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Driver’s license contract halted

A QUEZON CITY court has stopped the Land Transportation Office (LTO) from awarding the supply contract for driver’s license cards to the winning bidder. 

“I see this as a temporary setback,” LTO Chief Vigor D. Mendoza II told a news briefing in Filipino on Thursday. He vowed to clear up the matter at the next court hearing on Aug. 22 so the LTO could resolve the shortage in driver’s license cards. 

“The cessation in the delivery of the cards will cause a delay, instead of us being able to address the problem now,” Mr. Mendoza said. “So, we will have to resort to temporary measures like extending the validity of existing licenses.” 

The trial court issued the 20-day restraining order based on a petition filed by disqualified bidder Allcard, Inc. Named respondents in the lawsuit were the LTO, the bids and awards committee of the Transportation department and rival Banner Plasticard, Inc., which won the P219.24-million contract to supply materials for 5.2 million driver’s licenses. 

AllCard said it was disqualified even if it had offered the lowest bid. – Justine Irish D. Tabile

No polls for Teves post 

BW FILE PHOTO

THE HOUSE of Representatives will not seek a special election for the Negros Oriental post vacated by former congressman Arnolfo A. Teves, Jr. after his expulsion from Congress, the chamber’s secretary general said on Thursday.  

“A special election may be difficult [to conduct] because of the time constraints,” House Secretary General Reginald S. Velasco told a media briefing.  

He pointed out that the Commission on Elections (Comelec) is already busy preparing for the nationwide Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections in October as well the midterm elections in 2025.  

“We have also informed Comelec officially that there’s a decision from the House on Mr. Arnolfo Teves, Jr., so we will be awaiting their response whether they will call for special election or just leave it at that,” Mr. Velasco said. 

In past instances, the House Speaker either assumes the vacant post as “caretaker” or assigns another member of the chamber to take on the responsibility. 

“I’m sure there’s already a budget for the district [for next year.] That’s the duty of the caretaker, to see that these projects are appropriated and implemented,” said Mr. Velasco. 

Congressmen on Wednesday voted to expel Mr. Teves for his continued absence in Congress and “indecent behavior” shown on social media. Murder charges brought up against him over three killings in his province and his being tagged as a “terrorist” by the government did not help his cause. 

Mr. Teves’ office has received a copy of the House Ethics and Privileges’ Committee Report No. 717 which the House adopted to expel him, according to Mr. Velasco.  

However, the House leadership is yet to decide on who will be the caretaker of the third district of Negros Oriental, which Mr. Teves previously served. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Clarkson, Gilas face Ivory Coast in a close-door tune-up game

JORDAN CLARKSON — FIBA

IT’S TIME for Jordan Clarkson and Gilas Pilipinas to play ball against fellow FIBA World Cup (WC)-gearing squads.

The Nationals face Ivory Coast tonight in a closed-door tune-up at the PhilSports Arena that serves as Mr. Clarkson’s first action gig since entering camp while kicking off Gilas’ three-game final test before Friday’s WC opening.

After the Ivorians, the Filipino dribblers are booked for similar pre-tournament duels with Montenegro and Mexico on Sunday and Monday, respectively.

Gilas coach Chot Reyes said it is by design that Mr. Clarkson and Co. are tackling against the three squads from different continents a few days before their actual battle against the Dominican Republic, Angola and Italy.

“The way we structured the tune-up games is a replica of the teams that we’re going to play — European, African and Latin/South American teams,” Mr. Reyes said recently in The Game on One Sports.

“Those are the teams we’re going to face in the actual World Cup so we made sure that we mimic the kind of competition. And in fact, even the schedule, we tried to make it as close as possible to what we’ll actually face in the World Cup.”

Ivory Coast, which will compete in Group G in the Jakarta side of the competition, will stand in for its African rival, Angola. Europe’s Montenegro and Americas’ Mexico, which are bracketed together in Group D at the Mall of Asia (MOA) Arena, will approximate the styles of the Italians and the Dominicans, respectively.

Gilas aims to make the most of the three pre-WC matches to squeeze in valuable playtime for Mr. Clarkson and his 15 teammates in the last seven days before tipoff.

It may also be the last chance of the pool members to pitch for their inclusion in the Final 12.

“These games will solidify the coaches’ mind on the Final 12,” said Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas President Al Panlilio.

