive benefits. However, they would receive survivorship benefits not from the time their spouses died, but from the time that the law took effect.

But there was an “opposite view” in the Supreme Court that said that the spouses of the judges and justices who died before 2010, would no longer be entitled to survivorship benefits, according to Mr. Marquez.

Because of the conflicting views, the Special Committee on Retirement and Civil Service Benefits, composed of two technical working groups (“TWG to screen applications” and “legal TWG”), was created in an order signed by Ms. Sereno, Justice Antonio Carpio, and Justice Presbitero Velasco.

As a result, “all applications received by the Office of the Clerk of Court en banc beginning October 2015 were held in abeyance,” Mr. Marquez said.

In an e-mailed statement, Ms. Sereno’s spokespersons said the Chief Justice “did not intentionally delay action on petitions for retirement and/or survivorship benefits, which applications are in the first place required to be decided by the Supreme Court as a collegial body.”

They further explained that, “The Chief Justice is sympathetic with the plight not just of retirees in the Judiciary, but of the people, who long for an expeditious resolution of their cases. To this end, she has even instituted measures to rationalize and expedite the very process respecting retirement benefits that Complainant assails.”

As to whether the Special Committee was more efficient, lawyer Josalee Deinla, one of the spokespersons, said in an interview that, “Mahalagang maunawaan natin na nagkakaroon ng bagal, may bara hindi dahil sa malisya o may pinag-iinitan ’yong mga justice ng SC, kundi may mga bagay na kailangan munang resolbahin.” (It’s important for us to understand that there is a slowdown, there is a choke point, not because of malice or because the SC justices are ganging up on anyone, but because there are things that need to be resolved first.)

“May policy decision na kailangan munang pagdesisyunan ang SC en banc at may pending administrative cases ’yong mga justices and judges na kailangan ng final decision,” she also said. (There is a policy decision that the SC en banc should decide on first, and there are pending administrative cases of the justices and judges that need a final decision.)

She noted further: “Ang desisyon patungkol sa application ng retirement benefits ay hindi ginagawa ni CJ alone, SC en banc ang nagdedesisyon (The decision regarding the application of retirement benefits aren’t done by the CJ alone, but it is the SC en banc that decides on it).”

Mr. Marquez himself acknowledged that the decisions on retirement benefits are decided not by the Chief Justice alone, but by the Supreme Court en banc.

As to whether the Supreme Court has any rule that governs the period wherein applications for benefits must be resolved, Mr. Marquez said he could only think of the provision in the 1987 Constitution which gives the Supreme Court 24 months to resolve cases filed before it.

Meanwhile, Mr. Umali said also on Tuesday another justice is willing to testify in the impeachment hearing.

“Meron pang isa eh. Kanina meron akong nakita na willing pa rin, another justice. Nakalimutan ko lang kung sino,” Mr. Umali told reporters. (There’s another one. I saw another who’s willing, another justice. I forgot who.)

Nevertheless, this associate justice, Mr. Umali said, is expected to talk about corruption charges against Ms. Sereno, particularly her alleged purchase of a Toyota Land Cruiser worth P5 million.

Mr. Gadon has accused Ms. Sereno of using public funds to finance her lavish lifestyle. — Tricia Aquino of interaksyon.com and Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

NY Giants fire McAdoo in wake of Manning uproar

NEW YORK — The New York Giants fired head coach Ben McAdoo on Monday, less than a week after he triggered uproar by benching long-serving quarterback Eli Manning.

The Giants general manager Jerry Reese has also been dismissed after an 11-year reign which yielded two Super Bowls.

Giants co-owner John Mara confirmed the dismissals in a press conference, saying there had been a need for “wholesale changes.”

McAdoo’s position has been under scrutiny all season after a series of dismal performances that have left the Giants with a 2-10 record, tied for second worst in the league.

“We’ve had an embarrassing season and most people that know me know how painful that is to me, how committed I am to try and put a winning team back on the field,” Mara told reporters.

“I know our fans are suffering, but I’m suffering more, I’ll guarantee you that right now. We’ve gotten to the point where we felt we had to make wholesale changes and that’s what we’ve done.”

The Giants were beaten 24-17 by the Oakland Raiders on Sunday after McAdoo’s decision to drop Manning in favor of Geno Smith.

McAdoo had angered fans last week after announcing Manning, who led the Giants to Super Bowl wins in 2007 and 2011, was no longer the starting quarterback.

The handling of the decision — which saw Manning choking back tears before reporters in the locker room — – reportedly angered Mara.

Players across the league also criticized how Manning, one of the most respected figures in the NFL, had been treated. Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers said the situation was “pathetic.”

McAdoo, however, remained defiant and said on Sunday he planned to continue in his job as “long as my key card works.”

“You know, we’ve got a great group of players, the coaches, we’ve got a great staff to work with. We’re going to show up ready to go tomorrow and get this thing cleaned up and move on to the next one,” McAdoo said after the loss to the Raiders.

Meanwhile, ESPN reported that Manning would return as starting quarterback for this Sunday’s game against the Dallas Cowboys at MetLife Stadium. — AFP

Sereno says SC has been promoting better transparency

CHIEF JUSTICE Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno — who has previously been challenged by President Rodrigo R. Duterte to resign alongside himself and Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales amid allegations of corruption — said the Supreme Court (SC) has been pursuing greater transparency since 2012.

