Home Blog Page 400

Review: REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G

REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G—BETTINA V. ROC

XIAOMI Corp. last week launched in the Philippines its latest mid-range smartphones, the REDMI Note 15 Series, consisting of five devices with Pro and base models and both 4G and 5G versions, offering a variety of choices to fit different budgets and needs.

The brand lent BusinessWorld a unit of one of the three Pro models of the series, the REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G (8GB+256GB), for this review. The device’s suggested retail price starts at P19,999. Discounts and freebies for customers are available until Feb. 8.

Besides the phone and the usual documentation, included in the box are a 45-watt (W) two-round-pin charging adapter, a USB-A to USB-C cable, and a protective case for the device.

Using the provided charger and cable, it took a little over an hour to get the REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G’s 6,580mAh silicon-carbon battery 100% from 20%.

The battery is one of the standout features of this phone for me. For a three-day media trip with Xiaomi to Cebu for the launch of the REDMI Note 15 Series, I only needed to recharge the phone once — and that was with heavy use of its cameras during a city tour and also for typical social media browsing. With typical use, I’d say you can get one to two days out of a full charge.

A bonus: the REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G also supports up to 22.5W wired reverse charging via USB-C. Xiaomi also says this battery is designed with technology that can make its life last up to six years.

Another feature that shines is the screen. The REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G has a 6.83-inch 1.5K CrystalRes AMOLED display that has a refresh rate of up to 120Hz, which supports a peak brightness of up to 3,200 nits. This made the phone very easy to use during the daytime, especially under direct sunlight — no need to shield the screen just to see what’s on it. Visuals are also clear and crisp, and color reproduction is vivid. The screen is also very responsive, and its flat design is a plus for me.

When watching videos or listening to music, the REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G’s dual speakers, which have Dolby Atmos support, have great audio quality, making for an immersive experience. Even when using 400% volume boost, there is only minimal distortion.

The phone’s overall design and form factor also makes for a good user experience. The flat side edges with rounded corners make it easy to grip for prolonged periods of time, even for a relatively large phone, as the device is thin and light. It also looks and feels premium.

Powered by a MediaTek Dimensity 7400-Ultra chipset, the phone delivers a smooth performance for typical use cases like social media browsing, watching videos, and even light gaming, making it a great mid-range daily driver.

Software-wise, the phone runs on HyperOS 2.0 and has a simple and clean interface, and it also offers several AI features, including image editing tools. It does come with some preloaded apps and bloatware, but all of these are easy to uninstall if you find them unnecessary.

The REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G features a dual-camera setup at the rear with a new 200-megapixel (MP) ultimate-clarity main sensor with optical image stabilization and an 8MP ultra-wide lens. Even without a telephoto lens, the phone captures sharp images with great details and colors. It performs very well when used outdoors in the daytime. During the night or indoor conditions with challenging lighting, as well as when using Ultra HD mode, image processing can get a tad slower than usual.

There are also several shooting modes that can cater to both casual and more advanced users. I especially liked tinkering with Pro Mode (which allows you to use or save parameter presets), especially for night shots.

Now for another of the REDMI Note 15 Series’ main selling points — its Titan Durability — the phone has IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K dust and water resistance ratings, as well as drop resistance certification. Its display is also made with Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2.

I subjected the REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G to simple drop and water tests, and unsurprisingly, the review unit survived these. One drop test on floors made of hard tiles did result in small dents in the phone’s rear camera panel but did not affect its performance.

Of course, only time will tell just how much (intentional and accidental) beating this phone can take, but its “Titan Tough” build can give users peace of mind — especially at a time when smartphones are set to become more expensive due to the surge in memory chip costs fueled by growing AI demand. Customers also get a four-year battery replacement warranty, two-year liquid damage coverage and front and back cover replacement, and a comprehensive two-year overall warranty.

With its durability and long battery life, the REDMI Note 15 Pro 5G is a very capable daily driver for those who want a smartphone that can deliver great performance at a competitive price. — Bettina V. Roc

Pit Señor! Toyota Motor Philippines celebrates Sinulog with Coco Martin

Coco Martin brings the vibrant Sinulog spirit to life at his mall show in SM City Cebu.

Toyota Tamaraw Ambassador pays homage to Sinulog

Toyota Motor Philippines (TMP) brought extra excitement to this year’s Sinulog celebration by welcoming Coco Martin to Cebu City during the festival weekend. Through this, TMP highlighted its support for local traditions and its commitment to engaging communities across the Philippines.

Festival-goers were treated to a memorable experience, seeing Coco Martin up close as he joined the festivities, bringing energy and star power to the vibrant celebration.

For Coco Martin, the Sinulog is not only a fiesta but also an occasion for people to unite in prayer and set aside differences.

Coco Martin shines during his Sinulog Grand Parade appearance.

Ramdam mo dito yung tibay ng loob at pananampalataya ng mga Cebuano (You feel the Cebuanos’ inner strength and faith),” he said during his visit to Cebu City on Sinulog weekend.

TMP’s initiative not only amplified the spirit of Sinulog but also created meaningful connections with the people of Cebu.