Gilas’ Dirty Dozen will be named on or before Wednesday, the Fiba’s final deadline for submission of rosters in the Aug. 25 to Sept. 10 basketball showpiece.

First up for the Nationals are Karl Anthony Towns and the Dominican Republic on Friday at the Philippine Arena followed by Angola on the 27th and Italy on the 29th, both at the Smart Araneta Coliseum. — Olmin Leyba

ASEAN youth archery a boom for the sport in the region

NORBERT-BRAUN-UNSPLASH

CEBU CITY — World Archery Philippines President Clint Aranas is hoping the 1st ASEAN Youth Championships that unfolded at the Dynamic Herb Sports Complex here would blaze the trail for the sport to boom in the region.

“We pray that this initial tournament will spark our Southeast Asian and Asian neighbors in organizing more international youth competitions in both the recurve and compound disciplines so we can scout our promising athletes at an early age and keep them in the sport,” said Mr. Aranas in a statement.

“This event will test the capabilities of our young archers as they prepare for the big international events next year.

“As iron sharpens iron, World Archery Philippines is optimistic that this initiative will hasten the development of our promising young archers in Southeast Asia and Asia, encouraging them to continue and compete in the dynamic sport we all love,” he added.

Mr. Aranas said the meet, which is supported by the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC), Cebu City government and sports commission, should help smoothen the transition of an aspiring archer into a potential world-class talent.

“That close to 300 archers from Chinese-Taipei, India, Indonesia, Singapore, United Arab Emirates and the Philippines are here shows the growing need for competitions at the age group level so there can be a smooth transition among our budding archers through the ranks until they reach senior play,” said Mr. Aranas.

Also gracing the inaugurals were Southeast Asia Archery Federation President Sanguan Kosavinta of Thailand, former World Archery Asia secretary-general Dr. Sungho Um of South Korea, host Cebu City Mayor Mike Rama and councilor Dondon Hontiveros and PSC commissioner Edward Hayco.

The country was spearheaded by Palarong Pambansa six-gold medal winner Naina Dominique Tagle, Miel Cipriano, Jonathan Reaport of recurve and Alon Jucutan and Gwyneth Garcia of compound as action went underway yesterday in the Under-10, U15, U18 and U21 age groups in both boys and girls divisions backed by Benel Archery, Post Science Corp., Tangent and Fair Deal Enterprises. — Joey Villar

Philippine Azkals call big guns for their training camp and three friendlies

NEIL ETHERIDGE — TWITTER.COM/NEIL38ETHERIDGE

THE PHILIPPINE Azkals have called up the big guns led by top custodian Neil Etheridge for their training camp and three friendlies next month preparatory to the coming FIFA World Cup Qualifiers.

Mr. Etheridge, who plays for Birmingham in the English Football League, led 24 veterans and new faces tapped for the duel with Chinese Taipei in Kaohsiung on Sept. 8 and Afghanistan on Sept. 12 in Manila.

Also summoned to fly from Europe are Gerrit Holtmann of Turkish side Antalyaspor, Santiago Rublico of Atletico de Madrid, Michael Kempter of Grasshopper Club Zurich, Jens Rasmussen of Danish team Hobro IK and John Patrick Strauss and Sandro Reyes of German clubs FC Hansa Rostock and SpVgg Greuther Furth II, respectively.

Vets Manny and Mike Ott, Daisuke Sato, Patrick Reichelt, Patrick Deyto, OJ Porteria, Kevin Ingreso, Amani Aguinaldo, Carli de Murga and Spanish-born Bienvenido Marañon, who ply their trade in Southeast Asian leagues, are joining the endeavor as well.

Rounding out the roster are Kevin Ray Hansen, Jesse Curran, Dylan de Bruycker, Christian Rontini, Joshua Grommen, Enrique Linares and Oskari Kekkonen.

The Azkals are out to bring back the luster they once enjoyed as they try to follow in the footsteps of the Filipinas women’s team, which made history and won a game in their FIFA Women’s Cup debut last month.

The Pinoy booters’ road to the World Cup begins in November with their stint in the second round of the Asian Qualifiers versus Iraq, Vietnam and the winner of the Round 1 duel between Indonesia and Brunei Darussalam. — Olmin Leyba

Team Lakay sees two rising MMA top breeds

BAGUIO CITY — Two rising star fighters of Team Lakay, are now carving out their names into the world of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), dreaming to bring glory to their families and the country.