Ms. Sereno, who was appointed to the highest judicial post in August 2012, made the statement following Mr. Duterte’s call on Monday, Dec. 4, for improving transparency among the three branches of government that would allow public access to relevant information about their affairs.

SC Spokesperson Theodore O. Te, reading Ms. Sereno’s comment in part, said: “The President, in a speech made on 4 December 2017, expressed the hope that both the legislative and judicial branches of government would join (the executive branch) in strengthening our democratic institutions by following suit and instituting measures that would allow unfettered public access to relevant information about their affairs.”

Ms. Sereno pointed out that “even without a Freedom of Information Law, the judiciary has, in fact, done this starting from May 2012.”

She cited that the SC Web site, (sc.judiciary.gov.ph), and its transparency page, (sc.judiciary.gov.ph/transparency) contain such information as:

• The Summaries of the Statement of Assets,Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) of the Supreme Court Justices starting 2014;

• All relevant fiscal and financial data including disbursements from the Judiciary Development Fund (JDF) and Annual Procurement Plans;

• Livestreaming of the audio of the oral arguments of the Supreme Court, the posting of the relevant pleadings and legal documents related to the particular cases being heard, and the audio recordings of the oral arguments;

• Updates on relevant and current developments also done through the Supreme Court Public Information Office (PIO) twitter page;

• Information about the bar examinations and the release of the bar results every year starting from 2013; and

• New rules and procedures and guidelines to judges.

“Included in the measures of transparency are the weekly live press briefings on Tuesdays given by the Supreme Court Chief Public Information Officer after each session of the Court En Banc and also occasional press briefings on matters of public concern,” Ms. Sereno said.

“The Court is also deliberating on a draft Rule on Access to Information About the Supreme Court pursuant to its power to promulgate rules and its power to supervise the lower courts (A.M. No. 17-09-08-SC),” she added. — Andrea Louise E. San Juan

UFC China debut results in sellout crowd, largest MMA event in China’s history

SINGAPORE — UFC, the world’s premier mixed martial arts organization, today shared final results from UFC Fight Night: Bisping vs Gastelum, its first-ever event in mainland China.

The event took place on Nov. 25 at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai in front of a sellout crowd of 15,128 and marked the country’s largest ever Mixed Martial Arts event. The fight night drew more than one million live views on PPTV, China’s leading sports media provider, and an additional one million in Video On Demand. UFC Fight Night: Bisping vs. Gastelum also aired globally across UFC’s digital streaming service, UFC Fight Pass, recording the largest live-viewing audience of an Asian Fight Pass event to-date.

The event’s official hashtag, #UFCShanghai, garnered more than 46 million reads, making it the top trending sports hashtag in the country that evening, and surpassing the legendary Mayweather vs. McGregor boxing match. Eight of the 12 bouts featured Chinese athletes, with five notching victories including strawweight Yan Xiaonan, featherweights Wang Guan and Song Yadong, and welterweights Li Jingliang and Kenan Song. Jingliang and Yadong also each took home $50,000 Performance of the Night awards.

UFC traveled to 14 countries this year, and the event in Shanghai was one of 10 new stops for the organization — a year that saw the global brand’s fan base grow to a record 278 million in 45 measured markets. The event also marked the sixth sellout of the year. UFC has recorded seven sellouts in 2017, with others including: UFC 208: Holm vs. De Randamie at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York in February; UFC 210: Cormier vs. Johnson 2 at the KeyBank Center in Buffalo, New York in April; UFC 212: Aldo vs. Holloway 2 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in June; the organization’s debut in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada in September for UFC 215: Nunes vs. Shevchenko 2; UFC Fight Night: Brunson vs. Machida in São Paulo, Brazil in October and UFC 218: Holloway vs. Aldo 2 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan this past weekend.

UFC’s international growth trend will continue into 2018 with new stops already announced for the first quarter including first-time visits to Belem, Brazil and Perth, Australia.

The ABCs of human rights

FROM “activism” to “zero,” the ongoing exhibition at the Cultural Center of the Philippines called The Weight of Words: An Alphabet of Human Rights presents 26 artworks that correspond to 26 words synonymous with one of today’s controversial issues: your merits as a human being.

The words usually associated with human rights like “democracy,” “freedom,” and “peace” are present in the alphabetized list, and are interpreted and executed by visual artists — mostly graphic designers and photographers.

Artist Daniel Palma Tayona visualizes the words “freedom” and “peace” through graphite on paper drawings of a person behind bars and four people showing the word “peace” in sign language.

Each artwork, which is untitled, has a short artist’s note beside them, which explains the artists’ sentiments on this sensitive topic.

For “D” as in “democracy,” artist Keith Dador took a photograph of a blindfolded woman. He said in his note: “when the few elites masquerades itself (sic) as the rule of the people, how easy is it then to control everything for personal and political gain? Do those in power serve the people or do they become the appointed lords who expect subservience from their people?”

“The issue of human rights is divisive. You cannot talk about it without people getting angry or different sides talking past each other. But the irony is that everyone agrees that the idea of human rights is a good thing. No one claims that they are against it. So, it should not be divisive, yet it is,” said Gigo Alampay, CANVAS’s executive director.