TMP and Coco Martin timed his Next Generation Toyota Tamaraw Roadshow with the Sinulog celebration, held every third weekend of January in Cebu, to be one with the Cebuano devotees. He proudly carries his badge as the Tamaraw Next Generation ambassador, enthusiastically going from one city to another to engage with the Tamaraw customers and his fans.

Cebu City was his fourth stop after Cagayan de Oro City, Tacloban City, and Marilao, Batangas. He has more cities to visit in the months ahead.

He likens the strong and persevering faith of the people of Cebu to the durability and reliability of the Tamaraw Next Generation. A devout Catholic, the actor/filmmaker who is behind the TV hit series FPJ’s Ang Probinsyano and FPJ’s Batang Quiapo, has a strong devotion to the Black Nazarene.

Coco Martin meets with the customers of Toyota Mabolo and fields questions about the Tamaraw from the Cebu media.

Toyota Motor Philippines (TMP) brought Coco Martin closer to Cebuano fans during the Sinulog weekend, starting with a meet-and-greet at the Toyota Mabolo showroom with Toyota Tamaraw customers. He then entertained mallgoers with lively performances, trivia games, and photo opportunities, even trying the steps of the traditional Sinulog dance. The weekend culminated with Coco joining the Grand Parade aboard a “Next Generation Toyota Tamaraw” float organized by Toyota Team Cebu, braving intermittent weather to experience the Sinulog beat and delight the street crowd.

The Next Generation Toyota Tamaraw utility van, launched in 2024, has quickly become a popular choice among micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), start-ups, and those familiar with the early Tamaraw FX. With its design customizability, fuel efficiency, and affordability, the Tamaraw is now increasingly seen on roads nationwide, supporting nation-building by enabling better mobility and empowering MSMEs to grow their businesses.

Eric Ong (leftmost) and his family receive the ceremonial key to their Tamaraw FX from
Tamaraw Ambassador Coco Martin (in brown jacket) at the Toyota Mabolo showroom on Sinulog weekend.

Cebu businessman Eric Ong has just bought his second Tamaraw, the 2.4 GL Utility Van DSL AT. He already has the Dropside DSL A/T variant that he uses for his construction business, Worldwide Builders.

He said he had waited for the 2.4 GL Utility Van DSL AT automatic transmission because it is more efficient to drive than a vehicle with manual transmission. Also, when he needs to load purchases of auto parts needed for his EGO Taxi fleet, the FX provides security for his cargo. And, he added, human passengers can safely ride in the Tamaraw FX.

Christine and Marc Lin (first and second from left) and their son (fourth from left) receive the ceremonial key to their Tamaraw FX from Tamaraw Ambassador Coco Martin (center) at the Toyota Mabolo showroom on Sinulog weekend. With them is their agent Jinggoy Olvido.

Marc and Christine Lin just bought a Tamaraw FX DSL A/T, intending it for their restaurant business especially for delivery. They said they find the Tamaraw “sturdy and reliable.”

The Ongs and the Lins received the ceremonial keys to their Tamaraw FX from Coco Martin at the Toyota Mabolo showroom on Jan. 17.

The FX is the first and only utility van with automatic transmission across all brands in the Philippine market today, according to Toyota Mabolo.

Lester Alferez (left) bought a Tamaraw because he wanted a more efficient delivery of his coffee beans and other supplies for his business. With him is his agent Jay Naparate.

Lester Alferez, who is in the coffee industry, found the Tamaraw “a reliable vehicle that can handle daily work in the shop.”

“It’s strong, practical, and perfect for our coffee business needs,” he said.

Toyota has rolled out new colors for the Tamaraw utility van: greyish blue metallic and super red for the Tamaraw FX DSL MT and super red for the Tamaraw Dropside DSL AT.

To learn more about Next Generation Tamaraw, visit https://www.toyota.com.ph/tamaraw or inquire at your nearest Toyota dealership.

Follow Toyota Motor Philippines onFacebook,InstagramandX, and join the ToyotaPH community onViberto get the latest updates on products, services, and promos.

 


Spotlight is BusinessWorld’s sponsored section that allows advertisers to amplify their brand and connect with BusinessWorld’s audience by publishing their stories on the BusinessWorld Web site. 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.

China says it rescued Philippine crew from cargo ship near Scarborough Shoal

THIS PHOTO taken by the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) shows one of the two Chinese coast guard vessels shadowed by the BRP Cabra about 26 nautical miles (48.15 kilometers) east of Scarborough Shoal, Nov. 23, 2025. — PCG

BEIJING — China and the Philippines said on Friday they launched rescue operations after receiving reports of a distressed cargo ship near the Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea which was carrying 21 Philippine crew members.

The Chinese military said 17 crew members were rescued and two of them later died, after a report around 1:30 a.m. on Friday (1730 GMT on Thursday) that a foreign cargo vessel had capsized in waters near the shoal. It dispatched aircraft to conduct searches and the Chinese Coast Guard sent two vessels for rescue efforts.

One person was receiving emergency medical treatment, it said, adding that China’s maritime authorities were organizing additional rescue forces to head to the area.

The Philippine Coast Guard said it deployed two vessels and two aircraft to rescue the Philippine crew from a Singaporean-flagged cargo vessel loaded with iron ore that was en route to southern Chinese city of Yangjiang.