Team Lakay coach Mark Sangiao believes Carlos Alvarez and Carlo Von Bumina-ang’s time has finally arrived. This after the impressive victories the two displayed in their recent fights, he beamed. For the past years, Messrs. Alvarez and Bumina-ang have been under the limelight while honing their MMA skills.

With the exit of some of Team Lakay’s former world champions, both Messrs. Alvarez and Bumina-ang are now in the position to carry the torch for the Benguet-based squad and pave their own paths too.

Mr. Bumina-ang recently showcased to the world what he is capable of after dispatching Reza Saedi less than a minute in his debut at ONE Friday Fights 27 at the Lumpinee Boxing Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand. The multi-medalled SEA Games athlete returned to MMA and needed only 52 seconds to finish off the Iranian wrestler with his lethal striking.

A booming left straight rocked Mr. Saedi, and Mr. Bumina-ang wasted no time by following it up with a barrage of straights, uppercuts and knees, forcing referee Herb Dean to stop the fight.

Mr. Alvarez meanwhile had two impressive victories since turning professional this year, after scoring a second-round technical knockout over Reza Abasi in his debut last April 21 at Lumpinee Stadium in Bangkok.      

The Filipino worked to get a submission after throwing knees to the head but was unsuccessful but in round two, he got the full mount that allowed him to unleash vicious ground and pound that drew a cut on the side of Mr. Abasi’s left eye.

In his second outing, Mr. Alvarez also scored an impressive second-round submission win over Sadegh Ghasemi in July also at the Lumpinee Boxing Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand. In just the 1:23 of the second frame, Mr. Alvarez set Ghasemi up for a D’Arce choke. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Commissioner’s Cup

It’s a testament to how much the Liberty and Aces wanted to win that they brought jitters with them in the Commissioner’s Cup final the other day. The first three and a half minutes of the match didn’t seem like it featured the best of the best of the Women’s National Basketball Association; the 8,967-strong crowd was treated to 12 botched shots, two missed free throws, and two turnovers — with the score standing 0-0 all that time. Little wonder, then, that all and sundry heaved a sigh of relief when reigning Most Valuable Player awardee A’ja Wilson finally ended the drought with two charities, followed by a three-point basket courtesy of chief rival Breanna Stewart.

The Liberty and Aces would pick up on their shooting the rest of the way, albeit marginally, and nowhere near their pacesetting percentages from the field and stripe. Perhaps it was because, apart from the hardware, relatively major moolah was on the line: the winners stood to receive $30,000 each, thrice more than the prizes for the runners-up. Imagine Stewart hitting the side of the backboard on a corner three attempt, the easiest from anywhere behind the arc; she would wind up with a dreadful four-of-14 clip. Wilson was no better at two of 10, including one that missed the hoop entirely from point-blank range.

Nonetheless, there can be no doubting the desire of the Liberty and Aces. And though uglyball was evident for much of the set-to, it still had more than enough highlights for discerning fans. Reserve Marine Johannes was particularly transcendent, coming up with five treys and a midrange shot that carried a high degree of difficulty. There was likewise Three-Point Contest champion Sabrina Ionescu, who picked up steam in the crunch to seal the outcome. Which is to say stats are significant, but nothing beats the eye test when it comes to proving mettle under pressure.

When the battlesmoke cleared, the Liberty hoisted the trophy and celebrated the victory. After likewise making mincemeat of the Aces in their immediate past encounter, they have the bragging rights — that is, until they need to prove their worth anew when they meet their would-be foils again tomorrow. They’re confident of building on their success, though; they’re rounding into form, with their continually developing chemistry further underscoring their depth. And it’s no coincidence that their surge dovetails with Jonquel Jones’ own; slowed by a preseason injury, she’s back in the groove and proving true to prognoses on both ends of the court.

For the Liberty and the Aces, the real reckoning will come at the end of the 2023 campaign. And that’s assuming they will be able to carve a path to the title series. In the interim, they’ve got a lot of work to be done — starting tomorrow, when they engage in a staredown once more.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Close to half of Americans favor TikTok ban — poll

REUTERS

WASHINGTON — Close to half of American adults support a ban on the Chinese-owned social media app TikTok, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos survey that also asked questions about national security concerns and China.

TikTok, owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance and used by tens of millions of Americans, has faced calls from US lawmakers for a nationwide ban over concerns about possible Chinese government influence.