On view until Jan. 21, the exhibition is the brainchild of CANVAS (Center for Art, New Ventures, and Sustainable Development) which is a nonprofit organization that aims to promote literacy among children, to explore our national identity, and promote a broader public awareness for our art, culture, and environment.

To have peaceful discussions on human rights using art as the medium, CANVAS goes back to the basics — our ABCs. “The alphabet is a basic tool for learning, reading, and understanding. So if we go back to the basics, maybe people will realize that we can talk about human rights in a sober way,” Mr. Alampay said.

Words like “barbed wire,” “martial law,” “torture,” and “revisionism,” which allude to the Marcos Regime were rendered in artworks including a paper cutout, candle wax, a photograph, and a sculpture, respectively.

The letter “B” for “barbed wire” — made from strips of watercolor paper — is “a symbol of human captivity, degradation, and torture in modern history.” For artist John Ed de Vera, it is a “tool for division: it separates and confines, protecting those who are inside it at the cost of caging them.”

Artist Meneer Marcelo used the wax drippings from a candle to form the profile of Ferdinand Marcos on framed glass. He said of his art: “The process is contemplative and hopeful. A metaphor for prayers that seek justice for the victims of martial law.”

Designer and illustrator Dan Matutina made the metal and acrylic sculpture of a hand holding a “T”-shaped hammer. Reflecting on “torture,” he said: “Man is the only creature capable of consciously and deliberately harming another for no reason whatsoever. What does that say about us? Who are the animals?”

Curator Jaime Pacena II said that the project was originally intended for the kids. “That’s why it is an alphabet, but we saw the difficulties of explaining it to the young ones, so we eventually thought not to be conscious of who our target audience is. It is for anybody,” he said.

The Weight of Words: An Alphabet of Human Rights will also have a corresponding book that will be formally launched on Dec. 10, Human Rights Day, commemorating the day in 1948 when the UN General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

The book will be distributed for free to disadvantaged communities in the country as part of the CANVAS’s “One Million Books for One Million Filipino Children” campaign.

While there are words that are contextualized in the local milieu, the exhibition also included universal icons of human rights including Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, and Malcolm X, all done by the street artists called Ang Gerilya.

A group of five mural artists who usually work with portraits of Filipino icons, Ang Gerilya’s work for the exhibit was done by only two of its members, Janno Gonzales and Marianne Rios. They said that the topic is timely and timeless because anywhere in the world people are experiencing or have experienced injustice. — Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

Phoenix trades first round pick Jun Gabriel for Kia’s second round pick next year

JUN GABRIEL, the 6-foot-7 center out of Colegio de San Lorenzo, hasn’t played a single PBA game yet, but he has already found himself shipped to his third team in the pro league.

Picked in the first round by TNT, he was immediately sent to the Phoenix Fuel Masters for Sidney Onwubere, but after receiving a tender offer from his new squad, the pride of Pangasinan, who also played for Sta. Lucia Realty in the Pilipinas Commercial Basketball League, the versatile big man instead found himself traded to the Kia Picanto side.

New Fuel Masters coach Louie Alas confirmed the news to BusinessWorld.

“We’ve decided to trade him for Kia’s own second round pick in the 2018 Draft,” Mr. Alas said in a telephone interview. “We wish him (Gabriel) good luck.”

The Fuel Masters lost their preseason game against the Rain or Shine Elasto Painters, 95-91, just recently, but saw a lot of promise with the new system being employed by the squad.

From a team that runs a dribble-drive offense, Phoenix has become more of a defensive oriented unit under Mr. Alas, using a variety of pressing defense.

“That’s been my calling card. Me and (assistant coach) Topex Robinson share the same vision for the team and that’s what we intend to do this coming season,” added Mr. Alas.

The Fuel Masters got a solid games from Jeff Chan, recruited by the squad late last season, as well as new recruits LA Revilla and rookie Jason Perkins.

This season, Alas has a modest goal for the team and that is to improve from last season’s finish.

“We don’t want to put pressure on ourselves, but on the other hand, we are aware that we cannot keep up with our own success so we have to improve,” he added. — Rey Joble

Chinese infra firms in the mix for Clark upgrade

SEVEN GROUPS, including three major Chinese infrastructure companies, have submitted bids for the Clark International Airport (CIA) Phase I terminal upgrade project, the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said.

The BCDA and the Department of Transportation (DoTr) said yesterday in a statement that bid documents for the P12.55-billion project were received from China State Construction Engineering Corporation Ltd. (CSCEC).; China Harbour Engineering Company Ltd. (CHEC); Sinohydro Corp. Ltd.; the joint venture of Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR Infrastructure (Singapore) Pte. Ltd.; DDT Konstract, Inc.; R-II Builders, Inc.; and Tokwing Construction Corp.

Among the companies that bought bid documents but did not submit bids are the joint venture of First Balfour, Inc., and Datem, Inc.; Qingjian Group Co. Ltd.; and Atlantic Gulf & Pacific of Manila, Inc.

BCDA Vice-President for Business Development and Operations and SBAC Chairperson Joshua M. Bingcang said that the bid submissions are subject to qualification.

“We will evaluate the documents and see if the companies meet the prescribed requirements,” Mr. Bingcang said in a phone interview.