“The PCG Command Center acquired information from the Hong Kong Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre that 10 of the 21 Filipino crew members were rescued by a passing China Coast Guard vessel,” it said.

Scarborough Shoal is one of Asia’s most contested maritime features and a frequent flashpoint in disputes over sovereignty and fishing rights.

On Tuesday, the Chinese military said it organized naval and air force units to drive away a Philippine government aircraft that it accused of “illegally intruding” into airspace over the atoll.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, overlapping the exclusive economic zones of Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Vietnam.— Reuters

Poor student literacy rates seen weighing on PHL economic growth

PHILIPPINE STAR/WALTER BOLLOZOS

By Almira Louise S. MartinezReporter

The Philippines may experience an economic slowdown fueled by the low proficiency levels of students, as literacy rates in both local and international assessments decline.

“A decline in literacy weakens human capital, lowers workers’ ability to adapt to technology, and limits movement into higher-value jobs,” John Paolo R. Rivera, senior research fellow at the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS), told BusinessWorld in a Viber message.

“If this trend is not reversed, the Philippines risks slower long-term growth, weaker competitiveness, and deeper inequality, as more Filipinos remain trapped in low-skill, low-pay work while other countries move up the value chain,” he added.

The foundational learning crisis has been a long-term problem for the country for at least 30 years, according to the Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM 2).

“If you see our curriculum for the past three decades, it’s very ambitious, it’s very aspirational. You go from so many types of literary texts, you study poems, short stories, extended essays,” EDCOM 2 Executive Director Karol Mark R. Yee told BusinessWorld in an interview.

“But (it) turns out our challenge was illiteracy and the lack of ability to comprehend complex texts,” he added. “We need a curriculum that adapts to the learner, and we need to strategize and prioritize because we can’t expect them to learn everything.”

Functionally illiterate Filipinos on the rise
Data from the agency showed that about 24.8 million Filipinos were functionally illiterate in 2025, nearly doubling from the 14.5 million in 1993.

The same concern was evident in the 2024 Functional Literacy, Education, and Mass Media Survey (FLEMMS) report by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), which showed 18.9 million Filipinos aged 10 to 64 were considered functionally illiterate.

Functional illiteracy, as defined by the local statistics agency, is the ability to read, write, and compute, but lacks comprehension skills.

One of the most alarming markers flagged by Mr. Yee is the poor performance of elementary students, specifically in grades 1 to 3, where 85% are struggling to read, and only 15% can read according to their grade level.

“We need to focus on the foundation,” he said. “We really need literacy until grade 3 because without that, you cannot keep moving them up to further grade levels to learn the other complex tasks.”

The SEA-PLM 2024 report
In the 2024 Southeast Asia Primary Learning Metrics (SEA-PLM), Filipino grade 5 students were lagging in reading and mathematics within the region.

The study revealed that only 13% of learners were considered to have reached the minimum reading proficiency, while 14% have reached the minimum proficiency in mathematics.

“If you look at the global data, it is really declining, which is why we’re not the only ones saying there’s a crisis – almost all are facing their own crisis,” Mr. Yee said.

“Except that for us, because this is perhaps the first time that we are confronting this… It is clear to us that we are not alone. There’s a lot of us, and many have already succeeded,” he added.

Economic effects of the learning crisis
The decades-long learning crisis will have lasting implications for the country’s future workforce, Federation of Free Workers President Jose Sonny G. Matula said. “If literacy rates keep falling, the long-term risk is that the economy becomes locked into low value-added work.”

“That means slower productivity growth, weaker ability to absorb technology, reduced competitiveness in higher-skill manufacturing and services, and greater inequality because fewer workers can move up the skills ladder,” he added in a Viber message.

Mr. Matula noted that the industries that could be affected by workers lacking foundational literacy skills include manufacturing and production lines, construction, and OSH-sensitive work, logistics and inventory systems, customer handling and documentation services, and gig work where workers must navigate apps, terms, ratings, and digital pay systems.

“At the macro level, declining literacy undermines human capital – so GDP growth becomes harder to sustain, more fragile, and less inclusive because productivity improvements stall,” he said.

“A major gap is the tendency to treat literacy as a ‘school issue only’ when it is also a labor, economic, and social protection issue,” he added.

Leonardo A. Lanzona, an economics professor at Ateneo De Manila University, said that roughly one year of schooling can lead to a 7% increase in wages. “We can perhaps infer that illiteracy is close to losing 7% of wages per year.”

Analysts underscored that persistent low learning outcomes could lead to significant economic losses.

“Global studies suggest learning losses can cost countries several percentage points of GDP (Gross Domestic Product) over the long run through lower lifetime earnings, weaker productivity, and reduced tax revenues,” Mr. Rivera said.

“For the Philippines, persistent poor literacy could mean billions of pesos in foregone income annually, especially as the economy becomes more digital and skills intensive.”

Citing the data from the World Literacy Foundation in 2023, Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development Director Ser Percival K. Peña-Reyes echoed similar worries, stating that lost earnings, reduced productivity, and limited employability caused by illiteracy could cost $4.72 billion or P277 billion annually.

He added that the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) also warned of a potential $17 trillion in lost lifetime earnings for the current generation globally without intervention.

“These numbers highlight the severe learning crisis in the Philippines, especially post-pandemic,” he told BusinessWorld in a Viber message.