Some 47% of respondents to the two-day poll, which concluded on Tuesday, said they at least somewhat supported “banning the social media application, TikTok, from use in the United States,” while 36% opposed a ban and 17% said they didn’t know.

Fifty-eight percent of Republicans favored a ban, compared to 47% of Democrats, the poll showed.

The survey also revealed deep worries among Americans about China’s global influence at a time when US-China relations have fallen to their lowest point in decades.

The online Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted nationwide, collecting responses from 1,005 adults, including 443 Democrats and 346 Republicans. It had a credibility interval, a measure of precision, of about 4 percentage points in either direction.

FBI Director Christopher Wray said in March that China’s government could use TikTok to control software on millions of devices and drive narratives to divide Americans, adding that the app “screams” of national security concerns.

Other top US intelligence officials, including CIA Director William Burns, also have said TikTok poses a threat.

TikTok said in a statement that more than 150 million Americans, including 5 million US businesses, actively use TikTok to earn a living, engage in the classroom, and find community.

“We’ve taken unprecedented actions to safeguard protected US user data, and we will continue working to build a safe, secure, and inclusive platform to ensure the positive experience of our users in every corner of the country,” a TikTok spokesperson said.

Efforts to give the Biden administration new powers to ban TikTok have stalled in Congress. Last month US lawmakers said they were considering changes to address concerns about the bill.

Still, the issue could become a focus for Republicans in the 2024 US presidential campaign, with some candidates backing a TikTok ban.

Former President Donald Trump in 2020 sought to bar new downloads of TikTok but a series of court decisions blocked the ban from taking effect.

Florida governor and presidential candidate Ron DeSantis has said he favors some form of national ban on the app. — Reuters

German cabinet OK’s landmark bill over legal cannabis use

REUTERS

BERLIN — Germany’s cabinet passed a contentious bill on Wednesday to legalize recreational marijuana use and cultivation, one of the most liberal cannabis laws in Europe that could potentially provide further momentum for a similar worldwide trend.

The legislation, which still has to pass parliament, would allow adults to possess up to 25 grams (0.88 oz) of the drug, grow a maximum of three plants, or acquire weed as associates ofnon-profit cannabis clubs.

The center-left government of Chancellor Olaf Scholz hopes the law will curb the black market, protect consumers against contaminated marijuana and reduce drug-related crime.

A key pillar of the plan, which removes the taboo around cannabis use, is also a campaign to raise awareness about the risks, which should ultimately curb consumption, said Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, of Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD).

Such a campaign would not gain the same level of attention if it were introduced without a change in the law, he said.

“With the current procedures we could not seriously protect children and young people, the topic has been made a taboo,” Mr. Lauterbach told a news conference in Berlin to present the law.

“We have rising, problematic consumption, we couldn’t simply allow this to go on,” he said. “So this is an important turning point in our drug policy.”

The number of adults in Germany aged between 18 and 25 years old that consumed cannabis at least once nearly doubled in 2021 from the previous decade to 25%, according to the health ministry.

Young adults are considered more vulnerable to the health risks of cannabis. The new legislation will limit the amount of cannabis young adults can buy to 30 grams a month, compared to 50 grams for older adults.

CRITICISM FROM BOTH SIDES
Opposition to the legislation is fierce, with conservative policymakers in particular warning that it will encourage marijuana use and that the new legislation will create even more work for authorities.

“This law will be linked to a complete loss of control,” Armin Schuster, conservative interior minister for the state of Saxony, told media group RND.

A U.N. narcotics watchdog said in March moves by governments to legalize the recreational use of marijuana have led to increased consumption and cannabis-related health problems.

Mr. Lauterbach said Germany had learned from other countries’ mistakes, however.

Mr. Scholz’s government had already watered down original plans to allow the widespread sale of cannabis in licensed shops after consultations with Brussels.

Instead, it said would launch a pilot project for a small number of licensed shops in some regions to test the effects of a commercial supply chain of recreational cannabis over five years. For that, it will need to present separate legislation in a second phase.

Similar such projects already exist or are planned in the Netherlands and Switzerland.

Many countries in Europe have already legalized cannabis for limited medicinal purposes, including Germany since 2017. Others have decriminalized its general use.

Malta became the first European country to allow limited cultivation and possession of cannabis for personal use in late 2021. Germany would become the first major European country to do so.