The technical proposals of eligible firms will be opened on Dec. 7. Qualified bidders will then move on to the next phase, which is the opening and evaluation of the financial documents scheduled for Dec. 14.

The BCDA will award the Engineering, Procurement and Construction contract on Dec. 15, and groundbreaking is scheduled on Dec. 20. The new terminal is expected to be operational by the first quarter of 2020.

Among the technical and financial qualification requirements are the completion of a total of P15 billion worth of related projects; the design of an airport currently in operation; net worth of at least the cost of the project; and the capacity to raise loans, with the winning bidder putting up 20% equity.

The BCDA and the DoTr are also set to review the P839-billion unsolicited proposal of the Filinvest Development Corp. (FDC) and JG Summit Holdings, Inc. (JGS) consortium for the long-term development of CIA. The proposal includes expansion of airport facilities such as terminals and runways, alongside operating and maintaining the existing and new passenger terminals. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Carpio questions police memo focusing on street-level drug operations

SENIOR ASSOCIATE Justice Antonio T. Carpio has questioned the Philippine National Police’s (PNP) apparent focus on street-level operations in its anti-narcotics campaign and ignoring the drug lords as contained in Command Memorandum Circular (CMC) No. 16-2016.

“The thrust of tokhang is to go against street-users. Explain why the PNP in CMC-16 is concentrating on street-level operations and practically ignoring the drug lords. How come the flagship project of the President is going after the small-time peddlers?” Mr. Carpio said during yesterday’s Supreme Court en banc session for the third oral arguments hearing on cases filed against the administration’s war on drugs.

Mr. Carpio was interpellating against Solicitor General Jose C. Calida, who admitted that President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s priority in his mandate is to go against the small-time peddlers.

“The President mandates to go against all drug users/peddlers. The big-time drug lords are outside the Philippines. First go against the small-time peddlers, second to go against the big-time drug lords,” Mr. Calida said.

Mr. Carpio also questioned the policy that goes after drug retailers instead of the bulk operations and big-time dealers. “Why is the policy to go after the retail and not after the bulk operations? You can control at customs?”

In reply, Mr. Calida said: “We are an archipelago; drugs are dumped into the high seas where they are taken away.”

Not backing down, the high court official said: “If you can control from the ports and from the seas, you can control the drugs.”

In May, P6.4 billion worth of illegal drug shabu (methamphetamine) was discovered by authorities stashed in warehouses in the capital after passing through the Bureau of Customs (BoC).

Meanwhile, Mr. Carpio, ordered Mr. Calida to provide data on the number of people under the so-called “deaths under investigation” and those killed in legitimate operations.

Mr. Calida cited that a total of 3,800 have been killed since the start of the administration’s campaign against illegal drugs in July 2016.

PNP Director-General Ronald M. dela Rosa and Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) Director-General Aaron Aquino, who were invited to the hearing, were not present as they are both in New York for an Anti-Terrorism Conference. — Andrea Louise E. San Juan

The Many Sins and Mysteries of MRT-3

By Rene S. Santiago

ONCE AGAIN, an old rickety train system mislabelled as MRT-3 is in the news, threatening our Christmas celebration like Grinch.

Troubles seem to be the twin brother of MRT-3.

Controversial at birth, it continues to be talked about nearly three decades after.

To understand its current predicament and recurring problems, one has to look at its sordid past that is shrouded in mystery and colored by money.

It is a saga that transcended six administrations — Corazon C. Aquino, Fidel V. Ramos, Joseph E. Estrada, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Benigno S. C. Aquino III, and now, Rodrigo R. Duterte.

It began in 1989 as an unsolicited proposal to the Philippine National Railways (PNR), then evolved into a Build-Lease-Transfer Agreement in November 1991. How it became an official contract was a mystery by itself.

The construction of MRT-3 broke ground (in October 1996) during President Ramos’ watch, and only after forcing a change in investors line-up.

After 10 years in labor, the Edsa Rail line made its inaugural run in December 1999 and baptized by Erap as “Magandang Regalo sa Taongbayan.”

During Arroyo’s long reign, its future dimmed and became a victim in the battle between two malls. But its most dramatic, and visible, downhill slide to hell commenced during Aquino’s time.

Will MRT-3’s fortune change in Duterte’s time?

ORIGINAL SIN
Back in 1989, a Manila-based Jewish businessman (who likes to brag he has yet to meet a Filipino he cannot bribe) submitted an unsolicited proposal to PNR.

It was received like the horse given to Troy by the Greeks — the first to ride on the newly-minted Build-Operate-Transfer Law (Republic Act 6957). The proposal snaked its way to the then-Department of Transport and Communications (DoTC), which promptly conducted a tender — where a Hongkong-registered company capitalized at $998 got anointed.

Four challengers with bigger pockets were knocked out, within a month of document submission.

A DoTC insider blew the whistle that got the Senate poring over its mysterious provenance.

Eventually, the issue landed on the court of last resort, which dismissed its legal infirmities on the ground that the same had been cured by a subsequent law (RA 7718 or the amended BOT law).

While MRT-3 proponents managed to hurdle the legal challenges, its shaky finances failed to impress the tight credit markets of the time.