By 2028, Mr. Yee said EDCOM 2 is seeking around 30% improvement in the reading proficiency of grade 3 students, raising the grade-level readers from 43% to 75% within three years.

Reforms underway
“Our proposal is that by 2028, we hope that 75% of all of our grade 3 students are reading at their grade level,” he said. “That will be a very good start because it means that we have seriously undertaken the reforms needed.”

The Department of Education (DepEd) aims to address learning gaps through different education reforms and initiatives, such as the ARAL (Academic Recovery and Accessible Learning) program.

The ARAL program, launched on Sept. 13, is mandated under Republic Act No. 12028 and aims to provide tutorial support for kindergarten to grade 10 learners in reading, mathematics, and science.

In the 2026 budget for education, P8.93 billion will be allocated to the ARAL program to ensure learning gaps are addressed by “adequately trained and fairly compensated” tutors.

Vampire thriller ‘Sinners’ makes Oscars history with record 16 nominations

WARNERBROS.COM

LOS ANGELES — Vampire thriller “Sinners” stormed into Oscars history on Thursday with a record 16 nominations, positioning the Warner Bros film as the frontrunner for best picture and pitting star Michael B. Jordan against Timothee Chalamet and Leonardo DiCaprio as rivals for best actor.

“Sinners,” a celebration of blues music and Black culture in the Segregation-era US South, will face off against “One Battle After Another,” “Frankenstein,” “Hamnet,” “Marty Supreme” and more for the coveted best picture prize.

The previous record for most nominations was 14, a mark hit by “All About Eve,” “Titanic” and “La La Land.”

“Bugonia,” “F1,” “The Secret Agent,” “Sentimental Value” and “Train Dreams” also were nominated for this year’s best picture trophy at the highest honors in the movie business.

Together, the nominations span genres – from historical drama to supernatural horror – and reflect a film academy increasingly willing to reward unconventional storytelling. A handful of nominees also are commercial hits, which could help boost viewership for the March 15th Oscars ceremony.

Mr. Jordan was nominated for best actor for his dual role in “Sinners” as twin brothers who set up a juke joint in 1930s Mississippi, triggering a bloody gangsters vs. vampires showdown that serves as an allegory for segregation and racism. The Warner Bros film also earned nominations for director Ryan Coogler, supporting actor Delroy Lindo, supporting actress Wunmi Mosaku and cinematography, costume design, original screenplay and visual effects.

Mr. Jordan’s competition includes Leonardo DiCaprio in offbeat action movie “One Battle After Another,” which scored 13 nominations, and Timothee Chalamet in table tennis tale “Marty Supreme.”

Paul Thomas Anderson earned a nomination for directing “One Battle After Another,” which features DiCaprio as a one-time radical turned weed-smoking father of a teenager. Co-stars Sean Penn, Benicio Del Toro, and Teyana Taylor were nominated in supporting categories.

“My career has been filled with battles, doubts, and moments of deep uncertainty,” Ms. Taylor said in a statement. “It has felt like one long fight for space, for respect, and for opportunity. But today feels like a gentle reminder that dreams really do survive.”

For best actress, Jessie Buckley was nominated for playing William Shakespeare’s wife, Agnes Hathaway, in “Hamnet,” and Kate Hudson for “Song Sung Blue,” the story of a Neil Diamond tribute band.

Chloe Zhao, one of only three women to win best director in the 97 Oscar ceremonies to date, for “Nomadland,” landed a nomination for “Hamnet.” The film imagines how Shakespeare’s family dealt with the death of their 11-year-old son, whose name was Hamnet. Historians believe Hamnet’s death inspired the playwright to pen the play “Hamlet.”

Paul Mescal, who earned critical praise for his role as Shakespeare, did not receive an Oscar nomination.

COUNTDOWN TO MARCH 15TH CEREMONY
Winners of the gold Oscar statuettes will be chosen by the roughly 10,000 actors, producers, directors and film craftspeople who make up the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Walt Disney’s ABC will broadcast the awards and stream them on Hulu, and comedian Conan O’Brien will host for the second straight year.

Warner Bros Discovery, the studio subject to a bidding war between Netflix and Paramount Skydance, led all studios with 30 nominations.

Netflix has never won best picture despite nominations for “Roma,” “Emilia Perez” and “The Irishman.” It has a chance this year with Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein,” which earned nine nominations, and “Train Dreams.” The streaming service releases its movies in theaters for only a limited time to qualify them for awards consideration.

Global phenomenon “KPop Demon Hunters,” also from Netflix, was nominated for best animated feature and original song for “Golden.”

Two best picture contenders are non-English language films. They are Norwegian family drama “Sentimental Value” and Brazilian political thriller “The Secret Agent.”

“Sentimental Value” star Stellan Skarsgard said the recognition will boost awareness of a film without a multi-million-dollar advertising budget.

“We are depending on the awards and festivals to get it out, so I’m glad it will get out there,” he said. The movie has collected $16 million at global box offices, compared with $368 million for “Sinners” and $206 million for “One Battle After Another.”

The highest-grossing best picture nominee is Brad Pitt racing drama “F1,” with nearly $632 million in worldwide ticket sales. — Reuters

New Google Gemini update enables beginners to create software

GOOGLE AI STUDIO

Multinational technology firm Google announced on Thursday a major update to its artificial intelligence (AI) model, Gemini, where users even beginners, can begin developing software through the new Google AI Studio.