The legislation presented on Wednesday includes strict rules for growing weed — cannabis clubs of up to 500 associates must have burglar-proof doors and windows, with greenhouses fenced off. Associates will not be allowed to smoke weed at the clubs or in the vicinity of schools, nurseries, playgrounds or sports grounds.

Germany’s hemp association said the rules were “unrealistic” and the black market could only truly be fought with the introduction of cannabis sales in shops. — Reuters

Singapore arrests 10 foreigners, seizes S$1-B assets in money laundering probe

NAMCHA PH-UNSPLASH

SINGAPORE — Singapore police have arrested 10 foreigners for alleged money laundering and forgery offences, in a case involving about S$1 billion ($737 million) of cash, properties, luxury cars and other assets.

The police conducted simultaneous raids on Tuesday across the city-state to arrest the suspects, their statement said on Wednesday.

Prohibition of disposal orders were issued against 94 properties and 50 vehicles, with a total estimated value of more than S$815 million.

Other seizures included bank accounts, cash, luxury bags, jewelry, watches, electronic devices and some documents with information on virtual assets.

The foreigners were aged between 31 and 44, and their nationalities include Chinese, Turkish, Cypriot, Cambodian and Ni-Vanuatu, Singapore police said.

In a separate statement, the Singapore central bank said it has been “in touch with the financial institutions (FIs) where the potentially tainted funds have been identified. Supervisory engagements with these FIs are ongoing”, without naming the FIs. — Reuters

Meet Ghana’s online romance scammers

REUTERS

ACCRA — As a teenager, Kasim was the star striker of his school’s football team in Ghana, earning him the moniker Starflex. But the 22-year-old has since abandoned both his studies and football for a vocation that keeps him up at night: finding and luring victims into online romance scams.

In one bedroom in Accra, Starflex and his two friends Suleiman, 19, and Patrick, 18, huddle over their phones and laptops, exchanging intimate messages with “pals”, their code name for potential victims they meet on dating sites.

To bait a suitor, they comb Facebook and Instagram, swiping photos of influencers, actresses and adult film actors to create fake accounts on dating sites.

“We use photos or videos of you shopping, cooking or hanging out with friends to keep up the format,” Starflex told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, referring to their playbook to trap and defraud victims globally.

Starflex and his sidekicks are known as the Sakawa boys – meaning ‘putting inside’ in the Hausa language, a young generation of school drops-outs in Ghana who dabble in identity theft and romance scams on social media.

Their activities can be traced to the Yahoo boys, or fraudsters in Nigeria. Ghana’s Cyber Security Authority estimates victims have lost 49.5 million Ghanaian cedi ($4.5 million) to identity theft schemes since the beginning of the year.

Starflex is posing as Joan, a 23-year-old masters’ student from Turkey, while chatting with an American realtor he befriended on online dating site Zoosk.

Joan’s boyfriend believes her parents died of COVID-19 and has been convinced to cover her $5,000 tuition lest she get deported.

“He sends me $500 for my monthly upkeep from the US. What work in Ghana will pay me $50 a day?” Starflex said, grinning.

When he cashes the money through his crypto wallet in Ghana, Starflex said he shares the proceeds with his crew of keyboard warriors running shifts to keep the web of lies.

Such scams are becoming increasingly common in Ghana due to persistent poverty and a youth unemployment rate of more than 30%, while the country fights its way out of a generational economic crisis.

“If you pick eight out of every 10 children in any of the slums in Greater Accra, they are into internet fraud,” said Kwadwo Agyemam, an IT teacher in a public school in Accra, the capital.

“Just go through their phone, and you’ll see those nude pictures they’re using to entice men online.”

GRINDING POVERTY
Starflex and Suleiman grew up in New Town, an impoverished area of Greater Accra. Both said economic hardship forced them to fend for themselves as teenagers and turn to scamming.

When his father became sick following a stroke, and his mother, a petty trader, could no longer put food on the table, Suleiman said Starflex introduced him to the criminal trade.

“To come to school was hard … there was no money for breakfast or lunch,” Suleiman said. “He said he was getting paid by white men. I could make money that way, too,” he added, pointing at Starflex.

Agyemam said students who should be in classes can be found chatting with foreigners in internet cafes, hoping to extort cash.

In July, the government launched a national school program to educate students about social media use and cyber risks.