With Palace prodding, a new group of investors “kicked out” the original sinner with a “pabaon” of about $33 million. Out with EDSA LRT Consortium, in with Metro Rail Transit Corporation (MRTC).

The contract underwent at least seven revisions — as some well-meaning bureaucrats tried to remedy the atrocious features of the project (e.g., changing the at-grade crossing on Quezon Avenue, thumbing down on the high-rise property developments on the middle of EDSA, improving the poor accessibility of stations, etc.). The project cost ballooned from $160 million to $675.5 million. The last amended contract was dated August 8, 1997, but I think it was not the last.

UNMASKING THE PPP MODALITY
The Build-Lease-Transfer (BLT) contract shielded MRTC from commercial or market risk. It would make money regardless of ridership, a guaranteed 15 percent return after tax, sweetened with the sovereign guarantee of the Philippine republic.

In the current parlance of Public-Private Partnership (PPP) project practitioners, it was structured as a capacity-fee payment, a more appealing name for “take-or-pay” modality. The capacity is a minimum of 22 trains (three-car/train) per hour in exchange for the fixed lease payments.

To deliver on its commitment, MRTC took responsibilities for maintenance and spare parts via its affiliate. It had the features of a ‘wet lease’ arrangement, except that operations personnel would be hired by the lessee (which was DoTC). More than 600 employees were hired by DoTC on a contractual or casual basis. It is a wonder that after 10 years of employment, more than two-thirds of these personnel remained as “casuals” — the kind of “Endo” arrangement this current administration wants to abolish.

During construction, MRTC officials went to town — boasting about the “first mass transit project” to be build at no cost to the government. Earnings from the lucrative “development rights” would cover losses on the rail side of the business.

By 2003, this no-subsidy myth crumbled, and government had to scramble for the rental payments that were non-existent in DoTC’s budget. This omission became the seed for the third sin. But that will come later.

The MRT-3 project intrigued me as a development researcher, a perennial student, and a transport professional. I had a ringside view of its putative years. In July 1993, I published a paper entitled “Heresies of the BOT Kind: Lessons from Manila’s LRT”, which was presented at the 1st Annual Conference of the Transport Science Society of the Philippines.

Its takeaway: MRT-3 would be a very big problem. Nobody believed me at that time.

I had another opportunity to revisit the project, when the UP National Center for Transportation Studies conducted a short course for senior transport officials in the ASEAN region in 2000 and 2001.

As the resource person on PPP, I used the MRT-3 as my case study.

At that time, private sector participation was quite novel for many of our neighboring countries. The officials returned to their home countries with invaluable lessons on how not to do a PPP. Or perhaps, a subliminal lesson on how to steal legally.

I still remember one participant’s effusive reaction: “If it happened in my country, the deal-makers would have been shot.” There was no need to riposte, that indeed, the Philippines was (and still is) different.

WHERE HAVE ALL THE MONIES GONE?
Revenues from property developments underpinned the no-subsidy myth. These revenue streams evaporated — quicker than David Copperfield could do it.

By 2017, the government share from “development rights” should have amounted to more than P500 million, based on Annex A-2 of the BLT contract.

But where did the money go? No one could tell me.

In the last decade, I recall occasional outbursts from DoTC officials about the missing billions. It is a mystery wrapped in enigma. How could billions disappear without a quizzical note from COA? One could only deduce that another amendment to the 1997 contract transpired between 2002 and 2010 as to cut off or divert the incomes from Trinoma and other station-related commercial developments. This to me is the second mortal sin committed in the name of MRT-3.

From the get-go, MRT-3 started its transit life on a fragmented set up — a business model that guaranteed future headaches. Rail revenues goes to the national treasury, rather than flowed back to the operating entity. Expenses need an annual allowance from Congress, dominated by persons who cannot dissociate a “coupler” from salacity. Maintenance is outsourced to another entity. Non-rail revenues is nowhere to be found.

After construction, MRTC had no more incentive to take care of the assets, except sit back, collect rental payments, and re-channel them to creditors and equity holders. Nobody was left to look after sustaining the economic life of the system.

MULTI-LAYERED DEBTS
The third sin committed in the name of MRT-3 was the securitization of the future lease payments or the equity rental payments (ERP) — with the tacit consent of DoTC. It involved 77.7% of the ERP.

The complex web of debts becoming another form of debts and/or sliced into several tranches, cannot easily be explained in a few paragraphs even by financial experts.

Cast of characters multiply from MRTC to MRT Holdings (MRTH), MRTH II, MRTC Limited (MRTCL), and so on.

A simple analogy might help.

Instead of waiting for your measly retirement checks from Social Security System, you go to your friendly pawn shop who pays you a lump sum amount, and takes your place on the monthly queue.

On the surface, it is nothing more than a textbook case of receivables financing — except done to the second and third order derivatives. The tricky part of the deal was retention of residual rights; like selling your house but still retaining some rights over who gets to occupy the building.

There were payment hiccups on the ERP, caused in part by a government that initially swallowed the no-subsidy myth. This was a breach of material obligation that gave rise to arbitration proceedings in Singapore, and for the ERP bonds to suffer value downgrades.

The financial crisis of 2008 also forced holders of those bonds to hold a fire sale. A large portion of those bonds were in the hands of the vultures of Wall Street.