​In a statement, the tech company said that through Google AI Studio, powered by Gemini 3, software development is now heading into an era of “vibe coding.”

​This means that the user can just provide a prompt or idea, while the AI, such as Google AI Studio, does the work by handling the code, visuals, and logic.

​Google said that, basically, even beginners with no programming background can create software with the new update.

​”We’re moving from a world where you have to write every line manually, to a world where you orchestrate,” said Logan Kilpatrick, group product manager at Google DeepMind, the company’s AI research lab.

​”The fundamental skills of critical thinking and creativity are becoming more valuable, not less,” he added.

​Google AI Studio can be accessed through the website aistudio.google.com. Upon visiting the website, there is a chatbox that allows the user to write a prompt for the desired software or application.

​Based on an initial attempt, the indicated prompt generated a working result in minutes, which is aligned with what Google claimed in its statement.

​Multimedia formats such as video, image, and audio inputs can also be uploaded to the platform and integrated into the generated application. Then it can deployed to Google Cloud with a single click, Google said.

The tech giant  said that by removing traditional coding barriers, Google is empowering users such as students, educators, and entrepreneurs to focus on innovation, creativity, and real-world problem solving.

​The Gemini app is being used by over 650 million users per month, according to Google’s report in November.— Edg Adrian A. Eva

US withdraws from the World Health Organization

THE World Health Organization (WHO) logo is seen on the exterior of entry door at WHO Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, on July 19, 2023. — WHO/PIERRE ALBOUY

LONDON — The United States officially left the World Health Organization on Thursday after a year of warnings that doing so would hurt public health in the US and globally, saying its decision reflected failures in the UN health agency’s management of the COVID-19 pandemic.

President Donald Trump gave notice that the US would quit the organization on the first day of his presidency in 2025, via an executive order.

According to a press release from the US Health and State Departments, the US will only work with the WHO in a limited fashion in order to effectuate the withdrawal.

“We have no plans to participate as an observer, and we have no plans of rejoining,” a senior government health official said. The US said it plans to work directly with other countries – rather than through an international organization – on disease surveillance and other public health priorities.

DISPUTE OVER US-OWED FEES
Under US law, it was supposed to give one-year notice and pay all outstanding fees – around $260 million – before departing.

But a US State Department official disputed that the statute contains a condition that any payment needs to be made before withdrawal.

“The American people have paid more than enough,” a State Department spokesperson said in an email earlier on Thursday.

The Department of Health and Human Services said in a document released on Thursday that the government had ended its funding contributions to the agency. Mr. Trump had exercised his authority to pause the future transfer of any US government resources to the WHO because the organization had cost the US trillions of dollars, the HHS spokesperson said.

The US flag had been removed from outside the WHO headquarters in Geneva on Thursday, according to witnesses.

In recent weeks, the US has moved to exit a number of other United Nations organizations, and some fear that Mr. Trump’s recently launched Board of Peace could undermine the UN as a whole.

Several WHO critics have also proposed setting up a new agency to replace the organization, although a proposal document reviewed by the Trump administration last year instead suggested the US push for reforms and American leadership at WHO.

QUICK RETURN UNLIKELY
Over the last year, many global health experts have urged a rethink, including most recently WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

The WHO also said the US has not yet paid the fees it owes for 2024 and 2025. Member states are set to discuss the US departure and how it will be handled at the WHO’s executive board in February, a WHO spokesperson said.

“This is a clear violation of US law,” said Lawrence Gostin, founding director of the O’Neill Institute for Global Health Law at Georgetown University in Washington, a close observer of the WHO. “But Trump is highly likely to get away with it.”

Bill Gates – chair of the Gates Foundation, a major funder of global health initiatives and some of the WHO’s work – told Reuters at Davos that he did not expect the US to reconsider in the short term.

Mr. Gates said he would still advocate for the US to rejoin. “The world needs the World Health Organization,” he said.

WHAT THE DEPARTURE MEANS
The US departure has sparked a financial crisis that has seen the WHO cut its management team in half and scale back work, cutting budgets across the agency. Washington has traditionally been by far the UN health agency’s biggest financial backer, contributing around 18% of its overall funding. The WHO will also shed around a quarter of its staff by the middle of this year.

The agency said it has been working with the US and sharing information in the last year. It was unclear how the collaboration will work going forward.

Global health experts said this posed risks for the US, the WHO, and the world.

“The US withdrawal from WHO could weaken the systems and collaborations the world relies on to detect, prevent, and respond to health threats,” said Kelly Henning, public health program lead at Bloomberg Philanthropies, a US-based non-profit.— Reuters

UN agencies take responsibility for IS camps in Syria after Kurds retreat

REUTERS

BAGHDAD/UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations said on Thursday it was taking management responsibility for vast camps in Syria housing tens of thousands of women and children associated with Islamic State (IS), after the rapid collapse of Kurdish-led forces who guarded them for years.

Iraq, which has begun taking in detainees transferred from prisons in Syria as the Kurds retreat, said it would begin prosecuting them through its criminal justice system, and called on other countries to help take them in.