Earlier this year Ghana and Nigeria pledged to ramp up efforts in tackling transborder crime, especially cybercrimes such as online scams.

Both countries have cyber laws and regularly investigate offences, but prosecutions are rare, said forensic and internet litigation expert Mike Roberts, who founded Rexxfield, a firm specializing in cybercrime investigations.

“The biggest disincentive to fraud is justice. If you feel you’re not going to get caught defrauding others, you won’t stop,” Roberts said.

SCAM TACTICS
In 2022 the Cyber Security Authority said identity theft accounted for most reported cases of online fraud, attributing the trend to the ease of creating social media accounts.

The agency did not respond to a request for comment.

Sean Gallagher, a researcher at Sophos X-Ops, a British cybersecurity firm, said West African criminals are borrowing techniques from Chinese romance scams, including using crypto accounts to send money.

“There’s a marketplace to purchase hacked Facebook and Twitter accounts, and you can buy these with crypto or cash. Then some people create a full persona using clip art or photos from other social media accounts,” Gallagher explained.

“Then people are paid to generate the content for that profile. And you get to the 15 and 16-year-olds in West Africa doing the keyboard work and pretending to be this person. It’s an industrial-level operation,” he added.

Roberts said conmen are becoming more brazen, teaching victims to open crypto accounts to bypass scrutiny from banking institutions.

Single mother-of one Tina, who owns a medical billing company in New York state, said she met a gemmologist who called himself Ray Dixon on Tinder in 2019.

Over two years, her online boyfriend swindled her of $200,000, claiming he needed money for plane tickets, rent and upkeep, among other reasons.

“I borrowed from friends, my bank, and I only stopped sending money when I had nothing left,” Tina, 57, said in a video interview.

Frequent requests for money prompted her to search for his name online. “It didn’t come up at first, but I later found it on a Turkish dating site,” Tina said, adding that when she confronted him, he denied faking his identity.

Tina said she contacted Roberts – whose company works with law enforcement and victims to investigate and trace crypto scams to help her recover her money.

Roberts said his team of investigators tracked Tina’s scammers to criminal networks in Ghana.

When he thinks of women like Tina, Suleiman says he hates himself.

He has decided to quit scamming within a year, and is putting aside $200 monthly to pay his way through college.

“I have no option for now. I have to care for my sick dad and help my mum,” he said. – Thomson Reuters Foundation

The Thomson Reuters Foundation is the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters.

Indonesian’s Rebricks, turns plastic into bricks

NICK FEWINGS-UNSPLASH

JAKARTA — Ovy Sabrina fights plastic waste in Indonesia by spreading noodle packets, coffee sachets, straws and other trash around the sprawling archipelago — entombed in eco-friendly bricks.

Her family knows not to stand in her way on environmental issues, especially five years ago when she came up with the idea of making bricks using single-use plastic to counter pollution and the capital Jakarta’s high-emissions building boom.

Using machinery from her family’s conventional brick factory and tapping into her zero-waste lifestyle, Ms. Sabrina and her friend Novita Tan launched their green construction materials startup Rebricks in 2018.

“My family usually tell me to go ahead and do whatever I want. If people disagree with me, I will do it,” said the 37-year-old, who regularly locks horns with her siblings over sorting household waste and recycling in their shared home.

“’Just do it’ is what we always tell people who want to get into recycling initiatives.”

With more than half the region’s population living in cities and rising, Asia’s urban population is soaring as wealth increases and people seek better lives — putting huge pressure on infrastructure, public services and affordable housing.

Bustling Jakarta, which has 10 million inhabitants, is dotted with construction sites that emit high levels of greenhouse gases, working on new train lines, malls, leisure complexes, apartments and offices.

But on the ground, residents vie with street-hawkers for space, and struggle with the city’s notorious traffic jams, regular flooding and choking air pollution.

As Indonesia’s capital grows, waste collection and recycling services have struggled to keep pace.

Single-use plastics — such as drinking straws, confectionery packets, plastic bags and coffee sachets — are usually sent to already full landfill sites, burned by informal trash collectors, or simply thrown into the city’s canals.

Looking to tackle Indonesia’s twin challenges of trash and polluting urban growth, Rebricks made a breakthrough in late 2019 by creating a brick using single-use plastic waste that meets industry standards.

The company mixes volcanic ash, mountain stones, plastic waste donated from households across Indonesia, and cement to make its bricks, which do not contain sand like regular ones.

It supplies charities and other groups that build affordable homes and sanitation buildings for poorer communities.

The firm’s prices are competitive, while its bricks — long-lasting and strong as conventional bricks — are non-combustible, and the paving stones it also makes do not get slippery when wet, Sabrina said.

Rebricks’ website says it has production capacity of 100 sq meters (1,076 sq ft) a day.

But Sabrina declined to give details of sales, adding that production is limited by the company’s basic brick-making technique and labor-intensive machinery, with plastic waste donations often outstripping demand for bricks.

The startup — which uses social media to appeal for plastic waste — is in talks with the government to supply materials for subsidized housing projects.

“As a developing country, it’s impossible for us to say ‘don’t develop’,” said Sabrina.

“Development will keep on going, but at least if you recycle waste at the same time, it can help.”

CONSTRUCTION, BUILDINGS PART OF CLIMATE SOLUTION
The buildings and construction sector is responsible for about 40% of global energy-related emissions — and reducing this will be vital for countries to meet their international climate and environmental pledges, industry experts said.

About half of the sector’s emissions come from construction and the rest from how buildings are heated or cooled, and powered, once in use.

The industry also accounts for 50% of all extracted materials, while cement production alone is responsible for 7% of global carbon emissions, said Lea Ranalder, part of the climate change team at UN-Habitat, a U.N. agency that promotes sustainable human settlements.

Less than 9% of the materials consumed by the sector are circular — recycled or re-used — leading to a “we build, we throw away” mentality, she noted.

“The buildings and construction industry is the overlooked giant when we talk about climate change and how we tackle climate change,” she said.

“Without really tackling the sector, when we talk about the climate crisis, we will not get there.”

Reforming the fragmented industry is complex. And many developers in Asia are focused on profits and affordability, with the perception that greener designs and building materials are expensive, industry experts said.

Constructing greener buildings pushes costs up by 3%-5% depending on the type of building, said Jonathan Duwyn, a buildings and construction expert at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

But over time, it becomes cheaper as the buildings cost less to run, he said, adding that “overall the cost is not much higher and the more we do it, the costs will go down”.

In addition, training the industry’s workforce — and ensuring that universities and architecture schools promote sustainability — is a huge opportunity to create well-paid green jobs, experts said.

“If governments make a commitment to invest and expand green building developments, this will incentivise construction workers to pursue these types of skills, knowing that there will be guaranteed work for them in the future,” said Nick Jeffries of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, which advocates for circular economies.

MIX TRADITIONAL AND MODERN FOR GREENER CITIES
Indonesian architect Andi Subagio’s next project will be a pedestrian plaza outside one of Jakarta’s new mass rapid transit stations.

Sitting in a Jakarta restaurant he designed and built using Rebricks materials, Mr. Subagio — who is passionate about making his city more sustainable — said the eatery makes better use of natural ventilation rather than installing air conditioning.

The 33-year-old sees great benefits in combining both modern and traditional designs and building materials, adding that towering structures built with steel, concrete and glass are a relatively new trend.

“Traditional (designs) are where we can learn how to live more sustainably,” said Mr. Subagio, founder of SASO architecture studio.

UNEP’s Duwyn also said the industry should use fewer new materials in construction, and do more to extend the lifespan of existing buildings. Natural ventilation, using nature and adding shade are also vital to help cooling in a warmer world, he said.

For construction materials, he pointed to bio-based waste for insulation and sustainably logged wood as options.

Socially, however, it is often difficult to revive older technologies because many people feel that living in a modern concrete building signals success in life, he added.

Asia is home to some of the fastest-growing construction markets, and projects are picking up pace after a pause during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There are plenty of green buildings being built but their construction is outpaced by less well-planned, less sustainably sourced, less well-designed projects at a variety of scales,” said Eli Elinoff, a lecturer in cultural anthropology at the Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington.

Back in Jakarta, entrepreneur Ms. Sabrina said larger developers she has spoken to are often more focused on costs than the environment.

Such developers, which may build a thousand new homes for example, usually have preferred vendors for materials and often view trying something new as risky, she said.

Undeterred, Ms. Sabrina’s company plans to open a second factory in Central Java and another on the resort island of Bali this year — and she hopes to start teaching awareness of plastic waste in schools next year.

“Maybe we can replicate this on smaller islands in Indonesia, so we can create bigger impact,” she said. — Reuters