For purposes of simplicity, they were in possession of a bond with a face value of $100, but could be sold only at $20.

The vulture funds — who, among others, specialized in making money out of the misfortunes of poor countries — saw an opportunity. Losing the case in Singapore could trigger a cross default in other Philippine loans totally unrelated to MRT-3. The government panicked. And the vultures’ $20-worth of paper rose in value, say $40.

Not to be outdone, our local vultures joined the party. After all, they are disciples of Wall Street, if not trained in the USA to do the same financial wizardry. Their dummy firms in the British Virgin Islands became the buyer for $40, with credit provided by Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) and the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP). The latter two government financial institutions (GFIs) then purchased the same bonds for $80, in the hope of getting $100 at maturity.

By participating in the financial merry-go-round, the GFIs exceeded the limits of their own charters. An Executive Order had to be issued to provide a legal cover for a transaction that has the appearance of propriety.

MRT

With his Wharton credentials, it was no wonder that then DoTC Secretary Mar Roxas found and push aggressively for the Equity Value Buyout (EVBO) of MRTC. But the Senate smelled something fishy, and threw a monkey wrench that stopped the greasy wheels of EVBO — albeit, temporarily.

Everybody made money — from the vultures of Wall Street and their local versions, to the two GFIs, including some powerful individuals who recouped their losses of hidden wealth parked in some esoteric papers in New York City. The government also managed to evade a bad judgment from an arbitration court, or has it?

The paradox, however, is this.

Why allocate $1 billion in the national budget for EVBO that would give windfall to the GFIs, but not a single cent going into badly-needed improvements of the MRT-3 system? At the current exchange rate, that would be more than enough to rebuild the MRT-3 system from scratch — new railcars, new signaling, new tracks, renovated stations, new power systems, etc. And yet, at the end of the financial exercise, control over MRTC remained elusive.

When the dust cleared, who ended up paying for all these? Everybody made money, except poor Juan dela Cruz.

COMMERCIAL INTEREST OVER PUBLIC AND TRANSIT NEEDS
The depot of MRT-3 got built on the property of the National Housing Authority (NHA). NHA management would be at a loss on how several hectares of land on North Triangle ended with the MRT-3 sinners. But that is another story.

A rail system needs a good maintenance facility. That took a back seat to the demands of Mammon.

Occupying a cramped quarter on the basement of Trinoma, the depot can only support 120 railcars, of the double-articulated tram-car type. Not the kind of rail cars you can see on LRT 1 or LRT-2. It is adequate for its current fleet of 72 railcars. But not for system’s ultimate capacity of 145 railcars and passenger volume of 850,000 thousand per day.

To accommodate future expansion and extension, it would need a second depot. That option has been taken away with the construction of the North Loop and the ‘uncommon’ common station.

To begin with, the 1938-model tramcar of MRT-3 were designed for the cities of the former Soviet republics, where passenger demand is light. They got deployed in a high-demand corridor — like tricycles forced to carry daily loads of jeepney passengers.

To deliver the same volume of passengers, MRT would require more railcars than the other two lines.

With the extension to Malabon foreclosed, and the earlier mistake of grade-elevation on EDSA/Tramo, there is very little elbow room left for MRT-3 expansion. Replacing the old cars with more modern light rail vehicles (LRVs) is out of the question.

HOW DID DOTC DOOM THE FUTURE OF MRT-3?
Sometime in 2004, the DoTC proposed to build an entirely new line from North Avenue to Malabon, at twice the cost of extending MRT-3. An exasperated President, who was also desperate for some accomplishments in rail — decided to transfer the extension project to LRTA.

Thus, the MRT-3 extension to Monumento became the North Loop of LRT-1. This has the unintended effect of truncating the future expansion of MRT-3 depriving it of possible a satellite depot.

Before the construction of the North Loop ended, LRTA issued a variation order — to build a “common” station for MRT-3, LRT-1, and MRT-7 nearer to SM North, rather than at North Avenue closer to Trinoma. SM paid LRTA P200 million for the privilege. Board piles and other civil works got erected on the new station location. But the budget for this enlarged station got caught in the transition from the old to new administration. Thus, begun the protracted “war” between the two malls.

To railway engineers, the common station had technical issues. Inter-station distance should not be less than one kilometer so that trains could gain enough speed before decelerating and could be given enough space for turn backs. Locating it nearer SM would meant a short distance from the Roosevelt Station, a downside for LRT-1 operations. Locating it nearer to Trinoma would constrain operations of MRT-3 (and the forthcoming MRT-7). The battle of the malls stretched for more than seven years.

GAME OF MAINTENANCE CHAIRS
To its credit, MRTC managed to make available 22 trains in service continuously.

By the 10th year of operation, the system needed major rehabilitation and called for a re-pricing of the maintenance contract between MRTC and Sumitomo-TES Philippines. The acolytes of Daang Matuwid saw gold at the darkened shop floors of the depot; so they took out MRTC from the equation and booted out Sumitomo.

When I joined a maintenance review team in 2011, five Japanese engineers of Sumitomo answered all my probing questions — with data. In the case of the other rail lines, I was met by lawyers who blurted out arguments on why they were the chosen people.

What was the DoTC’s excuse for the unilateral abrogation of the maintenance contract?

Since DoTC was paying for the maintenance work as a separate item (rather than bundled into the ERP), it resorted to the golden rule: he who has the gold rules. The overt explanation was that the Sumitomo contract had expired, and something had to be done. Mysteriously, it omitted the fact that the contracts for LRT-1 and LRT-2 were also on extended runs.

With a stroke of the pen, then DOTC Secretary Joseph Emilio A. Abaya launched a game of musical chairs — starting with an interim contractor that had yellow lineage, replaced by another outfit that has the DNA of the first one.

The maintenance responsibilities were sliced into several packages — the better to spread the crumbs on the maintenance table. Then came a third interloper, the progeny of another mysterious negotiation. Busan Universal Railways Inc., emerged with its agricultural credentials hiding behind the facade of a Korean rail operator.

By intervening in the maintenance aspect of MRT-3, DoTC unilaterally changed the Build-Lease-Transfer contract and absolved MRTC of its continuing responsibility to provide 22 trains/hour until termination.

Not only did it upend the capacity-fee modality of the contract, DoTC also handed MRTC a big favor: a valid ground for evading its end-of-contract obligation to turnover full ownership of a rail system in good working conditions. Handing over a carcass in 2025 has become legal.

Given what happened to MRT-3 in the last six years, it is illogical for a new railway maintenance outfit with true credentials to step up on a fixed-price basis. It needs to be omniscient as to discern what had been cannibalized, and make sense of fuzzy maintenance records of the last six years.

In contrast, Sumitomo had a fully functioning computerized system for maintenance management. And since it was the first contractor, its mechanics also got trained on the particulars of the Czech-made railcars and has amassed a detailed history of every item of the system — down to the last screw. Data analytics can then guide the mechanics on the floor on which part to change and when.

Should MRT-3 go back ex-ante, i.e., before the bright boys of Roxas and Abaya ran the system down? Another round of a game of maintenance chairs?

Let’s not forget that maintenance as a business sucks.

To make a profit under a regime of fixed payments, a maintenance contractor can either scrimp on salaries of specialists, or on parts procurement, or both. Both are bad choices. In addition, the client has no full control of his funding — as it is dependent on the caprice of Congress.

Inherently, splitting maintenance from operations is a flawed policy. It precludes the balancing of the conflicting goals of two vital organizational cogs of an efficient urban transit system.

This was the lesson from an operations audit of LRT1 in 1997; it became the basis for my paper “Designing Sustainability into Mass Transit” presented during the 2nd Annual Conference of the Eastern Asia Society for Transportation Studies held in Seoul.

With no rail industry to speak of, the Philippines has a shallow bench to tap. Our railway sector is very small and the technical expertise grew out of the three railway lines — which, unfortunately, had very little parts or system commonalities. Thus, a public tender would be akin to scouring for someone who can repair a Lamborghini in a sea of jeepney mechanics.

MOVING FORWARD
With so many sins committed in the name of MRT-3, the gods must really be very angry. Running after the sinners, however, will be a fool’s errand; the perpetrators are guarded by the best lawyers that money can buy.

Nevertheless, putting one or two of the sinners behind bars will be a better salve than presidential apologies.

It appears that the current administration has not learned from history. It is embarking on the same game of revolving maintenance contractors.

No matter who gets chosen and how transparent the selection process has become, the outcome will be the same. As someone else once said: “Insanity is repeating the same mistakes and expecting different results.”

Privatization of the entire MRT-3 system is the only sensible way forward. This is the path already blazed on LRT-1 and its extension to Bacoor.

However, privatization is not the same as handing over the system back to a collector company. That is akin to rewarding the sinner. It will be the litmus test whether the administration will make good on its hybrid PPP strategy, or make powerpoint presentation as the conclusion.

A new concessionaire can be granted a long-term contract, say 25 years, to rehabilitate the system and double its capacity in two years. It may take around $400 million to do this.

Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) has submitted an unsolicited proposal — in September 2011 and in September 2017. That can be a jump off point — for an eventual Swiss Challenge, or a Solicitation Proposal.

The PPP-track will not be a walk in the park. Expect a turbulent ride, more severe than what MRT-3 riders now experience.

Firstly, the bearded landlord could be pesky, as he is wont to do when the smell of money wakes him from stupor. The President could shame him into exile, or throw him into the hands of the millions of parents who saw their dreams for collegiate education of their children vanished. He can checkmated by expropriation. It will not be as bad as the NAIA-3 expropriation, as long as the ERP schedule is honored to re-assure the remaining 22.3% holders of the ERP Bonds.

Secondly, the new PPP contract should avoid the onerous provisions of the 1997 BLT agreement, shield it from future administrative expropriation that the 2015 concession for LRT-1 is vulnerable to, and cut it some slack in setting fares.

A third wrinkle is the Metro Manila Subway.

If it gets completed in 2025, the concessionaire would face a precipitous market share reduction. There are ways to mitigate this.

A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. Re-brand MRT-3 into LRT-3, if not the “Yellow Line”, to end the deception.

Besides being more technically honest, it avoids confusing the elevated railway from the forthcoming subway — which is the true MRT.

 

Rene S. Santiago is a Transport Engineer, a Fellow of the Foundation for Economic Freedom, past president of the Transportation Science Society of the Philippines, and the President of Bellwether Advisory Inc.

Odyssey turns sporty

Text and photos by Kap Maceda Aguila

HONDA Cars Philippines, Inc. (HCPI) last week debuted the refreshed iteration of its popular minivan, the Odyssey. The revelation coincided with the company’s thanksgiving party held in Taguig City, where HCPI President and general manager Noriyuki Takakura reported a 26% spike in sales for the Japan-headquartered automaker from January to October 2017, compared to the same period last year.

Mr. Takakura then presented the new Odyssey. An immediately conspicuous change is in the front fascia of the EX-V Navi variant, whose grille is now rendered in dark chrome. The bumper also has a sportier appearance, and bears integrated LED fog lights; the door handles are also finished in dark chrome.

Meanwhile, the EX receives a so-called “Aero” exterior styling — new front and rear bumpers, halogen fog lights, and a platinum-finish front grille. Aside from aforementioned changes, the EX-V Navi is bestowed smoked-LED guide type tail lamps.

Honda gives the new Odyssey redesigned 16-inch and 17-inch wheels in both the EX and EX-V Navi variants, respectively.

“(The) refreshed exterior styling and added convenience features… aim to further satisfy customers’ need for luxurious and comfortable mobility,” said the company in a release.

HCPI maintained that the new Odyssey still banners a “flexible and elegant interior.” The customizable seven-seat (2-2-3 layout) EX-V Navi boasts a full-leather interior, and now gets black wood and silver trim panels, plus a large armrest with center console for added first-row storage. In the second row are captain’s seats with ottoman and holders.

In the case of the eight-seat EX (2-3-3 layout), the Odyssey has soft fabric-covered seats, and employs a 60:40 split bench to accommodate three in the second row. The third row for both variants has “magic seats” to take passengers and additional cargo with a three-way-split reclining structure. This allows portions of the seats to be independently folded, reclined, or stowed into the floor.

Smart entry and a push-button start system now come standard for both Odyssey variants; same with a seven-inch touch screen display audio system with Bluetooth to offer hands-free functionality. The EX-Navi is provided navigation and a nine-inch rear entertainment system with DVD and HDMI playback capability.

Both are equipped with six air bags, an anti-lock braking system with electronic brake-force distribution, vehicle stability assist, hill-start assist, speed-sensing auto door locks, and multi-view reverse cameras. The EX-V variant additionally features a multi-view camera system, blind spot information, cross traffic monitor, and an improved smart parking system with sensors.

Still powered by Honda’s fuel-efficient Earth Dreams Technology 2.4-liter DOHC i-VTEC engine mated to a CVT with paddle shifters, the Odyssey has access to 173hp at 6,200 rpm, and to 225Nm of torque at 4,000 rpm.

The Odyssey EX is priced at P2.039 million, while the EX-V Navi variant goes for P2.449 million. Four colors are available: Platinum White Pearl (for an additional P20,000), Premium Twinkle Black Pearl (only for the EX-V Navi, plus P20,000), Super Platinum Metallic, and Crystal Black Pearl (only for the EX-V Navi).

Gas policy sets stage for LNG terminal bids

THE Department of Energy (DoE) on Tuesday outlined its policy for the downstream natural gas industry, a strategy for making the Philippines a regional hub for the fossil fuel, which includes plans for a $2-billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal.

“That would guide everybody including PNOC (Philippine National Oil Co.)… to operate an LNG  terminal,” DoE Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi told reporters at the ceremonial signing of Department Circular 2017-11-0012 or the “Rules and Regulations Governing the Philippine Downstream Natural Gas Industry.”

He said the circular is needed ahead of the construction next year of the integrated LNG facility. Many companies that are keen on participating in the project have been awaiting the issuance of the rules before firming up their plans.

“It takes two and a half years to make it [LNG terminal] operational from the time the project starts,” he said.

He said the project should be completed before the expected depletion of the Malampaya offshore gas find near Palawan island in 2024.

“But we will not wait for that. We need that in place in three years’ time,” he said.

He said local and foreign project proponents have approached PNOC to partner with the DoE’s commercial arm in the project.

Separately, DoE Undersecretary Donato D. Marcos said under the rules, PNOC or its unit PNOC Exploration Corp. (PNOC-EC) may acquire at least a 10% stake in the LNG project, which will house a storage, regasification and a power plant.

He placed the facility’s cost at around $2 billion and its eventual capacity at five million metric ton per annum.

“We’ve finished. We have complied with all the policy regulations, it’s up to them (PNOC) to find a partner,” Mr. Cusi said.

But he said foreign entities that submit proposals directly to the DoE will still be referred to PNOC or PNOC-EC for a possible partnership.

“They are choosing a partner to move their project forward. So that is complying with the policy that we have crafted,” he said, adding that three proposals from foreign groups are being evaluated by PNOC.

Mr. Marcos said the LNG terminal’s power plant component can be 100% owned by foreigners, although the public utility component is subject to the constitutional limitation of 40% foreign ownership.

“That’s why the permit is for the third-party access,” Mr. Marcos said.

Under the rules, excess capacity of the LNG terminal, transmission system, distribution system and other services offered by the operator should be made available on a transparent and non-discriminatory basis to third-party users. — Victor V. Saulon