Home Blog Page 2848

Gaza war hits Arab neighbors; GDP loss may hit $10B

Toy soldiers, Hamas and Israel flags are seen in this illustration taken, Oct. 15, 2023. — REUTERS

AMMAN — The economic cost of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza on Arab neighbors Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan could rise to at least $10 billion this year and push more than 230,000 people into poverty, according to a United Nations (UN) study.

The war has come as the three Arab countries face a struggle with fiscal pressures, slow growth and steep unemployment, and it has deterred much-needed investment as well as hitting consumption and trade. Lebanon is in a deep economic crisis.

The study, commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), said the cost of the conflict for the three states in terms of loss of gross domestic product (GDP) may amount to $10.3 billion or 2.3%, and could double if it lasts another six months. “This is a massive impact,” Abdallah Al Dardari, UN assistant secretary-general and UNDP’s Director of the Regional Bureau for Arab States (RBAS) who lead the study told Reuters.

“The crisis was a bomb in an already fragile regional situation… It soured sentiment with fear of what could happen and where things are going,” he said.

Israel launched its campaign to annihilate the Hamas militant group that controls Gaza after fighters stormed across the border on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians, and seizing 240 hostages, according to Israel.

Since then, Israeli forces have besieged the enclave and laid much of it to waste, with more than 18,000 people confirmed killed, according to Palestinian health authorities, and many thousands feared lost in the rubble or beyond the reach of ambulances.

Mr. Dardari said the scale of destruction in Gaza within such a brief time was unprecedented since World War II. “To lose 45-50% of all housing in one month of fighting … We have never seen anything like this … the relationship between destruction level and time, it’s unique,” Mr. Dardari said.

The mass displacement of almost 80% of Gaza’s population within such a short period eclipsed the more than decade-old Syrian conflict, which sparked the world’s biggest refugee crisis.

“It took Syria five years of fighting to reach the same level of destruction that Gaza reached in one month,” said Mr. Dardari, a former minister for economic affairs in the Syrian government.

Mr. Dardari, an expert on reconstruction in conflict zones, said his team was already reaching out to development funds and multilateral financial institutions on post-war reconstruction scenarios for Gaza.

“We are not waiting until the battles end… this effort has begun,” Mr. Dardari said, without elaborating. — Reuters

US officials say Russian hackers are launching SolarWinds-style operations

REUTERS

WASHINGTON — US officials say that Russian hackers are targeting servers hosting outdated versions of software made by the Czech tech company JetBrains for potential SolarWinds-style espionage operations.

In a statement released on Wednesday, the US National Security Agency, the FBI and cyber watchdog agency CISA accused the hackers, sometimes known as Cozy Bear or APT29, of trying to hijack the servers in a bid to access software developers’ source code, something that could potentially allow them to tamper with its compilation or deployment.

A similar technique was used to doctor software made by the US software firm SolarWinds, the statement noted. That cyberespionage campaign led to a wave of serious breaches across the government that were discovered in 2019.

Russian officials did not immediately return a message seeking comment. Moscow has previously denied hacking allegations.

In a statement, Prague-based JetBrains said it had fixed the vulnerability affecting its TeamCity collaborative software building tool in September and had been contacting its customers since in the hope of “motivating them to update.”

It said fewer than 2% of TeamCity instances still used unpatched software.

Programs like TeamCity — which help manage other companies’ software building process — can potentially make for ideal springboards for hackers looking to break into many different targets at once. Securing that kind of sweeping access has been a key priority for APT29, which is alleged by Western officials and private cybersecurity companies to act on behalf of Russia’s foreign intelligence agency, the SVR, and is generally considered one of the country’s elite hacking groups.

The US statement said the US and its allies had identified “a few dozen compromised companies” in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Australia. It said the companies had little in common except that they had outdated and vulnerable versions of JetBrains exposed to the internet, suggesting the hacks were “opportunistic in nature and not necessarily a targeted attack.”

The statement was co-signed by Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre as well as Poland’s Military Counterintelligence Service and its Computer Emergency Response Team. — Reuters

Cebu Pacific celebrates Christmas with 8-day seat sale

Fares as Low as PHP 88

Cebu Pacific (PSE: CEB), the Philippines’ leading airline, joins the holiday festivities as it rolls out its eight-day Christmas seat sale.

From Dec. 11 to 18, 2023, guests may book flights to domestic and international destinations on sale for as low as P88 (one-way base fare exclusive of fees and surcharges). The travel period is from Aug. 1 to Nov. 30, 2024, perfect for travelers who wish to plan and score value-for-money fares this gift-giving season.

With CEB’s low fares now made more affordable, guests can discover and explore new places listed on their bucket lists. They can experience the picturesque beaches of Davao and Zamboanga, feast on the local delicacies of Cebu and Bacolod, and experience boating at the underground river of Puerto Princesa.

In addition, with CEB’s growing international network, guests can also go on a shopping spree in Hong Kong and Singapore, immerse their creative sprits in the art hubs of Macau and Taipei, enjoy museum-hopping in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, and marvel at the majestic sights in Bangkok and Da Nang through CEB’s direct flights from Manila, Cebu, and Clark.

Passengers may use their existing Travel Funds to book flights and avail themselves of add-ons. CEB also offers multiple payment options, including payment centers, credit or debit cards, and e-wallets.

CEB currently flies to 35 domestic and 25 international destinations spread across Asia, Australia, and the Middle East.

It’s never too late to make your travel wishes come true. Book your flights now at bit.ly/CebuPacificSale.

 


Spotlight is BusinessWorld’s sponsored section that allows advertisers to amplify their brand and connect with BusinessWorld’s audience by enabling them to publish their stories directly on the BusinessWorld website. For more information, send an email to online@bworldonline.com.

Join us on Viber at https://bit.ly/3hv6bLA to get more updates and subscribe to BusinessWorld’s titles and get exclusive content through www.bworld-x.com.

 

Scientists see risk of lost opportunity for long COVID research in China

REUTERS

SHANGHAI — With more than a full year past since China eased restrictions and let COVID-19 sweep its households, scientists are worried a unique opportunity may be slipping away to study long COVID from possibly hundreds of millions of infections in that country.

Global disease experts say little is known about China’s experience with long-term COVID effects, which in Britain, Canada, the U.S. and elsewhere are thought to have afflicted millions with debilitating fatigue, brain fog and other symptoms that persist for months or even years.

China’s rare circumstances – relying on home-grown vaccines and mostly avoiding COVID until late in the pandemic – could, these experts say, provide particularly valuable data and insights on long COVID.

But national agencies’ funding plans and comments from scientists and policy experts in China suggest that interest in public health-related COVID studies may be waning in the country’s research community, like it has elsewhere, as memories fade of stay-at-home orders and close contact tracing.

“The majority of COVID cases in China emerged less than a year ago,” Martin Taylor, the World Health Organization’s China representative, said in an emailed reply to queries.

Chinese research might, he said, offer a different view from other countries and help to shed light on the causes, prevalence and risk factors of long COVID, which are still not clearly understood.

“Given that situation, WHO encourages more research in China.”

But academics point to signs China may be deprioritizing or even backing away from public health-related COVID research, including at government agencies that offer grants and academic journals that publish research studies.

“I haven’t heard much at all about long COVID, or research on long COVID, despite a wave last winter in which a very large fraction of the population were infected for the first time,” said Ben Cowling, an epidemiologist at the University of Hong Kong.

“I’m quite surprised about that, but I am aware that it could be a sensitive topic … I think the country wants to put COVID behind it.”

LONG COVID STUDIES
In one research program’s call for proposals, the National Office for Philosophy and Social Sciences did not include pandemic-related topics, although it had in the past, while the National Natural Science Foundation of China has cut projections for the number of projects to be funded under one COVID research program, according to documents posted on their websites.

Some researchers noted, however, that funding might be available elsewhere, and indeed the Natural Science Foundation this year offered special grants for research on anti-COVID drugs and COVID-related basic science.

The two agencies did not reply to requests for comment.

Chinese researchers have also published a number of recent studies on long COVID, with more expected.

A study published in November found that half of a set of COVID-19 patients discharged from a Wuhan hospital in early 2020 still had symptoms – mostly mild – three years later. Another study in Beijing published in October found that 28.7% of a group of infected healthcare workers and 39.2% of a group of infected residents still had COVID symptoms five months after they were infected.

But several academics and doctors in China said a variety of concerns have made the research community increasingly wary about long COVID, including sensitivities around bio-data security and policymakers’ eagerness to put the pandemic behind them.

“Although the government’s investment is continuing … the interest of the country’s researchers seems to be falling,” said Tan Hao, an academic at Hunan University’s Emergency Science Research Center. He has urged creating a platform for long COVID where patients could receive guidance and support.

China’s National Health Commission said in a faxed reply to queries that the country supported scientific researchers looking at the coronavirus.

Regarding long COVID, it said Chinese and international research so far suggested the rate of occurrence is low, organ damage is fairly rare, and symptoms gradually improve with the passage of time.

Other relevant agencies and ministries contacted for comment, including the Ministry of Science and Technology and China’s State Council, referred Reuters to China’s National Health Commission or did not respond.

Many countries have played down the significance of long COVID, or even failed to acknowledge it as a condition, but China’s large population and unique circumstances give it a particularly essential role to play in long COVID research, according to several scientists and researchers.

“There is a huge opportunity for Chinese scientists to contribute and help us solve this complex puzzle,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, a senior clinical epidemiologist at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. He pointed to possible lessons from China’s public health response and the potential for optimizing future vaccine strategies.

“I hope they do not sit this one out,” he said. — Reuters

Why the Indian Ocean could be China’s Achilles’ heel in a Taiwan war

A globe is seen in front of Chinese and Taiwanese flags in this illustration, Aug. 6, 2022. — REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION

HONG KONG — Every day, nearly 60 fully loaded very large crude-oil carriers sail between the Persian Gulf and Chinese ports, carrying about half of the oil that powers the world’s second-largest economy.

As the vessels enter the South China Sea, they ply waters increasingly controlled by China’s growing military, from the missile batteries and airfields at its bases on disputed islands to its stealthy Type 055 destroyers.

But when crossing the Indian Ocean, joined by others headed to China from Africa and Brazil, these tankers lack protection in a naval theatre dominated by the U.S.

A dozen military attaches and scholars say that vulnerability is now being scrutinised as Western military and academic strategists discreetly game scenarios about how a conflict with China over Taiwan, or elsewhere in East Asia, could evolve or escalate.

In a major war, Chinese oil tankers in the Indian Ocean “would find themselves very vulnerable”, said David Brewster, a security scholar at the Australian National University.

“Chinese naval vessels would effectively be trapped in the Indian Ocean and … they would have little or no air support, because there are no bases or facilities of its own that (China) could rely on.”

Four envoys and eight analysts familiar with discussions in Western and Asian capitals, some speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive topic, said this enduring weakness gives China’s adversaries a ladder of escalatory options, especially in a drawn-out conflict, like Russia’s war on Ukraine.

These scenarios range from harassment and interdiction operations against Chinese shipping that could divert Chinese naval vessels to the region, up to a blockade and beyond.

In a full-scale war, the tankers – capable of carrying 2 million barrels of oil – would be prizes to be sunk or captured, reflecting naval actions of last century in which combatants targeted their enemies’ economic resources, three analysts said.

These options could be used to dissuade China from launching action, or later to raise costs on an invasion of Taiwan.

Less clear is how this vulnerability shifts Beijing’s calculations toward Taiwan, the people said.

China’s defence ministry did not respond to questions about its position in the Indian Ocean.

Chinese strategists are aware of the problem but ultimately any decision to launch military action would be taken by President Xi Jinping, according to People’s Liberation Army (PLA) documents and retired officers.

Xi has instructed the PLA to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027, U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Director William Burns said in February. China has been increasing military manoeuvres ahead of the island’s elections in January.

Since taking power in 2013, Xi and other Communist Party leaders have stressed the importance of a modernised military that can project power globally and secure China’s vital trade routes.

But amid fears of conflict, some of the analysts said China would struggle to protect these lifelines even as its energy demands increase, making a protracted war over Taiwan difficult to sustain.

China imported 515.65 million tons of crude oil in the 11 months through November, or 11.27 million barrels per day, official data show, an annual increase of 12.1%.

The Pentagon estimates about 62% of China’s oil and 17% of its natural gas imports transit the Malacca Strait and South China Sea, key Indian Ocean gateways.

China is moving to diversify supplies, with three pipelines from Russia, Myanmar and Kazakhstan accounting for roughly 10% of its crude-oil imports in 2022, according to customs data and state media.

Western sanctions on Moscow after its invasion of Ukraine have also led China to stockpile more cheap oil from Russia, its top supplier.

Food is a more complex picture. China’s soybean imports – used for animal feed – are shipped in part via the Indian Ocean but other commodities such as potash, needed for fertiliser, arrive via other routes.

BASE SURROUNDED
China has an extensive network of military satellites but just one dedicated military base, and no air cover from land or sea, for Indian Ocean naval deployments.

In its October annual report on China’s military, the Pentagon lists 11 potential Chinese bases on the ocean’s fringes, including Pakistan, Tanzania and Sri Lanka. Those locations reflect Chinese diplomatic and commercial outreach under Xi’s Belt and Road Initiative.

But these have not emerged as hard military assets, with neither a permanent PLA presence nor publicly known guarantees of access in a conflict, the attaches and an Asian diplomat said.

The Pentagon report notes, in language used for the first time this year, that China still “has little power projection capability” in the Indian Ocean.

China’s initial overseas base in Djibouti, on the ocean’s western edge, opened in 2017 and hosts 400 marines, reflecting Chinese involvement in international piracy patrols around the Horn of Africa since 2008.

But the base has no airfield and is flanked by military facilities of seven other countries, including the U.S., France and Britain.

The U.S. Indian Ocean presence remains in stark contrast, reflecting its Cold War build-up.

The U.S. 5th Fleet is based in Bahrain while the Japan-headquartered 7th Fleet operates out of Diego Garcia, a U.K.-administered atoll with runways for long-range bombers and a lagoon adapted to house U.S. aircraft carriers.

To the east, Australia is increasing patrols using its submarine-hunting P-8 Poseidon aircraft and is expanding a west-coast base for British and U.S. nuclear-powered submarines and, eventually, Australian nuclear-powered boats.

WORK IN PROGRESS

Zhou Bo, a retired PLA senior colonel and a security fellow at Beijing’s Tsinghua University, said he was aware of foreign debates about China’s vulnerabilities but the scenarios were hypothetical.

Should China and the West clash militarily in the Indian Ocean, such a conflict by nature would be “almost uncontrollable” in scale and location, Zhou said. “At that point it is a major war involving a lot of countries,” he said.

Still, he said, China would gradually expand deployments and basing options to strengthen its position.

Military attaches and analysts tracking Indian Ocean deployments say China generally maintains four or five surveillance vessels and a similar number of warships and an attack submarine at any time. But China is yet to test its most potent assets in the Indian Ocean, one former Western intelligence analyst said.

Some analysts expect that to change, particularly as PLA documents stress the piracy patrols’ importance in protecting Indian Ocean supply lines. China could expand patrols if “hegemonic countries” exercise control over its vital transit routes, according to the 2020 Science of Military Strategy, an official paper outlining China’s strategic priorities.

While China’s navy keeps its nuclear-armed ballistic-missile submarines near their Hainan Island base, its attack submarines are expected to range more widely as they improve, a challenge to the U.S.

“We can see they are being cautious, definitely more cautious than expected,” said retired U.S. Rear Admiral Michael McDevitt, who in a 2020 book predicted an eventual major Chinese military presence to protect Indian Ocean sea lanes.

“I’m not saying they are not going to get there, but it does seem they are not comfortable yet, particularly with their aircraft carriers – and extending air cover will be vital for them in a conflict.”

BLOCKADE TROUBLES
Even if China cannot achieve dominance, some factors might run in its favour, some analysts say.

Blockades are difficult to implement given the fluidity of commerce, with oil sometimes traded en route.

Tracking and policing shipments would be a vast job, as operations against China would need to secure shipments to destinations like Japan, South Korea and Australia.

“You just can’t get away with blocking your adversary’s shipments and allowing yours to continue,” said Brewster.

Historians continue to debate the effectiveness of blockades against Germany in World War One and Japan in World War Two.

Still, China has learned some of the lessons. It has about 60 days’ strategic and commercial reserves of crude oil, according to analytics firms Vortexa and Kpler. Its petroleum reserves are partly stored underground and can’t be tracked by satellites.

It has little surplus natural gas but is drawing increasing volumes from pipelines through Russia, Central Asia and Myanmar.

China is largely self-sufficient in wheat and rice, and keeps large stockpiles of both, although the quantities remain a state secret.

In 2022, Washington’s U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission requested the Pentagon produce a classified report on the military requirements of a blockade on China’s energy shipments, details not previously reported.

“The report should also consider the extent to which China may be able to satisfy its energy needs during a crisis or conflict through stockpiles, by rationing supplies, and by relying on overland shipments,” the commission said. — Reuters

General Motors still planning to end gas-powered vehicle sales by 2035 — CEO

REUTERS

WASHINGTON — General Motors CEO Mary Barra said Wednesday the Detroit automaker still plans on moving to all electric vehicle sales by 2035 even as it has recently delayed some EV production.

“Our plan is to only be selling EVs, light-duty EVs at that time but of course we’re going to be responsive to where the customer is at but we have a plan to do that,” Barra told reporters after an appearance at the Washington Economic Club.

GM in October said it was abandoning a goal of building 400,000 EVs from 2022 through mid-2024 as it delays production of electric pickup trucks at its plant in Michigan’s Orion Township by a year. GM also in October scrapped a $5 billion plan to jointly develop affordable EVs with Honda Motor .

The Biden administration is pursuing aggressive vehicle emissions regulations and Barra said they must be achievable.

“I think we’re in a good position with the number of EVs that we have that we’re launching,” Barra said Wednesday. “I think we just need to make sure that the regulations stay aligned with where the customer is, the charging has to be there.”

The American Automotive Policy Council, representing GM, Ford Motor and Stellantis, in October urged regulators to halve its proposed fuel economy increases from 4% to 2% annually for trucks, saying the proposal “would disproportionately impact the truck fleet.”

U.S. automakers separately have warned fuel economy fines would cost GM $6.5 billion, Stellantis billion and Ford $1 billion. Reuters reported in June GM paid $128.2 million in fines covering 2016 and 2017, the first time the automaker had paid fuel economy penalties.

Automakers also have raised alarm at the Energy Department’s proposal to significantly revise how it calculates the petroleum-equivalent fuel economy rating for EVs. Barra met with Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm and raised the issue, sources told Reuters.

GM said in October it could support the administration’s fuel economy proposal if the Energy Department rescinded its petroleum-equivalent proposal. — Reuters

Tesla will recall 193,000 vehicles in Canada over Autopilot

STOCK PHOTO | Image by ElasticComputeFarm from Pixabay

Tesla will recall 193,000 vehicles in Canada to address concerns about safeguards for its driver assistance system Autopilot after announcing a recall of 2.03 million vehicles for the issue in the United States, Transport Canada said Wednesday.

Tesla said in a filing with US regulators that it was deploying an over-the-air software update to “incorporate additional controls and alerts” to better ensure drivers pay attention when using Autopilot. — Reuters

China condemns Canada’s support for Philippines on South China Sea incidents

Chinese President Xi Jinping speaks during the opening ceremony of the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Oct. 16, 2022. — REUTERS

China condemned Canada’s support for the Philippines over what it said were violations of China’s sovereignty in the South China Sea, according to a statement by a Chinese embassy spokesperson in Canada.

“The South China Sea is the common home of countries in the region and should not become a hunting ground for Canada, the United States and other countries to pursue their geopolitical interests,” the statement said.

Over the past few months, China and the Philippines have had several confrontations centered around the Second Thomas Shoal, an atoll in the South China Sea.

“As a country outside the region, Canada has emboldened the Philippines’ violation of China’s sovereignty, violated the purposes and principles of the U.N. Charter, and jeopardized regional peace and stability,” the Canadian embassy spokesperson said.

Manila has accused Chinese coast guard and maritime militia vessels of repeatedly firing water cannon at its resupply boats and deliberately ramming a vessel near the disputed waters.

The United States has voiced opposition to the run-ins and sided with the Philippines.

Over the weekend, a confrontation in the disputed waters drew condemnation from Canada in a government statement denouncing “the actions taken by the People’s Republic of China against Philippine civilian and government vessels in the South China Sea.”

China, which claims nearly the entire South China Sea as its own, has repeatedly said Philippine vessels were encroaching on its national sovereignty. — Reuters

Owner of the Philippines’ largest malls says China feud may hurt businesses

SM Investments Corp. Vice Chairperson Teresita Sy-Coson — BLOOMBERG

Escalating tensions in the South China Sea are making the owner of the Philippines’ biggest lender and shopping malls cautious, urging the government to not be hostile toward its neighbor and to steer clear of the US-China competition.

“China is very close to us, we cannot be too antagonistic,” SM Investments Corp. Vice Chairperson Teresita Sy-Coson told reporters late Wednesday on the sidelines of her company’s event. “Even though we know what is happening, I guess we have to do it through a more peaceful negotiation,” Ms. Sy-Coson added.

Ms. Sy-Coson’s comments, the first such remarks from an influential Philippine tycoon, show that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s increasing pushback against Beijing’s sweeping maritime claims is starting to create unease in the corporate world. She frowned on the government’s strategy of publicly calling out China, the Philippines’ top trading partner, after every encounter.

“That’s why we are all cautiously optimistic because of the things that are happening beyond the businesses’ control,” said the owner of BDO Unibank Inc., the nation’s largest lender. SM Prime Holdings Inc., also owned by the Sy family, has shopping centers in China.

Since Mr. Marcos took over from Rodrigo Duterte in June 2022, the Philippines’ maritime strategy has taken a dramatic shift, with the current leader discarding his predecessor’s non-confrontational approach in the disputed sea. While several countries have overlapping claims in the South China Sea, it’s the increasingly intense competition between Beijing and Manila that’s been drawing global attention.

The prospect of an armed encounter in the waters that could drag the US into direct conflict with China is making the South China Sea at times more dangerous than the Taiwan Strait, observers say. The Philippines has repeatedly protested China’s actions in contested waters, including its use of water cannons on Filipino vessels. But Beijing has maintained its actions are lawful and has called on Manila to stop infringing on its sovereignty.

“I think we have to look at our own position. We don’t want to get involved in the US-China tensions,” Ms. Sy-Coson said. “What we have to do is to have peaceful discussions with them because, after all, we can’t change our neighbors,” she said.

Teresita’s brother, Henry Sy Jr., owns a stake in the company that runs the Philippines’ power transmission network which is 40%-held by State Grid Corp. of China.

Mr. Marcos has granted the US military greater access to Philippine bases to help safeguard the Philippines’ interests in the South China Sea. The sea dispute escalated over the weekend after Chinese ships rammed and blasted water cannons at Philippine boats, prompting Manila to summon the Chinese ambassador.

“We just hope there will be no skirmishes in that area because whatever happens (there) will affect us, all of us,” Ms. Sy-Coson said.

Apart from geopolitical tensions, threats of natural disasters due to climate change also risk clouding the business outlook, she said.

“But left to our own, the Philippine economy is okay,” Mr. Sy-Coson said. — Bloomberg

The International Innovation Awards 2023 honors 34 remarkable sustainable innovations for future enterprises

Celebrating and embracing the spirit of progress and excellence, the International Innovation Awards (IIA) 2023 proudly honors 34 remarkable innovations that redefine industries and elevate the human experience on a global scale. As one of the pillars of the Innovation Revolution movement spearheaded by regional NGO Enterprise Asia since 2017, the award recognition program, which aims to create an innovation ecosystem for enterprises, is held annually to recognize outstanding innovations across the globe. This year marks the 7th edition of the awards which took place in Taipei, and was graced by Chern-Chyi “C.C.” Chen, Deputy Minister of Ministry of Economic Affairs, and Betty Hu, Deputy Director, Administration for Digital Industries, Ministry of Digital Affairs.

This year’s winning innovations epitomize the core tenets of sustainable progress, steering towards accelerated growth, heightened efficiency, and inclusive practices. In perfect alignment with the IIA’s mission, these innovations epitomize the ethos of fostering a global stage for businesses. They exemplify solutions that not only redefine industries but also serve as gateways to a more sustainable and promising future. Each winning innovation serves as a clarion call, encouraging organizations worldwide to persist in their investment in innovation for a future built on sustainability and progress.

The awards drew an exceptional mix of submissions across 20 countries and markets such as Hong Kong, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, and the United Arab Emirates and United States of America, just to name a few. 34 innovations were selected and crowned winners from over 200 applications through a rigorous evaluation process by a jury of prominent judges across three categories: Product, Service & Solution, and Organization & Culture.

“The Fourth Industrial Revolution represents a seismic shift, an era where digital technologies, artificial intelligence, and automation are transforming the way we live, work, and interact. It is a time of unprecedented opportunities and challenges, and it is in this crucible of change that self-reflection becomes a guiding light. As we stand on the precipice of this revolution, we must strive for a society where innovation is synonymous with equity, sustainability, and ethical growth. The businesses that thrive will be those that recognize that self-reflection, driven by a moral compass, is the rudder guiding them through the uncharted waters of technological change,” Richard Tsang, President of Enterprise Asia, stated in his welcome address.

Among the notable recipients of the highly coveted ‘InnoCube’ under the Product Category include Micron Technology, Inc.’s ‘Micron 6500 ION Data Center SSD’, which solves the issue of scaling AI in the data center by delivering more performance while consuming 20% less power than previous 30 terabyte drives on the market, and Medidata Solutions International Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd.’s ‘Rave Companion’, which simplifies and accelerates data transfers for clinical trial sites into Rave EDC.

For the Service & Solution Category, the New Taipei City Government, Information Management Center was awarded for ‘NewTaiPay (New Taipei Mobile Payment App),’ which is an incentive mechanism to distribute New Taipei Dollars to encourage municipal interaction that aligns with achieving the net-zero carbon emissions goal, and the United Arab Emirates’ Ministry of Health and Prevention with its ‘Customer Happiness Department,’ which is the country’s first federal User Experience (UX) Lab on its premises that engage customers in digital services development.

Far Eastern Big City Shopping Malls Co., Ltd. claimed the accolade under the Organization & Culture Category with ‘Development X Health X Impact: Big City makes the happy workplace,’ which comprehensively improves the work experience of its employees and achieves the goal of corporate talent sustainability. Krungsri Finnovate Company Limited also emerged as a winner under the Organization & Culture Category with ‘Krungsri Finnovate’s Impact in Sustainable Startup Growth,’ which is Thailand’s first startup fund allowing individual investments with a substantial fund size of 3 billion Thai Baht.

Prior to the awards ceremony, the International Innovation Summit (IIS) 2023 was held during the day and officiated by Amy Ho, Commissioner of the Economic Development Department of the New Taipei City Government. Themed “Sustainable Innovation For Future Enterprises,” the Summit is a transformative program featuring industry leaders from around the world and provides a platform to not only inspire but catalyze action towards sustainable transformation.

Over 300 innovation experts, industry leaders, and policymakers across the globe gathered at the summit to share and exchange the latest insights to reimagine business models, products, and services to create sustainable growth for organizations as well as a positive impact on society and the planet.

At the Summit’s opening, Enterprise Asia Vice-Chairman William Ng expressed that “Innovation, at its core, is a testament to human ingenuity. Yet, in our pursuit of excellence, we must not lose sight of the profound impact our choices have on the world around us. The ecological footprint of innovation cannot be an afterthought; it must be an integral part of the innovation process itself. The theme of the summit serves as a clarion call for collective action. It challenges us to reimagine the very fabric of innovation, intertwining it with the principles of sustainability that are not only vital to the health of our planet but also fundamental to the longevity and success of enterprises that shape our global landscape.”

The Summit’s speakers included Agnès Pondaven, CEO of Qualibri Consulting and Climate Fresk Coordinator in Taiwan; Dr. Will Zhao, Professor at the University of Waterloo and Director of G Social Lab (Canada); Jakkris Tangkuampien, Corporate Innovation Coach at Ekipa Consultancy and Former Thailand Lead Innovation Practitioner at Pruksa Holding, Roche and ExxonMobil; and Jane W. Wang, Global Leadership Coach & Transformational Coach, Facilitator of Intercultural Competence & DEI, and Activist for Degrowth & Well-Being Economies.

The International Innovation Awards and International Innovation Summit are supported by the International Chamber of Commerce-Philippines, Kuala Lumpur Malay Chamber of Commerce, Malaysian Alliance of Corporate Directors, Malaysia Entrepreneurs’ Development Association, Myanmar Business Executives Association, National Institute of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Singapore-Thai Chamber Of Commerce, The Philippine Retailers Association (PRA), VietCham Singapore, and 台灣循環經濟與創新轉型協會. PR Newswire is the Official News Release Distribution Partner while the media partners are Bangkok Post, BusinessWorld, Commercial Times, Dailywire.asia, Hong Kong Economic Times, and SME Magazine.

FULL RECIPIENT LIST OF THE INTERNATIONAL INNOVATION AWARDS 2023

PRODUCT CATEGORY

COMPANY

WINNING INNOVATION

COUNTRY/ MARKET

EXCELLENCE OPTOELECTRONICS INC.

EOI UNIFLEX SERIES AS PIONEER INNOVATIVE AUTOMOTIVE LIGHT SOURCE

TAIWAN

HETTIGODA INDUSTRIES PRIVATE LIMITED

SIDDHALEPA LIV-PRO

SRI LANKA

MEDIDATA SOLUTIONS INTERNATIONAL ASIA PACIFIC PTE. LTD.

RAVE COMPANION

SINGAPORE

MEGA INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK

STM (SMART TELLER MACHINE)

TAIWAN

MICRON TECHNOLOGY, INC.

MICRON 6500 ION DATA CENTER SSD

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

PARAGON TRADING ASIA LIMITED

PHENOMENAL BEWATER

HONG KONG

SB TAPE GROUP SDN BHD

SB BIO TAPE

MALAYSIA

SHIN KONG LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD.

IIA

TAIWAN

SYSTEX SOFTWARE & SERVICE CORPORATION

JIN KUANG

TAIWAN

SERVICE & SOLUTION CATEGORY

COMPANY

WINNING INNOVATION

COUNTRY/ MARKET

BANK SINOPAC

DAWHO DIGITAL ACCOUNT-VIP DIGITAL ACCOUNT FOR NEW GENERATION

TAIWAN

CAPITAL SECURITIES CORPORATION

CAPITAL PAY & HAPPY TRADE

TAIWAN

CATHAY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, LTD.

CATHAY LIFE INSURANCE APP

TAIWAN

CROWN MACHINERY COMPANY LIMITED

SMART MACHINE

TAIWAN

ELECTRICITY GENERATING AUTHORITY OF THAILAND

ENZY PLATFORM

THAILAND

GLOBAL MALL CO., LTD.

GLOBAL MALL APP: YOUR SMART SHOPPING ASSISTANT

TAIWAN

GRAND OCEAN LOGISTICS CO., LTD.

GOL-E TRACKING

TAIWAN

KRUNGTHAI BANK PCL.

KRUNGTHAI BANK’S WE CARE PROGRAM

THAILAND

MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND PREVENTION

CUSTOMER HAPPINESS DEPARTMENT

UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

NEW TAIPEI CITY GOVERNMENT, INFORMATION MANAGEMENT CENTER

NEWTAIPAY (NEW TAIPEI MOBILE PAYMENT APP)

TAIWAN

OMOO COMPANY LIMITED

OMOO

THAILAND

PACIFIC SOGO DEPARTMENT STORES CO., LTD.

CREATE A ONE-STOP GREEN SHOPPING PLATFORM FOR CUSTOMERS

TAIWAN

PAN FOOD CO., LTD.

SERVICE PAN FOOD THAILAND

THAILAND

PI MOBILE TECHNOLOGY INC.

PI MOBILE WALLET X PAYLATER : TRANSFORMING TAIWAN’S PAYMENT LANDSCAPE

TAIWAN

RHENUS LOGISTICS

CREATING SHARED VALUE THROUGH RHENUS INNOVATION HUB

HONG KONG

RIZAL COMMERCIAL BANKING CORPORATION

RCBC DISKARTECHPRENEUR

THE PHILIPPINES

SHIN KONG LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD.

DUAL-TRACK INNOVATIVE AI SERVICES “XIAOXIN”

TAIWAN

SHIN KONG LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD.

VIP

TAIWAN

WINCOMM CORPORATION

AI-BASED ENDOSCOPY SYSTEMS

TAIWAN

YUNGCHING REALTY GROUP

REAL ESTATE AGENT JOINT SALE PLATFORM

TAIWAN

ORGANIZATION & CULTURE CATEGORY

COMPANY

WINNING INNOVATION

COUNTRY/ MARKET

CATHAY FINANCIAL HOLDINGS CO., LTD.

BRAND INNOVATION IN FINTECH, THE DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION OF CATHAY

TAIWAN

FAR EASTERN BIG CITY SHOPPING MALLS CO., LTD

DEVELOPMENT X HEALTH X IMPACT: BIG CITY MAKES THE HAPPY WORKPLACE

TAIWAN

KRUNGSRI FINNOVATE COMPANY LIMITED

KRUNGSRI FINNOVATE’S IMPACT IN SUSTAINABLE STARTUP GROWTH

THAILAND

SHIN KONG LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD.

ERA

TAIWAN

SMILEFOKUS (THAILAND) LIMITED

SMILECULTURE: CORPORATE CULTURE APPLICATION

THAILAND

 


Spotlight is BusinessWorld’s sponsored section that allows advertisers to amplify their brand and connect with BusinessWorld’s audience by enabling them to publish their stories directly on the BusinessWorld website. For more information, send an email to online@bworldonline.com.

Join us on Viber at https://bit.ly/3hv6bLA to get more updates and subscribe to BusinessWorld’s titles and get exclusive content through www.bworld-x.com.

With rate hikes likely done, Fed turns to timing of cuts

REUTERS

WASHINGTON – The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday and U.S. central bank chief Jerome Powell said the historic tightening of monetary policy is likely over as inflation falls faster than expected and with a discussion of cuts in borrowing costs coming “into view.”

“People are not writing down rate hikes” in their latest economic projections, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a press conference following the end of the central bank’s final policy meeting of the year.

“That’s us thinking we’ve done enough,” he said, adding that rate increases were “not the base case anymore.”

“The Fed is done!” exclaimed Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG US, and if economic data continues evolving as it has, with inflation cooling alongside an economy that seems poised to slow but not crash, then “the Fed will be cutting sooner” rather than later in the year.

Indeed, the shift in outlook was stark, with 17 of 19 Fed policymakers seeing rates lower by the end of 2024, and none seeing them higher. A measure of policymakers’ perceptions of risks facing the economy also moved closer to balance, a point Powell alluded to when he said the central bank was now at the point where “both mandates are important,” with officials sensitive to the risk of “overdoing it” and pushing the economy into a faster than necessary slowdown.

The Fed is statutorily responsible for maintaining stable prices and maximum employment, two economic goals that are sometimes in conflict. After inflation erupted to a 40-year high last year, Powell said officials thought they now were zeroing in on an elusive “soft landing,” with inflation returning to the Fed’s 2% target in an economy that is slowing but not crashing, and one in which unemployment remains low.

“We are seeing strong growth that … appears to be moderating. We are seeing a labor market that is coming back into balance … We’re seeing inflation making real progress,” Powell told reporters. “These are the things we’ve been wanting to see … Declaring victory would be premature … But of course the question is ‘when will it become appropriate to begin dialing back?'”

It’s a debate that will preoccupy the Fed and investors in the weeks and months to come after two years in which it first scaled back the asset purchases it used to support the economy through the coronavirus pandemic, and then, beginning in March 2022, rapidly raised its benchmark policy interest rate from the near-zero level to the current 5.25%-5.50% range.

U.S. stocks jumped after the release of the Fed’s latest statement and policymakers’ updated quarterly economic projections, continued climbing during Powell’s press conference and closed sharply higher, with the S&P 500 index gaining about 1.4% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average hitting a record closing high. The U.S. dollar dropped against a basket of currencies and U.S. Treasury yields fell.

Traders of futures contracts that settle to the Fed’s policy rate are pricing in a March start to rate cuts and an end-of-2024 policy rate 1.5 percentage points below the current level.

‘SO FAR, SO GOOD’

For an institution that has been reluctant to declare victory over inflation, the updated projections and Powell’s tone marked a notable shift.

Headline personal consumption expenditures inflation is seen ending 2023 at 2.8% and falling further to 2.4% by the end of next year, within striking distance of the Fed’s 2% target.

That comes at little comparative cost in terms of higher joblessness, with the unemployment rate seen rising from the current 3.7% to 4.1%, the same rate projected in September, while economic growth is seen slowing from an estimated 2.6% this year to 1.4% over 2024.

“It’s so far, so good,” Powell said.

While officials remain free to raise the Fed’s benchmark overnight interest rate again in coming months if there is a resurgence in price pressures, that seems increasingly unlikely given the recent performance of inflation that has edged steadily towards the central bank’s target.

Some analysts and investors even interpretedWednesday’s events as the effective start of a Fed easing cycle.

The bond market took Powell’s message and ran with it. The yield on the 2-year Treasury note, which is tied closely to Fed policy rate expectations, plunged by 30 basis points – essentially delivering a rate cut to the open market.

Over the last eight weeks, moreover, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which is instrumental to setting mortgage rates and other key borrowing costs, has tumbled by roughly 1 percentage point, a move rarely seen outside of economic emergencies.

“For a group that prizes the pricing of its policy intentions in the forward markets … they had to know that moving the median forecast … would be a bullish signal,” Steven Blitz, chief U.S. economist at TS Lombard, wrote in an analysis headlined “The Fed Eases.” — Reuters

MWSS approves hike in water rates

A vendor arranges water containers for sale in Bacoor, Cavite, July 10. -- Photo by EDD GUMBAN, The Philippine Star

WATER RATES in Metro Manila are set to go up starting in January, as the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System Regulatory Office (MWSS-RO) approved the request of two water concessionaires to hike rates.

MWSS approved an increase of P6.41 per cubic meter for Manila Water Co., and a hike of P7.87 per cubic meter for Maynilad Water Services, Inc.

The rates will take effect on Jan. 1, 2024.

Manila Water customers in the east zone who consume 10 cubic meters will pay P34.13 more every month, while those who consume 20 cubic meters and 30 cubic meters will see their monthly bills go up by P76.68 and P187.01, respec-tively. Low-income customers who consume less than 10 cubic meters will pay P2.96 more every month.

For Maynilad customers in the west zone, those who consume 10 cubic meters will see a P45.36 hike in their monthly bill, while those who use 20 cubic meters a month will pay P100.67 more. Maynilad customers who use 30 cubic meters will pay P205.87 more for their monthly water bill.

For Maynilad’s low-income lifeline customers who consume less than 10 cubic meters, their bills will increase by P4.74 every month.

“The reason for this (increase) is we adjusted rates by inflation. The rates rebasing was based on the 2022 value so it needs to be adjusted every year,” MWSS Chief Regulator Patrick Lester N. Ty said at a media briefing on Wednesday.

Inflation averaged 6.2% in the first 11 months of the year, still above the central bank’s 2-4% target range and the full-year forecast of 6%.

Mr. Ty said the rate adjustments are a “necessary burden” to ensure that customers will receive proper service especially with the El Niño weather phenomenon, which is expected to be felt starting February.

The latest adjustment in water rates is the second tranche of the approved tariffs for the 2023 to 2027 period. Last year, the MWSS board approved the implementation of higher rates on a staggered basis for five years starting in January 2023.

“We did the tariff adjustments in tranches to ensure that the public will be protected and it will not be too burdensome to do it all in one go. And to ensure that Manila Water and Maynilad will be doing their capex (capital expenditure) rollout projects on time, and ahead of schedule, hopefully,” Mr. Ty said.

In a statement, Maynilad said that the tariff adjustment for 2024 is part of its five-year business plan approved by the MWSS last year.

“Together with our commitment to invest P163 billion in capital expenditure projects to improve water and wastewater infrastructure of west zone is the staggered implementation of tariffs that is needed to continue these projects,” Maynilad said in Filipino.

“We are strictly monitoring to follow our commitments in the Business Plan that is why we are glad that the appropriate tariff is also being implemented,” it added.

Based on Mr. Ty’s presentation, Maynilad and Manila Water have already spent P11.28 billion and P16.65 billion, respectively, in capex as of October.

Currently, the two concessionaires are applying for the term extension of their respective revised concession agreements from 2037 to 2047 to coincide with their 25-year legislative franchises.

Mr. Ty said all the figures have been studied by the MWSS-RO “to ensure that this falls within the cap set by the UN (United Nations) with regard to the average monthly water bill of consumers.”

Manila Water serves the east zone network of Metro Manila, covering parts of Marikina, Pasig, Makati, Taguig, Pateros, Mandaluyong, San Juan, portions of Quezon City and Manila, and several towns in Rizal province.

Maynilad serves the cities of Manila, except San Andres and Sta. Ana. It also operates in Quezon City, Makati, Caloocan, Pasay, Parañaque, Las Piñas, Muntinlupa, Valenzuela, Navotas, and Malabon. It also supplies the cities of Cavite, Bacoor, and Imus, and the towns of Kawit, Noveleta, and Rosario, all in Cavite province.

Metro Pacific Investments Corp., which has a majority stake in Maynilad, is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera