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Filipinas eye 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup ticket against Uzbekistan

THE Filipinas look to bring the lessons from the losses to mighty Japan in the quarterfinals and powerhouses Australia and South Korea in group play over to their most important game in the AFC Women’s Asian Cup (WAC) — the “Play-in” against Uzbekistan.

Thursday’s KO match against fellow losing quarterfinalist Uzbeks in Gold Coast offers the Pinay booters their last chance to clinch a coveted ticket to 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup (WWC) in the WAC.

“That’s the big focus for us now because that game will allow us to go to the World Cup,” said Philippine coach Mark Torcaso, who’s aiming to bring the side to the global showpiece for a second time after its historic debut in 2023 under his predecessor Alen Stajcic.

“We’re disappointed we lost to Japan in the quarterfinals but we’re also very, very positive and determined to make sure we go to the World Cup,” he added.

If unsuccessful against Uzbekistan, the Philippines will proceed to the “Inter-confederation Play-offs” against aspirants from other continents in a final battle for three tickets to the WWC in Brazil.

Mr. Torcaso lauded the fight and the character his charges showed despite absorbing a 0-7 blanking from Japan in Sunday’s Last 8 and previously in the gigs in Group A that saw them lose to the host Matildas (0-1) and South Korea (0-3) before beating Iran (2-0) to advance to the quarters.

Australia, South Korea and Japan all made it to the semifinals, ensuring their World Cup qualifications.

“The team did well to hold Japan off for most of the first half (0-0 after the first 44 minutes) but with teams like these, it only takes one moment’s lapse and they take advantage, which was a learning for us,” said Mr. Torcaso.

“I can’t fault the players for their discipline and commitment. They fought hard and we want to keep closing the gap between us and the best teams in the world.” — Olmin Leyba

Venezuela stuns Japan to reach World Baseball Classic semifinals; Italy eliminates Puerto Rico

VENEZUELA stunned Japan, 8-5, to eliminate the defending champions from the World Baseball Classic quarterfinals on Saturday, while Italy also advanced to the last four by beating Puerto Rico, 8-6.

Venezuela’s Ronald Acuna, Jr. hit a solo home run off Yoshinobu Yamamoto in the first inning in Miami but Shohei Ohtani answered immediately with a solo shot off Ranger Suarez.

Shota Morishita hit a three-run homer in the third to give Japan a 5-2 lead but Venezuela refused to fold, Maikel Garcia hitting a two-run homer in the fifth to pull within one.

With Ezequiel Tovar and Gleyber Torres on base in the sixth, Wilyer Abreu launched a 409-foot, three-run home run to give Venezuela a 7-5 lead as the stadium erupted.

Torres added another run at the top of the eighth to give Venezuela some more breathing room and their bullpen shut Japan down, retiring 13 straight batters at one point before Angel Zerpa struck out Ohtani to seal it.

“Its very hard to describe what went through my mind when I hit that home run,” Abreu told a press conference. “It was definitely one of the best moments in my career.”

Venezuela clinched a place in the semis for the first time since 2009, while the win also secured a spot at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

Three-time winners Japan were left to lick their wounds after failing to reach the final four for the first time.

At Daikin Park in Houston, surprise package Italy, who had already beaten the US and Mexico in pool play to go 4-0, did not need the long ball to get past Puerto Rico.

They chased ace Seth Lugo in the first inning and never looked back, turning a 1-0 deficit into a 4-1 lead.

JJ D’Orazio drove in three runs and Andrew Fischer knocked in two. A four-run fourth inning pushed the margin to 8-2 and effectively ended the contest, with all nine players in Italy’s starting lineup reaching base.

Puerto Rico mounted a late charge, capped by Christian Vazquez’ two-run single in the eighth that trimmed the deficit to 8-6, but reliever Greg Weissert retired five of six batters for his third save of the tournament.

“This team has been building character in the last couple of days,” Italy manager Francisco Cervelli, a Venezuelan-born former MLB catcher, said at a press conference.

“We have the same mission, which is to continue until the last day of the tournament.”

Venezuela meets Italy in the semifinals on Monday in Miami.

The United States faces Dominican Republic in the other semis on Sunday. — Reuters

Cameron Young wins The Players Championship by one shot in wild finish at TPC Sawgrass

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Florida — Cameron Young clinched his second PGA Tour title and the biggest win of his career with a sensational one-shot victory at The Players Championship on Sunday after a drama-laden afternoon at TPC Sawgrass.

One stroke behind England’s Matt Fitzpatrick with two holes to play, Young drew level with a birdie at the par-3 17th after hitting a brilliant tee shot to 9 1/2 feet and then coolly parred the last to card a 4-under-par 68.

That left the New York native at 13-under 275 in the PGA Tour’s flagship event and one ahead of Fitzpatrick, who also closed with a 68 after his tee shot at the 18th wound up on pine straw in the tree line to the right of the fairway and led to a bogey 5.

Former US Open champion Fitzpatrick had a chance to force a three-hole playoff after lining up a par putt from 8 1/2 feet on the 18th green, but his attempt slid past the right edge of the cup and he had to settle for second place.

Two-time major champion Xander Schauffele closed with a 69 to claim third place at 11 under, a stroke in front of World No. 8 Robert MacIntyre of Scotland, who also signed off with a 69.

Young, whose first PGA Tour victory came at the 2025 Wyndham Championship, was delighted to emerge triumphant in a tournament that attracts one of the deepest fields in golf and is unofficially called the fifth major.

Fitzpatrick, in pursuit of a third PGA Tour win, made a fast start to the final round with three birdies in the first four holes and he led Young by a shot after sinking a 13-foot birdie putt at the par-4 15th.

The 31-year-old Englishman felt that he had hit a good tee shot on 18, given that the wind was coming in off the right.

Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg, who had led the tournament by three shots overnight, was two ahead with eight holes to play on Sunday before his title bid dramatically unraveled with a bogey at the par-5 11th and a double bogey at the par-4 12th. He had to settle for a share of fifth place at 9 under after returning a 76.

Aberg, the tournament leader after the second and third rounds, offset a birdie at the par-5 second with a bogey at the par-4 fourth to reach the turn two shots ahead of Fitzpatrick and MacIntyre.

However, his title bid was severely shaken when he bogeyed the 11th after his second shot sailed right into a water hazard. Fitzpatrick, in the group ahead, made a birdie at the par-4 12th after hitting his approach to 3 feet and that moved him into a two-way tie at the top with the Swede at 12 under.

Fitzpatrick then seized the outright lead at 13 under with another birdie at the par-3 13th, striking a superb tee shot there to 4 feet and coolly sinking the putt.

Even worse was to follow for Aberg at the 12th, where he ran up a double-bogey 6 after hooking his tee shot way left into water, and that dropped him to 10 under — three strokes off the pace.

From there, the tournament effectively came down to a battle between Young and Fitzpatrick.

“It got away from me quick there,” Aberg said of Nos. 11 and 12. “Yeah, it was just poor swings… Obviously really disappointed. I would have loved to be standing where Cameron is standing right now. But overall I still felt like I saw some nice things in my game this week.”

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, the Players champion in 2023 and 2024, ended his week at TPC Sawgrass with a 1-under 71 to finish in a tie for 22nd at 5 under.

Defending champion Rory McIlroy, the World No. 2, was left to reflect on “not the week that I wanted” after he signed off with a 71 and an even-par total, tied for 46th.

The Northern Irishman withdrew from last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational after two rounds due to a back injury and he did not play a single practice round at TPC Sawgrass after only arriving at the venue on the eve of the tournament.

“Happy I got through four days and my body feels good,” McIlroy said after mixing five birdies with two double bogeys in the final round. “I feel like my game sort of progressively got a little bit better as the week went on, even though the scores probably didn’t reflect it over the weekend. I hit the ball well. I just didn’t make anything on the greens.”

Chad Ramey had a final round to remember, closing with a 71 that included an ace at the par-3 13th where he holed out with a 7-iron from 169 yards. It was the first ace of his PGA Tour career. — Reuters

New York Knicks survive 21-point deficit, hold off Golden State Warriors

JALEN BRUNSON scored 30 points and added nine assists for the host New York Knicks, who mounted their biggest comeback of the season and edged the undermanned Golden State Warriors, 110-107, on Sunday night.

The Knicks went 22 of 23 from the line — the third time this season they’ve had one miss or fewer from the line while hoisting at least 20 attempts — as they overcame a 21-point second-quarter deficit.

Karl-Anthony Towns posted a double-double with 17 points and 12 rebounds, while OG Anunoby had 14 points, including a pair of free throws for the game’s final points with 6.2 seconds left.

Jordan Clarkson (14 points) and Landry Shamet (10) each got into double figures off the bench. Josh Hart pulled down 12 boards, and Mitchell Robinson had 10.

Brandin Podziemski scored 25 points for the skidding Warriors, who played without injured leading scorers Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler III and De’Anthony Melton as well as hobbled veterans Draymond Green, Seth Curry and Al Horford.

Quinten Post had 22 points while Gui Santos scored 20 and Gary Payton II added 19 as the Warriors suffered their fifth straight loss.

Podziemski hit a pair of free throws with 8:43 left in the first quarter to give the Warriors a 13-11 lead and start a stretch of 28-plus minutes in which the visitors never relinquished the lead.

Golden State scored the final 11 points of the first quarter to take a 35-21 lead and opened the second on an 11-4 run to take its biggest lead at 46-25 on Post’s putback with 9:30 left.

But the Knicks began cooling off the Warriors, who shot four of 13 the rest of the quarter as New York went into halftime with a 20-8 surge to pull within 54-45.

The Knicks got within two points five times before Mikal Bridges’ runner tied the score at 73-73 with 3:58 left in the third. The teams later traded the lead on four consecutive possessions, after which Robinson’s putback gave New York the lead for good at 81-80 with 1:07 remaining. Shamet ended the quarter with a layup.

The Knicks never trailed in the fourth, when the Warriors pulled within one point three times in the final 2:04. Golden State had a chance to tie it in the waning seconds, but Santos’ pass intended for Post glanced off his hands and Shamet collected the ball before running out the clock. — Reuters

The water stewardship journey continues for SM Supermalls

For three decades, SM Prime Holdings Inc. (SM Prime) has steadfastly advanced responsible water stewardship for a more resilient water future through SM Supermalls, its operating arm.

SM Prime invested in its first Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) in the late 90’s with SM Southmall. STPs are essential for protecting public health and the environment, along with supporting community development. Since then, STPs have become a standard fixture in all 89 malls, reducing water waste and pollution, and safeguarding water resources.

SM Supermalls embeds water conservation practices across its operations. Recycled water is used in water closets for flushing, cleaning, and watering greens. Additionally, efficient low-flow fixtures and water-saving technologies prevent unnecessary consumption at scale.

“SM had always been conscious of its environmental impact on shared social good. Our water journey is rooted in our commitment to maximize what we borrow from the environment, creating resiliency for future generations,” said Liza B. Silerio, SM Supermalls Vice President and Head of Sustainability and Resilience.

Today, SM is evaluating centralized STPs that can serve multiple developments and allow for inter-building treatment systems, lowering operational costs, and enhancing process efficiency. “Part of our water resilience framework is building long-term capacity for water disruptions. Since the standardization of STPs across our malls, SM took it a step further and scaled its water sustainability efforts,” said Silerio.

A first in the industry, SM City Baguio’s Rainwater Treatment Facility has already processed almost 20,000 cubic meters of rainwater into potable water since it was launched, providing 30% of the mall’s total monthly clean water requirement since 2023. This translates to saving the equivalent of 12.7 million, 1.5-liter mineral water bottles or almost eight Olympic-sized swimming pools of freshwater from the grid.

Leveraging the mall’s nationwide reach, SM further campaigns sustainable water use through consistent awareness and engagement, SM creates public awareness and education campaigns through its Corporate Social Responsibility arm, SM Cares to activate future water stewards in the community.

This proactive and efficient approach resulted in SM malls receiving multiple industry distinctions such as the Bantayog ng Lawa Award from the Laguna Lake Development Authority (LLDA) and the first ever Gawad Taga-Ilog Award bestowed upon a private entity by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).

“We’ve come a long way since the 90’s. It’s heartwarming to be recognized by our community and peers, but we continue to work harder for future generations because water is a universal human right. By implementing these sustainability measures, SM aims to move forward with greater purpose and greater possibilities,” said Silerio.

 


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Trump demands others help secure Strait of Hormuz; Japan and Australia say no plans to send ships

ACTIVISTS PLACE “No” stickers on a sign held by a person wearing a cutout mask depicting US President Donald J. Trump during a rally against the US demand for South Korea to deploy troops to the Strait of Hormuz, outside the US embassy in Seoul, South Korea, March 16, 2026. — REUTERS/KIM SOO-HYEON

TOKYO/PALM BEACH, Florida — US President Donald J. Trump’s demands for a coalition to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz appeared to fall on deaf ears on Monday as allies Japan and Australia said they were not planning to send navy vessels to the Middle East to escort ships through the vital waterway.

With the US-Israeli war on Iran creating turmoil across the Middle East and shaking up global energy markets in its third week, Mr. Trump on Sunday insisted that nations relying heavily on oil from the Gulf have a responsibility to protect the strait through which 20% of the world’s energy transits.

Markets in Asia reacted cautiously, with Brent crude LCOc1 rising more than 1% above $104.50 and regional share markets mostly weaker amid concerns about the risk to Middle East oil facilities and after Mr. Trump’s request for allies to get more involved.

“I’m demanding that these countries come in and protect their own territory because it is their territory,” Mr. Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on the way from Florida to Washington. “It’s the place from which they get their energy.”

Mr. Trump said his administration has already contacted seven countries but did not identify the countries. In a weekend social media post, he hoped China, France, Japan, South Korea, Britain and others would participate.

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, a staunch Mr. Trump supporter, said on Monday her country, constrained by its war-renouncing constitution, has no plan to dispatch naval vessels to escort ships in the Middle East from where it gets 95% of its oil.

“We have not made any decisions whatsoever about dispatching escort ships. We are continuing to examine what Japan can do independently and what can be done within the legal framework,” Ms. Takaichi told parliament.

Australia, another key Indo-Pacific security ally to the US that also relies heavily on fuels made with Middle Eastern crude, said it will not send naval ships to assist in reopening the strait either.

“We know how incredibly important that is, but that’s not something that we’ve been asked or that we’re contributing to,” Catherine King, a member of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s cabinet, said in an interview with state broadcaster ABC.

TRUMP MAY DELAY BEIJING VISIT WITHOUT CHINA SUPPORT
Mr. Trump told the Financial Times on Sunday he was expecting China to help unblock the Strait before his scheduled meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing at the end of this month and might postpone his trip if it did not provide assistance.

“I think China should help too because China gets 90% of its oil from the Straits,” Mr. Trump said. “We may delay,” he said in reference to his visit if China did not offer support in the Gulf.

The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Mr. Trump also ratcheted up pressure on European allies to help protect the Strait, warning that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization faces a “very bad” future if its members fail to come to Washington’s aid.

European Union (EU) foreign ministers will discuss on Monday bolstering a small naval mission in the Middle East but are not expected to decide on extending its role to the choked-off Strait of Hormuz, diplomats and officials say.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer discussed the need to reopen the Strait with Mr. Trump, and with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a Downing Street spokeswoman said on Sunday, while South Korea has said it would carefully review Mr. Trump’s request.

Global air travel remains severely disrupted due to the Iran war which has closed or restricted key Middle Eastern hubs including Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi, forcing airlines to cancel thousands of flights and stranding tens of thousands of passengers.

Supplies of jet fuel are also becoming a concern, with authorities in Vietnam warning the country’s aviation industry to prepare for potential flight reductions from April after China and Thailand halted exports of jet fuel due to the Iran war.

DRONES CAUSE FIRE, DISRUPT TRAFFIC AT DUBAI AIRPORT
The disruption to energy markets caused by the Iran war is an “abject lesson” in the risks of relying on fossil fuels, according to the United Nations (UN) climate secretary.

“Fossil fuel dependency is ripping away national security and sovereignty, and replacing it with subservience and rising costs,” Simon Stiell, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, will tell EU officials and government ministers at an event in Brussels on Monday.

Although some Iranian vessels have continued to pass and a few ships from other countries have successfully made the crossing, the passage has been effectively closed for most of the world’s tanker traffic since the United States and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28.

Israel continued to launch strikes on Iran as well as Lebanon and Gaza, targeting militants from the Iran-backed Hezbollah and Hamas. The Israeli military said on Monday its troops had begun limited ground operations against positions in southern Lebanon held by Hezbollah.

Despite repeated claims from US authorities to have destroyed Iran’s military capabilities, drone attacks continued to threaten Gulf states on Monday.

Dubai authorities said they had contained a fire but temporarily suspended flights at the airport after a drone attack hit a fuel tank. Saudi Arabia intercepted 34 drones in its eastern region in one hour, state media said. No injuries were reported in either incident.

US officials responding to economic uncertainty over high oil prices predicted on Sunday that the war on Iran would end within weeks and that a drop in energy costs would follow, despite Iran’s assertion that it remains “stable and strong” and ready to defend itself.

Mr. Trump, who threatened more strikes on Iran’s main oil export hub Kharg Island over the weekend, has said previously that Iran wants to negotiate and that the US was talking to Iran, but Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi earlier on Sunday disputed that claim.

“We have never asked for a ceasefire, and we have never asked even for negotiations,” Mr. Araghchi told CBS’ Face the Nation program. “We are ready to defend ourselves for as long as it takes.” — Reuters

South Korea to lift coal cap, boost nuclear output amid Iran crisis, ruling party says

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Vitamin from Pixabay

SEOUL — South Korea’s ruling Democratic Party said on Monday that the government will lift limits on coal-fired power generation capacity and raise nuclear power plant utilization to as high as 80% as part of an energy response to the Middle East crisis.

Lawmakers in the party’s Middle East crisis economic response task force said in a briefing the measures are aimed at stabilizing energy supply and prices as oil and gas shipments to South Korea have been blocked by tensions in the Strait of Hormuz.

South Korea relies almost totally on imports for its energy, buying about 70% of its oil and 20% of its liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Middle East, according to Korea International Trade Association data.

The government would prioritize managing LNG supplies by increasing coal and nuclear output while reducing reliance on LNG-fired power generation, Democratic Party lawmaker Ahn Do-geol said.

Limits capping coal power output at 80% of installed capacity would be lifted from Monday, Mr. Ahn said, while maintenance work at six nuclear reactors would be completed early to boost nuclear utilization from the high-60% range to 80%.

South Korea on Friday introduced a gasoline price cap at 1,724 won ($1.15) per liter. It will adjust these prices every two weeks to reflect changes in global oil prices.

Mr. Ahn said gasoline and diesel prices on Sunday had fallen by 58 won and 77 won per liter, respectively, since the price cap was implemented.

SUPPLEMENTARY BUDGET
A supplementary budget would be drawn up by the end of this month and submitted to parliament, Mr. Ahn said. The extra budget is expected to include compensation for refiners linked to the fuel price cap, energy voucher payments, logistics cost support for exporters, and expanded investment in renewable energy.

Democratic Party leader Jung Chung-rae said in a separate party meeting on Monday that it would fast-track passage of the extra budget proposal within 10 days after it is submitted.

The budget ministry said there had been no decision yet on a specific date for a supplementary budget but would prepare one as soon as possible.

The ruling party and government were also considering designating the Yeosu petrochemical complex as a special industrial crisis response zone, said Mr. Ahn.

Shortages of raw materials such as aluminum, sulfur and naphtha were severe, and that supply disruptions and price spikes for naphtha — 25% of which is imported from the Middle East — could force petrochemical companies to cut production, he said.

To address this, the government would freeze exports of domestically produced naphtha at last year’s levels and seek alternative import sources, Mr. Ahn said.

The task force also agreed to double the ceiling on export vouchers usable for international transport costs to 60 million won and to introduce emergency logistics support vouchers for exporters to the Middle East, providing 10 million won each to 1,000 companies, Mr. Ahn said. Reuters

China’s economy builds early momentum in 2026 as risks mount

REUTERS

BEIJING — China’s factory output growth quickened in January-February while retail sales rebounded, in a steady start to the year for an economy confronting multiple challenges including the fallout from the US-Israeli war against Iran.

Industrial output rose 6.3% from the same period in the previous year, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data showed on Monday, up from the 5.2% growth clocked in December. It beat a 5% expansion forecast in a Reuters poll and marked the quickest growth since September last year.

The figures follow data showing China’s exports blew past forecasts in the first two months, powered by surging artificial intelligence‑related technology demand that also lifted upstream manufacturing.

“While risks to the outlook have increased amid geopolitical tensions and disruptions to global trade and energy markets, the latest figures indicate that China entered the year with a firmer growth footing than previously thought,” said Hao Zhou, chief economist at Guotai Junan International.

Retail sales, a gauge of consumption, jumped 2.8%, quickening from the 0.9% pace in December for their biggest gain since October last year. Analysts had expected a 2.5% growth.

The strong impetus was driven in part by the country’s longest Lunar New Year holiday in February. The festivities helped boost total tourism spending by almost 19% from the same holiday period last year, which was one day shorter.

But domestic tourism spending per trip dipped 0.2%, suggesting consumers remain cautious.

Data from earlier last week, for instance, showed passenger vehicle sales at home tumbled 26% year on year in January-February, hurt by the end of a tax break and scaled-back government subsidies for electric vehicles.

China combines January and February data releases to smooth out distortions from the festival holidays, which can fall in either month.

Monday’s data provided another encouraging sign for policymakers as an unexpected upturn in investment took some of the sting off the challenge of a protracted downturn in the critical property sector.

Fixed asset investment, which includes property and infrastructure investment, expanded 1.8% in the first two months, versus expectations for a 2.1% drop. It fell 3.8% in 2025, the first annual drop in about three decades.

Infrastructure investment, in particular, grew 11.4%, as policy support including a new financing tool from banks to fund key investment projects started to take effect.

The overall data, while showing some positive momentum, still suggest a wide gap between robust external demand and sluggish household consumption that analysts warn could hamper China’s long-term growth prospects. Last week’s lending data pointed to a continued slump in household borrowing.

Also, worryingly for income generation, the survey-based nationwide jobless rate rose to 5.3% in the first two months from December’s 5.1%, the NBS data showed.

“It cannot be ruled out that domestic demand data in March will still face downward pressure,” said Zhaopeng Xing, senior China strategist at ANZ, though he added that the overall data do not support an interest rate cut in the near term.

WAR IMPACT TO START FEEDING THROUGH IN COMING MONTHS
At the annual parliament meeting that closed last week, policymakers set this year’s economic growth target at 4.5%-5%, down from last year’s “around 5%.” The target was met in 2025 largely on the back of a record trade surplus of just over $1 trillion, deepening unease among China’s trading partners.

Analysts say China faces significant challenges as it tries to foster sustainable longer-term growth.

While the government pledged a “notable” lift in household consumption, it spelled out a few measures to suggest a turn toward aggressive demand‑side reforms.

The Middle East conflict adds fresh uncertainty as it drives up energy prices and rattles global trade, raising the stakes for US President Donald J. Trump’s late-March trip to Beijing to meet President Xi Jinping.

“The turmoil in the Middle East is set to show its impact on the global economy in coming months… I expect policymakers to respond through fiscal policy, if necessary,” said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

“The market will focus on the upcoming meeting between the Chinese and American leaders. While China will likely purchase more goods from the US to mitigate the trade imbalance, the war in the Middle East has made the meeting complicated.” Reuters

British teens resist Australian-style social media ban

ARPAD CZAPP-UNSPLASH

LONDON — British teenagers, like their peers abroad, have a conflicted relationship with social media.

They know it can feed them a diet of “brain rot” content that keeps them glued to their phones while making money for big tech. Yet it is central to their lives, and many do not think it is the government’s job to ban it. Britain, like other countries in Europe and beyond, is considering ways to restrict social media after becoming increasingly aware of the risks to children. It could follow Australia in imposing a ban for under-16s.

The government has asked “everyone with a view” to contribute to a public consultation, which closes in May.

Young people aged 16 to 18 at one south London school said Snapchat, Instagram and TikTok helped them socialize, make new connections and learn about the world.

But there were downsides: the platforms sometimes left them unhappy or exhausted, vulnerable to bullying and harmful content, and they knew the apps were designed to keep them scrolling.

GLUED TO PHONES FOR HOURS A DAY
“During the summer, I’d spend around eight hours a day on just TikTok,” said Awand Khdir, 17, who added there was little else to do on that platform besides scrolling. “But now it’s more like three or four hours. It’s still not good.”

“Doom scrolling is an issue on its own, but… the content that you see sometimes, especially on TikTok, there’s a lot of dodgy stuff.”

TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat pointed to the safety, privacy and security features they have for teenage users.

Snapchat has age-specific protections for 13 to 17-year-olds, including making the account private by default and no access to public profiles for younger teens.

Instagram Teen Accounts offers a sensitive content control setting and the platform offers supervision tools for parents and guardians.

TikTok’s teen accounts set an automatic screen time limit of 60 minutes and users are prompted to switch off after 10 p.m., according to a spokesperson. TikTok also age-restricts content that may not be suitable for teens.

But the young people Reuters interviewed said they were able to get round controls.

While many parents and politicians back a ban, some psychologists and researchers say there is no proof that it would work.

Research Professor Amy Orben from the University of Cambridge said the impact of social media was far from uniform, stressing that while some teens face significant risks, for many others, the platforms serve as a valuable means of connection.

“The online world, like the offline world, is very complex and its impacts will be very dynamic,” she said.

Sumiksha Senthuran, 16, said “mindlessly scrolling” was a good contrast to the stress of revision for exams.

Elizabeth Alayande, 17, said social media could help build confidence and identity. “You can express yourself by posting videos or just relating with other people… and I don’t think it’s the biggest waste of time if you spread it out evenly with other priorities,” she said. But the teenagers had been exposed to distressing content and online abuse.”Sometimes it’s quite negative because all you see is bad stuff… it’s quite tiring,” said Teyanna Charley, 17. Vish Ragutharan, 16, who has created his own blog about film, agreed. He said his posts could attract negative as well as positive responses, which was a “real disadvantage.”

Some of the students were fed content about body image.”When you see other girls on TikTok, you kind of want to look like them. And that’s really crushing people’s self-esteem,” said Joelle Azebaze Ayangma, 18.

DIFFICULTY OF ENFORCING A BAN
Despite knowing of the risks of social media, the pupils were mostly opposed to a ban.

Ali Raza, 16, uses apps to communicate with family abroad. Dua Arshia, 16, said restrictions could push young people towards platforms “where there’s more dangerous things,” and Leah Osando, 17, said enforcement would be difficult.

“Even if children get banned… they’ll go onto the dark web or use a VPN (virtual private network),” said Ms. Osando. Some teenagers also described the risk of not recognizing ever more sophisticated artificial intelligence-generated content. Three experts, all of whom have advised lawmakers on children’s internet safety, said there was no clear evidence that bans work.

One-fifth of Australian teenagers under 16 were still using social media two months after the ban, industry data showed, raising questions about the effectiveness of platforms’ age-gating methods.

The experts said pressure should be placed on social media companies to build safer platforms, as algorithm-driven feeds become increasingly addictive and, in some cases, direct children towards pro-anorexia or self-harm videos.

“These are commercial platforms,” Ms. Orben said. “They are designed to harness attention, and… young people are increasingly saying that they struggle to get off.”

Professor Julia Davidson, an expert in child online safety from the University of East London, said for children over 13, it may already be too late. British regulator Ofcom in 2022 said six in 10 children aged eight to 12 had social media profiles, despite many platforms requiring users to be at least 13.

“How are we going to enforce a ban with 14 and 15-year-olds who have grown up with it and built extensive networks?” she said.

Professor Sonia Livingstone, leader of the Digital Futures for Children center at the London School of Economics, said policymakers risked reaching for the wrong solution, with a ban seen as “a very blunt hammer to crack a nut.”

She said politicians should demand “safety by design… without eliminating children’s access to the digital world, which is what they want and have a right to.”

She said the government’s focus should be on how it tackles big tech, suggesting they take a “divide and conquer” approach. “Why don’t we say: Snapchat is the one where the randomers can get in touch with you. Instagram is the one where you can see the self-harm content. And TikTok is the one that wants you on so long that you can never get to sleep or do your homework,” she said. — Reuters

AI deployment for organizations still shallow – Philippine AI Report

STOCK PHOTO | Image by DC Studio from Freepik

Nearly all organizations in the Philippines, about 92%, used artificial intelligence (AI) in some form in 2025, but deployment remains shallow, with the majority still at the pilot stage due to talent scarcity and concerns over security and privacy, according to the Philippine AI Report 2025.

The report was produced by Swarm, a global AI consultancy firm, which surveyed 175 organizations across the technology, financial services, healthcare, and retail sectors. It also covered manufacturing, government, education, and nonprofit organizations, making it the largest published survey of enterprise AI adoption in the country to date, the report said.

Among its key findings is that AI has moved from theory to practice for most organizations in the country. Over 92% of Philippine organizations have used AI in some form over the past year, while 8% said they did not use AI at all.

“The prevailing mindset is now one of active experimentation, with AI increasingly viewed as necessary to remain competitive,” the report said.

Despite organizations experimenting with AI, adoption in the country remains shallow, with a striking 65% of organizations still at the pilot phase, or proof-of-concept stage, testing solutions in controlled environments or small-scale trials.

Only a smaller share have moved to full production deployment, the report said.

“The concentration at proof-of-concept reveals the central tension in Philippine AI adoption: enthusiasm has outpaced execution. Organizations have demonstrated they can launch pilots. The question is whether they can operationalize them,” the report said.

Other AI initiatives by organizations include AI application development for products at 47%, end-user AI enablement through training and onboarding at 41%, internal tooling development at 36%, applied AI development at 30%, fundamental AI research at 28%, vendor evaluation at 27%, and large-scale integration of third-party AI services at 25%.

AI strategy among organizations also showed strong backing from executives, with 61% of respondents saying C-suite executives directly lead AI initiatives.

Despite organizations’ high interest and executives’ strong support for AI, structural challenges hamper the country from scaling beyond pilots.

Talent scarcity tops the list, with 57% of organizations reporting a shortage of AI-skilled personnel, such as data scientists, AI engineers, and technically trained staff.

This skills gap stalls projects and limits the full use of AI tools, as teams struggle with technical roadblocks and business managers sometimes lack understanding of AI capabilities.

Security and privacy concerns follow closely at 40%, as companies remain cautious about feeding sensitive data into AI systems, particularly through third-party cloud services, due to fears of breaches or compliance violations.

Other barriers mentioned were unrealistic expectations (36%), internal development hurdles (34%), concerns about tool quality (28%), IT-business misalignment (26%), employee resistance (24%), and additional challenges such as regulatory hurdles, data gaps, or insufficient executive buy-in (13%).

To address the talent shortage, the study recommended upskilling existing employees.

Organizations are advised to dedicate the majority of AI resources to people and processes, following a 10-20-70 model: 10% for algorithms, 20% for technology, and 70% for workforce development, to accelerate adoption.

Immediate talent gaps can also be addressed through targeted hiring or partnerships with universities, AI consultancies, or technology providers. The study noted that only 12% of Philippine organizations currently have an AI compliance or governance officer.

It also suggested organizations align with national frameworks such as the Philippine Skills Framework for Artificial Intelligence (PSF-AAI), which defines AI-related job roles, required skills and competencies, and career pathways while helping companies access government-supported training and upskilling programs.

Lastly, the report said addressing the AI talent gap requires collective action across industries.

It encouraged organizations to participate in industry working groups developing AI skills standards and to support scholarships, bootcamps, and training programs to expand the talent pool.

Companies that invest in developing the broader AI ecosystem can also build early relationships with emerging talent before competitors.

The Philippine AI Report 2025 aims to understand the current level of AI adoption among local enterprises and what organizations need to do to scale its use.

“We started this research because we wanted to understand what AI adoption actually looks like in the Philippines and have data to back it,” said Tim Santos, project lead of the report.

He added that while global studies track adoption curves and investment trends, they do not capture the country’s nuances, such as how companies make decisions, the availability of talent, and the return-on-investment requirements that shape implementation timelines.

The report seeks to give business leaders the evidence they need to plan the next steps for AI adoption. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

Vietnam braces for flight cuts from April after China, Thailand ban jet fuel exports

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Toomas Tartes from Unsplash

HANOI — Vietnamese authorities have warned the country’s aviation industry to prepare for potential flight reductions from April after China and Thailand halted exports of jet fuel due to the Iran war, increasing the likelihood of shortages.

Vietnam imports more than two-thirds of its jet fuel needs, with 60% coming from China and Thailand, according to documents from the aviation regulator and importers seen by Reuters.

“There are risks of jet fuel shortages for Vietnamese airlines from the beginning of April and the following months,” the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam said in a March 9 document sent to the ministry in charge of transport.

It said airlines should review their plans, especially for domestic routes, and instructed airport operators to prepare additional parking space for Vietnamese carriers.

Vietnam has also seen reduced supplies from Singapore, the document showed.

In separate documents viewed by Reuters, major importers Petrolimex and Skypec said they could only guarantee jet fuel supplies for March. Skypec urged the regulator to restrict air transport to essential domestic routes if the conflict drags on.

All documents were issued after China urged its refiners not to agree to new exports early this month but preceded a hard ban on refined fuel exports from March 11. Thailand banned exports of refined oil products, including jet fuel on March 6 to all countries except Myanmar and Laos.

The regulator, the ministry and the two importers did not respond to Reuters requests for comment. Vietnam’s top airlines Vietnam Airlines  and VietJet declined to comment.

DIPLOMATIC EFFORTS MADE
Vietnam was the third-largest buyer of aviation kerosene from China last year after Australia and Japan, according to Chinese customs data.

The Southeast Asian country has taken up the issue with both China, its main supplier, and Thailand.

On Sunday, Foreign Minister Le Hoai Trung asked his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi for close coordination “to ensure energy security,” in a meeting in Hanoi that had been long planned, according to the Vietnamese government’s news portal.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson told reporters on Monday that Beijing stood ready to boost cooperation with Vietnam and other countries to jointly tackle energy security issues.

On Friday, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh asked Thailand to help address the shortage during a meeting with the Thai ambassador in Vietnam, state media reported.

The foreign ministries for Vietnam and Thailand did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Vietnam’s aviation authority recommended that Hanoi should seek to import from other places, citing South Korea, Japan, Brunei and India as potential sources, but it also said that “in the current context it is difficult to find new suppliers.”

It added that Vietnam’s two refineries are under pressure to expand production of other oil products, making it hard for them to increase jet fuel output.

Even if supply stabilizes, soaring fuel prices are disrupting the industry, it also warned, noting many routes would become unprofitable.

Petrolimex and Skypec also flagged that the spike in jet fuel prices has meant they are quickly reaching limits on credit lines and urged banks to offer more flexible financing until market conditions normalise, the documents showed.

Front-month jet fuel paper swaps in Singapore on a cost and freight basis are trading at around $157 a barrel, more than one-and-a-half times higher than pre-conflict levels, LSEG pricing data shows. — Reuters

DepEd to construct over 1000 climate-resilient facilities

A sample unit of a Learning Continuity Spaces (LCS) facility. — DEPED

The Department of Education (DepEd) said on Monday that it aims to construct 1,380 Learning Continuity Spaces (LCS) facilities units nationwide to help address damaged classrooms and learning disruptions caused by natural disasters.

“This project reflects the marching orders of President Marcos to ensure that no Filipino learner is left behind, even in the face of the most challenging calamities,” Education Secretary Juan Edgardo “Sonny” M. Angara said in a statement.

Data from DepEd showed that over 10,700 schools nationwide were damaged from June to October 2025, with a total estimated loss of P29.5 billion in school properties due to earthquakes, typhoons, and other calamities.

The damage has disrupted classes for more than 1.1 million learners across the country, which pushed schools to adopt various class modalities.

About 10,448 damaged schools implemented modular distance learning, 4,319 applied blended learning, 522 utilized flexible learning options, and 414 adopted online distance learning.

DepEd noted that the initiative to establish climate-resilient facilities came after the 6.9 magnitude earthquake in Bogo City in September last year, which affected classes for 90 students. In the same month, Typhoon Opong disrupted classes of 270 students in Masbate.

To promote continuous learning, the newly turned-over LCS facilities in Bogo City and Masbate are equipped with solar-powered setups and internet connectivity, ensuring schools can resume after the event of natural calamities.

“By integrating solar power and digital tools into these temporary spaces, we are not just rebuilding classrooms, but building a more resilient future for our children,” Mr. Angara said.

Each LCS facility takes two weeks to install, allowing schools to recover swiftly.

“The initiative also serves as a direct response to the President’s directive to slash the national classroom shortage through the use of fast-tracked, disaster-resilient infrastructure,” the DepEd said.

The country’s current classroom backlog stands at 165,443, and could further worsen by 2028 due to aging facilities.

Citing data from DepEd, the Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM 2) said that about 122,518 classrooms have already exceeded the standard 25-year design life, and 51,222 classrooms are expected to be condemned by 2028. — Almira Louise S. Martinez