More than 10,000 members of Islamic State, and tens of thousands of women and children associated with them, have been held for years in about a dozen prisons and detention camps guarded by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Syria’s northeast.

The SDF has rapidly retreated this week after clashes with Syrian government forces, raising concern about security at prisons and humanitarian conditions at the camps.

The United Nations said the SDF withdrew on Tuesday from al-Hol, which along with another camp, Roj, houses 28,000 civilians, mainly women and children who fled Islamic State’s strongholds as the group’s self-proclaimed caliphate collapsed. They include Syrians, Iraqis, and 8,500 nationals of other countries.

Syrian government forces had established a security perimeter around the camp and teams from the UN refugee agency UNHCR and the UN children’s agency UNICEF reached the camp on Wednesday, officials said.

“UNHCR – which has taken over camp management responsibilities – is actively coordinating with the Syrian government to urgently resume the safe delivery of life-saving humanitarian assistance,” senior UN aid official Edem Wosornu told the UN Security Council.

UN officials had not yet been able to enter because “the situation in the camp remains rather tense and volatile with reports of looting and burning,” UN Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters. He said the Syrian government had expressed a willingness to provide security and support for UNHCR and aid groups.

DETAINEES SENT TO IRAQ
The US military said on Tuesday its forces had transferred 150 detainees from Syria to Iraq at the start of an operation that could eventually see up to 7,000 detainees moved out of Syria.

A US official told Reuters on Tuesday that about 200 low-level IS fighters escaped from Syria’s Shaddadi prison, although Syrian government forces had recaptured many of them.

Iraq’s Deputy UN Ambassador Mohammed Sahib Mejid Marzooq told the UN Security Council on Thursday that Iraq was accepting detainees to protect regional and international security, but that other countries should be prepared to help.

“This issue should not be left to become a long-term strategic burden on Iraq alone. The insistence of some states on considering their terrorist nationals a threat to their national security and the refusal to repatriate them is unacceptable,” he said.

Islamic State emerged in Iraq and Syria, and at the height of its power from 2014-2017 held swathes of the two countries, ruling over millions of people. Its “caliphate” eventually collapsed after military campaigns by regional governments and a US-led coalition.

An Iraqi military spokesperson confirmed that Iraq had received a first batch of 150 IS detainees, including Iraqis and foreigners, and said the number of future transfers would depend on security and field assessments. The spokesperson described the detainees as senior figures within the group.

RELATIVES OF SOME DETAINEES WORRIED ABOUT THEIR FATE
Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council said Iraqi courts would take “due legal measures” against detainees once they are handed over and placed in specialized correctional facilities.

“All suspects, regardless of their nationalities or positions within the terrorist organization, are subject exclusively to the authority of the Iraqi judiciary,” the statement said.

Iraqi officials say IS detainees will be separated, with senior figures including foreign nationals to be held at a high‑security detention facility near Baghdad airport previously used by US forces.

The transfers have raised concern among some relatives of IS detainees in Europe. A European woman whose relative joined the group and was detained in Syria said her family was alarmed by reports that prisoners were being moved to Iraq, noting that Iraq has the death penalty.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, she said the family initially hoped changes in control in Syria might bring information on her relative’s fate.

“At least we thought we might finally learn where he is, whether he is alive or sick,” she said. “But when we saw that the prisoners were being taken to Iraq, that frightened us.”

Two Iraqi legal sources said the IS detainees sent from Syria include a mix of nationalities, with Iraqis making up the largest group, alongside Arab fighters from other countries and nationals of Britain, Belgium, France, Germany and Sweden.— Reuters

In Davos debut, Musk says US tariffs make solar power a challenge

ELON MUSK — REUTERS

DAVOS, Switzerland — Elon Musk marked his last-minute Davos debut on Thursday with a critique of US solar tariffs and aggressive targets for Tesla, including humanoid robot sales next year, as well as flagging European approval for self-driving tech within weeks.

After years of describing the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting as elitist, unaccountable and disconnected from ordinary people, the world’s richest man was interviewed by World Economic Forum interim co-chair Larry Fink.

The BlackRock CEO expressed his admiration for Mr. Musk at the start of the wide-ranging discussion, which covered the future of robots and AI, the economic benefits of reusable rockets and Mr. Musk’s childhood fascination with science fiction.

Mr. Musk has become more prominent in recent years, driven by his proximity to US President Donald Trump and his stewardship of firms including Starlink-owner SpaceX, social media platform X, and artificial intelligence startup, xAI.

Breaking ranks with Mr. Trump on renewable energy, Mr. Musk said the United States could produce enough solar power to meet all of its electricity needs, including booming demand from the proliferation of Big Tech’s power-hungry data centers.

“You could take a small corner of Utah, Nevada or New Mexico – a very small percentage of the area of the US – to generate all of the electricity that the US uses,” he added.

“Unfortunately, the tariff barriers for solar are extremely high and that makes the economics of deploying solar artificially high,” Mr. Musk said.

Mr. Trump has been openly critical of clean energy sources while encouraging oil majors to drill more for oil and gas.

His freeze on approvals for major onshore wind and solar projects has left thousands of megawatts of capacity in limbo at a critical time for the US as it rushes to secure enough power to meet soaring AI-driven requirements.

‘WE DON’T WANT TO BE IN TERMINATOR’
The interview did not touch on other major geopolitical and economic themes that have dominated the forum this week, including Mr. Trump’s ambitions for Greenland and Russia’s war in Ukraine, focusing instead on technology and robotics.

The pair joked about aliens, life on Mars, and the “Terminator” film series.

“We need to be very careful with robotics. We don’t want to find ourselves in a James Cameron movie. Love his movies, but we don’t want to be in Terminator, obviously,” said Mr. Musk, referring to the fictional AI system from the “Terminator” films that becomes self-aware and turns on humanity.

Among the highest profile executives speaking at the Swiss mountain resort this week, Mr. Musk predicted robots will eventually outnumber humans, leading to a huge economic boom, and joked about traveling to Mars.

“People ask me do I want to die on Mars, and I’m like: ‘yes, but not on impact’,'” he said towards the end of the 30-minute session, drawing laughter from the audience.

His appearance at Davos comes as governments and regulators from Europe to Asia crackdown on sexually explicit content generated by his xAI chatbot Grok on X, launching probes, imposing bans and demanding safeguards, in a growing global push to curb illegal material.— Reuters

BIR to resume issuance of LoAs within Q1

Finance Secretary Frederick D. Go — COURTESY OF DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE

THE BUREAU of Internal Revenue (BIR) may resume the issuance of letters of authority (LoA) within the first quarter, as the agency seeks to boost revenue collection.

Finance Secretary Frederick D. Go said tax audits should be resumed as the BIR seeks to meet its revised P3.431-trillion revenue target this year.

“We need to resume that. We need that for revenue collection,” he told reporters on Wednesday evening.

An informed source said the BIR will likely resume LoA issuance within the first quarter.

The LoA is a document from the BIR that allows an examiner to inspect taxpayer accounts. It is required before any tax audit can proceed.

Last November, the BIR banned all field audits, including the issuance of LoAs, mission orders and examinations, following misuse allegations by business groups and lawmakers.

“I must tell you that the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) cannot also survive with these letters of authority suspended forever,” Mr. Go said during his speech at the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines event on Jan. 21.

The BIR collected only P3.11 trillion in 2025, missing its full-year target of P3.22 trillion.

Data provided to journalists showed that the BIR has lowered its revenue collection target this year to P3.431 trillion, 4.14% lower than the previous goal of P3.579.9 trillion. However, it is 10.5% higher than the actual collection in 2025.

“When we resume this (LoA) activity, we will reduce the number of departments within the BIR authorized to issue letters of authority, and reduce the number of letters of authority a taxpayer can receive in any given year,” Mr. Go said.

Mr. Go said the BIR will also digitalize and institutionalize a data-driven audit selection process for LoA.

“By leveraging automated risk-based modeling, we are creating a system that minimizes discretion and strengthens accountability. The keyword here is quality assessments, and we will not allow arbitrary or abusive audits,” he said.

The BIR earlier announced preparations ahead of the suspension’s lifting to address concerns of businesses. Business groups have long complained that inconsistent audit practices create uncertainty and expose firms to potential abuse.

BIR Commissioner Charlito Martin R. Mendoza has said the agency earlier established a Technical Working Group Review Committee on Assessment Integrity and Audit Reform following the suspension of tax audits.

The committee is now in the final stages of completing the policy issuances that will guide audit procedures once the freeze is lifted, he said.

Mr. Mendoza had said that once audits resume, taxpayers will have access to an LoA verifier through the BIR’s Chatbot REVIE, and a new policy will limit audits to one LoA per taxpayer.

He added that the agency will also implement a “revalida,” or audit‑the‑auditors system, to tighten accountability among revenue officers.

These reforms are part of the BIR’s five-point priority reform agenda, called BIR DARES, with audit reforms as its top priority.

DARES stands for Digital and Data Transformation, Audit Reform and Accountability, Revenue Collection and Base Protection, Employee Empowerment and Welfare Promotion, and Service Excellence and Stakeholder Engagement.

Meanwhile, the Bureau of Customs’ (BoC) 2026 collection target has also been lowered to P1.003 trillion, 1.07% below the original goal of P1.0138 trillion but 7.34% higher than the P934.4-billion actual collection last year.

Customs Commissioner Ariel F. Nepomuceno earlier said the agency missed its P958.71-billion target in 2025 due to slower import activity amid the rice import ban and the corruption scandal.

In addition, the government raised its nontax revenue collection target by 40.47% to P349.9 billion from its previous target of P249.1 billion.

For 2026, the collection target for other offices is pegged at P38.7 billion. — ARAI

Philippines falling short of its RE targets, says S&P Global

Solar panels are seen in Batangas in this file photo. — PHILIPPINE STAR/NOEL B. PABALATE

By Sheldeen Joy Talavera, Reporter

THE PHILIPPINES may not be able to hit its renewable energy (RE) targets on time due to grid constraints and challenges in securing permits, according to S&P Global.

Vince Heo, director of Asia-Pacific Power and Renewables Research at S&P Global, said that RE’s share in the national power mix may only reach 27% in the next four years and 50% by 2050.

“We are making a forecast. It’s our own view. It’s not based on our base case,” Mr. Heo told reporters on the sidelines of an event in Makati City on Wednesday.

S&P Global’s latest forecast falls short of the Philippines’ target to raise the share of renewables in the power generation mix to 35% by 2030 and 65% by 2050.

RE accounts for 25% of the country’s energy mix.

Coal still dominates the energy mix but the Philippines is trying to move away from fossil fuel and tapping renewables to have a cleaner and more sustainable source of power.

The Department of Energy (DoE) has been launching a series of green energy auctions (GEAs) to entice more developers to harness renewable energy sources, which has so far promised around 20 gigawatts (GW) of potential capacity.

Despite this, Mr. Heo said that there is still “a big gap” between the government targets and the green energy auction.

“They always disclose a very big number but when let’s say the GEA-4 was announced, we discounted the actual capacity to be installed knowing that there will be challenges in meeting all these targets,” he said.

“Let’s say all these solar projects, seven gigawatts are all operational, there’s an issue with dealing with this intermittency from solar and there’s not enough storage in the power grid,” he added.

Mr. Heo said this would likely push the country to rely more on “firm capacity” from coal and gas, which can provide round-the-clock power.

Earlier this year, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines — the country’s sole grid operator — has called for “a more incisive and progressive policies” on the entry of variable renewable energy to ensure grid stability.

At the same time, Mr. Heo pointed out that the cost of financing a project in the Philippines is higher than in other countries.

“I think [the Philippines has] a WACC (weighted average cost of capital) estimation of about 10-11% for solar project which is about 3-4% higher than the other markets and that’s a big portion of your project,” he said.

Mr. Heo said the Philippines has higher country risk, making it difficult for international banks to finance projects in the Philippines.

“A lot of things on the government regulation, uncertainties in the transmission, etc. It’s much more clear and visible in other advanced markets than the Philippines,” he said.

Mr. Heo said the DoE’s termination of RE contracts is “good news,” as it shows the government is committed to transparency.

“I think it’s good that the government came out and announced this news so that everyone knows what’s happened and the consequences of not meeting the timeline,” he said.

The DoE earlier said it has terminated and relinquished 163 RE contracts, which is equivalent to nearly 18 GW of potential capacity, due to the failure of developers to implement these projects.

Also, Mr. Heo said the Philippines is attracting more foreign interest after it opened its RE market to 100% foreign ownership.

“Philippines is an interesting market, but definitely the government lifting the foreign ownership restrictions was a good trigger. We see a lot of foreign developers and investors now interested in the Philippines market,” he said.

Meanwhile, Avril de Torres, deputy executive director at think tank Center for Energy, Ecology, and Development, said that failing to meet the RE targets “is certainly a possible scenario for the Philippines.”

She said that this is due to the government’s policy directions that allow coal, gas, and other “detrimental energy sources” to crowd out renewable energy, rather than be displaced by it.

“The government must ramp up support for distributed and community-based RE initiatives to help take advantage of this untapped potential, such as through incentives and concessional financing,” Ms. De Torres told BusinessWorld.

Rice millers committed to higher farmgate prices for palay — DA

A farmer dries rice grains on a road in Baliuag, Bulacan in this file photo. — PHILIPPINE STAR/KJ ROSALES

By Vonn Andrei E. Villamiel

RICE MILLERS have committed to raising their buying prices for both wet and dry palay (unmilled rice), while importers agreed to an initial shipment of 300,000 metric tons (MT) to arrive by the end of February, ahead of the peak harvest season, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said.

At a briefing on Thursday, Agriculture Assistant Secretary Arnel V. De Mesa said the commitment followed consultations by the DA with rice millers and importers, amid the early start of the dry-season harvest.

Mr. De Mesa said millers agreed to buy unmilled grain at a minimum of P17 per kilo for wet palay and P21 per kilo for dry palay, particularly in major rice-producing provinces in Northern and Central Luzon.

“The millers committed that they will buy at that price. Hopefully, it will be maintained until the end of the harvest season in April,” he said in mixed English and Filipino.

The higher farmgate price is expected to provide much-needed support to farmers, as palay prices have dropped over the past year.

Preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority showed that the national average farmgate price of dry palay in 2025 was P17.70 per kilo, down 24.62% from P23.48 a year earlier.

Following consultations with importers, the DA also identified an initial import volume of about 300,000 MT through the end of February, subject to further review based on market conditions.

“The volume needs to arrive on or before the end of February, so that it will not coincide with peak harvest in March and April,” Mr. De Mesa said.

According to guidelines issued by the Bureau of Plant Industry, rice shipments arriving beyond the Feb. 28 deadline will be returned to the source country at the expense of the importer.

Data from the bureau showed that 178,397 MT of imported rice arrived in the country from Jan. 1 to 15, more than double the 71,772 MT initially projected for the period.

Mr. De Mesa said the DA will study whether to reimpose an import ban or further limit import volumes once the peak harvest season begins in March.

He added that the tariff rate on imported rice remains at 15%, pending an official announcement from the agency.

In a separate statement, the DA said rice tariffs will not be raised until February and that the final details will be “carefully managed to avoid unnecessary market speculation.”

Under the implementing guidelines of Executive Order No. 105, the rice tariff rate for January was scheduled to be announced by Jan. 15, based on December prices of Vietnam 5% broken rice, and will remain in effect until May 15.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT