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PHL Sports Commission summit tackles religion, ethics and sports

RELIGION, ethics, and sports take center stage at the 19th session of the National Sports Summit 2021 (NSS) on Wednesday with redemptorist brother and renowned author Br. Carlito “Karl” Gaspar CSsR.

Mr. Gaspar, a Doctor of Humanities at Xavier University, will spotlight the relationship of sports and religion, and its most pronounced impact on the philosophy of modern sport through the various beliefs across nations.

The Davao City native also gives a glimpse on new developments that helped create a shift which brought sports and religious practices together, and the development of the ethical value in promoting sports especially in terms of promoting fair play, sportsmanship while building the moral character and leadership of youth.

“This is a good topic for the Summit, as it will give us a better understanding of how sports and religion can peacefully coexist with each other and be tools for development and unity,” expressed Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) Chairman William Ramirez.

Mr. Gaspar has written more than 20 books on ethnographic studies of Indigenous People, peace-building in Mindanao, and Mindanao history and theological discourses. His book Manobo Dreams in Arakan won the National Book Award for Social Sciences in 2013.

He was also awarded the Lifetime Achievement award as author by the Cardinal Sin Catholic Mass Media Awards, and was given the Parangal ng Sambayanan award by Ateneo de Manila University, and the Datu Bago Award by Davao City in 2017.

Gilas to leave for FIBA Olympic Qualifying on June 24

FRESH from a successful campaign in the third and final window of the Asia Cup Qualifiers, Gilas Pilipinas sets forth for the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament this week, leaving on June 24 to play in the six-day competition in Serbia. — FIBA

GILAS Pilipinas sets forth for the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) this week, leaving on June 24 to play in the six-day competition in Belgrade, Serbia.

Fresh from a successful campaign in the third and final window of the Asia Cup Qualifiers where it went 3-0 to complete a sweep of its six-game assignment in the pandemic-disrupted tournament, the all-cadet Gilas squad now focuses its attention on the OQT where it hopes to gain added experience for its development apart from making a run for the lone Olympic spot up for grabs.

The Philippines earned a spot in the Olympic qualifiers after New Zealand withdrew from various FIBA tournaments, including the OQT, over coronavirus-related concerns.

Gilas is lumped in Group A along with the Dominican Republic and Serbia. Group B, meanwhile, has Puerto Rico, Italy, and Senegal.

For the OQT, the Tab Baldwin-coached national squad will be bringing the same team that saw action in the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers in a “bubble” tournament in Pampanga last week, save for two to three players so as to adhere to the 12-man lineup requirement in effect.

Players who saw action in the Asia Cup Qualifiers were Dwight Ramos, Justine Baltazar, SJ Belangel, RJ Abarrientos, Will Navarro, Angelo Kouame, Mike Nieto, Isaac Go, Jordan Heading, Carl Tamayo, Geo Chiu, Kai Sotto, Jaydee Tungcab and Lebron Lopez.

Javi Gomez De Liaño, who played in Gilas’ game against Indonesia, has already been cut for the upcoming tournament because of quad injury.

Mr. Baldwin said for the OQT, a rough road awaits them considering the level of play of the other teams. But they are bent on staying the course as part of their push for continued collective improvement.

For former national athlete and now Philippine Sports Commission commissioner Ramon Fernandez, the young Gilas squad’s stint in the Serbia OQT should serve it in good stead.

“They did a good job in the Asia Cup qualifiers, and congratulations to them. Now, it’s about taking it to the next level. I think the SBP (Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas) made a good decision in allowing these young players to play and represent the country for their long-term development,” said Mr. Fernandez, a four-time Philippine Basketball Association most valuable player, during his session on the online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum on Tuesday.

Gilas returned to training on Tuesday at the Angeles University Foundation gym after taking a one-day break following its completion of its FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers bid.

It will play the Chinese national team in a one-game tune-up on Wednesday before flying out to Serbia the following day.

In the FIBA OQT, the Philippines will play Serbia on June 30 and the Dominican Republic on July 1.

The top two teams from each group advance to the crossover semifinals where the winners battle for the Olympic spot in the finals. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Jon Rahm takes over no. 1 world ranking

JON Rahm officially reclaimed the No. 1 spot in the Official World Golf Rankings on Monday, a day after the Spaniard claimed his first major title at the US Open.

Rahm briefly held the spot twice in 2020, after winning the Memorial and after tying for 13th at the PGA Championship. Both stints lasted only one event, however, although Rahm has not been outside of the top three since.

He knocked Dustin Johnson off the No. 1 perch this week after Johnson tied for 19th at Torrey Pines. Johnson had held the top spot since winning The Northern Trust last August, kicking off a dominant run that included winning the Tour Championship and the Masters.

Rahm finally got there with Sunday’s win, which came on the heels of a withdrawal due to COVID-19 while leading the Memorial and a T8 at the PGA Championship. Rahm has eight top-10 finishes in 13 starts in 2021, including the forced WD. — Reuters

Switzerland advances to last 16 of Euro 2020 without kicking a ball

ROME — Switzerland advanced to the last 16 of the European Championship on Monday without kicking a ball, as the results from matches in other groups worked to their benefit.

They will next play either Group B winners Belgium, or the winners of Groups E or F, which will be decided on Wednesday.

The Swiss squad missed the unfolding drama, however, as their plane suffered a technical fault and delayed their trip back to their base in Italy by some three hours.

Switzerland’s progress comes a day after they beat Turkey 3-1 in Baku in their last Group A match but finished third behind Italy, who won all three of their games, and Wales on four points, who pipped the Swiss — also on four points — on goal difference.

In order to secure a knockout round berth, the Swiss needed to be one of the four best third-placed finishers at the end of Euro 2020’s group phase, but their fate was unclear after their victory on Sunday.

Monday’s conclusion to Groups B and C, however, saw the teams finishing third in both groups complete their program with only three points — thereby guaranteeing that the Swiss remain in the tournament.

In Group B, Finland finished third with three points while in Group C Ukraine did the same. Both sides lost in their respective games on Monday, and now it is they who must wait to see whether they continue at Euro 2020.

The Swiss had planned to keep a close eye on Monday’s games but a technical fault delayed their departure from Baku, the Swiss football federation said on Monday. They only arrived back at their Rome base after the games had ended.

Monday’s results also meant that England, France, Sweden and the Czech Republic are guaranteed to go through to the knockout stages regardless of the results in their final group games on Tuesday and Wednesday. — Reuters

Fairytale for Denmark as rout of Russia puts them in last 16

COPENHAGEN — Despair turned to exhilaration for Denmark as they claimed an astonishing 4-1 victory over Russia to scramble into the last 16 of Euro 2020 on a head-spinning night in Copenhagen on Monday.

Nine days after Denmark’s talisman Christian Eriksen needed life-saving treatment after suffering a cardiac arrest in front of a stunned Parken Stadium crowd, his team mates duly delivered on their promise to “do it for Christian.”

Needing victory to have any chance of making progress after losing to Finland and Belgium, it was Eriksen’s replacement Mikkel Damsgaard who lit the touchpaper with a 38th-minute wonder goal, the first act on a night of high drama.

When a dreadful mistake by Russia’s Roman Zobnin allowed Yussuf Poulsen to double the lead on the hour, it looked as though fate was smiling kindly on Denmark.

It was not that simple as even a win would not have been sufficient had Finland avoided defeat by Belgium, a match bizarrely being played in St. Petersburg.

The script took a dark turn when Russia’s giant striker Artem Dzyuba converted a penalty at almost the exact moment a Belgium opening goal was being disallowed by VAR.

But everything turned out alright in the end as Andreas Christensen’s screamer and Joakim Maehle’s late effort completed the demolition of Russia and Belgium beat Finland 2-0.

The stadium erupted and beer filled the air at the final whistle as Denmark remained alive and kicking in a tournament which just over a week ago looked trivial following Eriksen’s brush with death.

Denmark, Finland and Russia all finished Group B on three points, behind Belgium, but the Danes edged through on goal difference and can now look forward to taking on Wales in Amsterdam while Russia is going home.

They are the first team in the history of the Euros to reach the knockout stage after losing their first two games but it took a while for the message to get through to Denmark’s players, who huddled together in the center circle around a phone for confirmation of Belgium’s win over the Finns.

“It’s so insane that we’ve gone through. This team, these players. It’s great to be a part of it,” said Damsgaard, the 20-year-old who has stepped into Eriksen’s boots.

“I have never dreamed of being a part of something so big, so it’s a great feeling.”

MAGIC MOMENT
Other than a Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg shot that fizzed wide early on, Denmark were struggling to make much headway against a disciplined Russia side for whom Alexander Golovin could have opened the scoring after a weaving run.

With no margin for error, there was a tension about Denmark’s play and Russia had briefly turned down the noise being generated by the 23,000-strong crowd resembling a solid red wall.

“It’s the first time I’ve seen support like this,” Russia keeper Matvei Safonov said. “One of their players just completes a pass and the whole stadium is on their feet.”

They were in ecstasy in the 38th minute when Damsgaard produced a moment of magic Eriksen would be proud of.

Receiving a pass from Hojbjerg, he took a silky touch with his left foot and opened his body to swerve a majestic right-foot shot beyond Russia keeper Matvei Safonov.

If Denmark’s opener was sublime, their second on the hour mark was ridiculous. Zobnin inexplicably played a pass back towards his keeper without looking and Poulsen completed the simplest of tasks to score.

Denmark were rampant, but everything went flat as Russia were awarded a penalty after Jannik Vestergaard fouled Alexander Sobolev — and giant striker Dzyuba thumped the ball past Kasper Schmeichel to revive their hopes.

The mood in the stadium became jubilant as news filtered through that Belgium had finally taken the lead and Denmark rode the red wave to finish with a flourish.

Christensen latched on to a clearance to smash an unstoppable shot past Safonov from 25 metres before Maehle fired home his side’s fourth to make absolutely sure of a reaching the knockout phase for the first time since 2004. — Reuters

Hawks are rolling but remain big underdogs

THE Atlanta Hawks’ splashy performance in the first two rounds of the playoffs has failed to convince the betting industry that they can reach the NBA Finals.

The Hawks flashed their talent in a first-round series victory over the New York Knicks and followed up with a stunning 4-3 series win against the top-seeded Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday to reach the Eastern Conference finals.

Atlanta’s matchup with the Milwaukee Bucks begins on  Wednesday, and the Bucks are heavy favorites to take out the Hawks.

The Bucks were listed on Monday at -460 at FanDuel and -500 at BetMGM to win the series. The -500 number means Milwaukee has an 83.3 percent shot to win the series.

The Hawks are by far the longest shot on the board among the remaining four teams to win the NBA title, too.

Milwaukee (+105), the Phoenix Suns (+150) and the Los Angeles Clippers (+800), per FanDuel, rate as better bets than the +1100 Hawks.

The Bucks, though, stamped their legitimacy by knocking out Kevin Durant, James Harden and the previous NBA Finals favorite Brooklyn Nets in their conference semifinal series.

Atlanta began the season 14-20 with Lloyd Pierce as head coach, but dramatically swing its momentum when Pierce was fired and replaced by Nate McMillan.

The finished the regular season by going 27-11 under McMillan.

Many see some big betting value, given that Hawks star guard Trae Young hit only five of his 23 shot attempts in the Game 7 win at Philadelphia.

He’ll likely be much better against Milwaukee, which is listed as a seven-point favorite in Game 1. — Reuters

Clippers look to cool off Suns’ Devin Booker in Game 2

LOOKING completely comfortable in the moment, the Phoenix Suns can move even closer to their first NBA Finals in 28 years when they host the Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals.

The Suns got the jump on the Clippers in Game 1 for a 120-114 victory backed by Devin Booker’s first career triple-double, which only gave more proof that Phoenix is not fazed by the spotlight.

Booker had 40 points, 13 rebounds and 11 assists in yet more evidence of his superstar status.

The Suns won despite playing without veteran point guard Chris Paul, who is in COVID-19 protocols after reportedly testing positive for the virus. Paul joined the team via video to celebrate the victory.

“We want to protect home court, so that was big for us to come out and secure that one,” Booker said. “I don’t know if I showed that much emotion through the playoffs that much, but not having Chris out there and being a high-intense game, we wanted that one bad.

“So it’s obviously only one. We know what they’re capable of and what they have done, came back, down 0-2 from their past two series, so we got to stay locked in.”

The Clippers also were short-handed without superstar Kawhi Leonard, who is out with a knee sprain. However, he was also out last week when the Clippers won consecutive games to finish off a conference-semifinal victory against the top-seeded Utah Jazz.

Paul and Leonard will both sit out Game 2 as well.

With the Clippers playing again with the small-ball lineup that befuddled the Jazz, the Suns had answers for Los Angeles’ adjusted aggressive approach on offense.

The game was tied at 93 when the fourth quarter started, with the Suns taking control by going on an immediate 12-2 run. The Clippers pushed back late, getting to within 116-114 with 22 seconds remaining before the Suns finished off the victory.

Paul George stepped up for Los Angeles with 34 points, while Reggie Jackson had 24, but Terance Mann had nine points after his breakthrough 39-point game to finish off the Jazz.

“As much as we wanted this one, I think this was a good feel-out game to see adjustments,” George said. “We’ve been great adjusting, and you know, we’ve been great at playing better as the series goes on.”

The Clippers led by as many as six points in the third quarter at 84-78 and looked poised to continue their success without Leonard until the Suns found another gear at home.

Clippers coach Tyronn Lue has been adept at making in-series and in-game adjustments and will have to come up with new answers moving forward. One priority will be to slow Suns big man Deandre Ayton, who had 20 points and nine rebounds.

“We played hard and competed,” Lue said. “(We) had some good shots down the stretch that we didn’t make. So give them credit. They made the shots and we didn’t. But I loved our fight, loved what I saw and just seeing how they played Game 1 and what they were trying to do and how they were trying to attack.”

Clippers forward Marcus Morris, Sr., who missed much of the second half on Sunday due to a sprained right knee, is questionable for Game 2. — Reuters

Ill-fated campaign

Sixers head coach Doc Rivers was at a loss for words. He had just gone through a tough Game Seven at the Wells Fargo Center, and he had yet to fully process his charges’ inability to translate their status as playoff top seeds to an Eastern Conference Finals berth. Still, the disappointment he felt was evident in the languages used by his eyes, his voice, and his body as he met members of the media for his post-mortem. They shouldn’t have bowed to the upstart Hawks — not with their talent depth, not with their opponents’ relative lack of experience, and not with the myriad opportunities given them throughout the series.

That said, the Sixers now have no choice but to take stock of their gross underperformance and wonder if staying put means subsequently getting ahead or taking a step back. They have heavy and hard decisions to make, beginning with All-Star center Joel Embiid’s contract situation. When healthy, he has performed exactly as envisioned — a dominant force inside on both ends of the court, and whose determination to keep improving his game has expanded his offensive repertoire. Unfortunately, he’s down due to injury plenty and often, Moreover, his conditioning remained suspect to the point where he disappeared late in the matches against the Hawks.

Another choice in the hands of Sixers’ honchos is how they will be dealing with Ben Simmons, whose all-world defense wound up being negated by a nonexistent offense. So awful was he in scoring against the supposedly porous Hawks that he had only three field goal attempts all told in fourth quarters of the series, and not a single one after Game Three. In retrospect, it doesn’t even matter that he made all three; as hockey legend Wayne Gretzky once noted, “you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” And so polarizing was his paralysis that Rivers — long noted for resorting to hyperbole to praise players by way of motivation — actually responded with “I don’t know” when asked if the starting point guard could be a vital cog on a championship team. Even Embiid saw fit to call him out for his evident timidity.

To be fair, Simmons owned up to his shortcomings, acknowledging that they were “mental” more than anything else. And he’s right. For all the problems with his shooting fundamentals, he finished with the worst free-throw shooting percentage in playoff history because he was in a constant battle with himself. How that battle will ultimately lead to victory for him remains to be seen. In the meantime, however, he will have to accept being Public Enemy Number One in the City of Brotherly Love.

Significantly, Rivers walked back somewhat on his assessment of Simmons after having had a day to himself. He said the ill-fated campaign, if nothing else, showed him what the problem is, and that they will be doing a lot of work in the offseason to address it. All the same, the Sixers would do well to explore any and all options at their disposal, trade scenarios included. At this point, they have nowhere else to go but forward. How and how fast are the questions they need to answer.

 

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.

Developing strategic business partners

The signing of MoU between CIMA, PAMA, AND PICPA

The Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA), Philippine Association of Management Accountants (PAMA), and Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants (PICPA) gathered last May 27, 2021, 2 pm via Zoom online meeting for the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding on their tripartite partnership.

That same day, CIMA launched its Chartered Accountants Program in the Philippines. Through this program, PICPA members with at least three (3) relevant working experience are exempted from fifteen (15) exams in the CIMA professional qualification, and will only be required to sit for one (1) exam, the strategic case study exam. Following the completion of this exam, the prestigious Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) designation will be granted upon successful application for CIMA membership.

Global Markets Managing Director, The Association of International Certified Professional Accountants (The Association – representing AICPA & CIMA) Ms. Irene Teng opened the event with her welcoming speech thanking the stakeholders and partners, as well as for the support that PAMA has provided for the growth of management accounting professionals in the Philippines. The Association represents 696,000 members and students globally, and this combined strength provides further capabilities to support members and students, and to work with selected partners for the good of the profession, as well as for the economic recovery and building a more sustainable future for all.

President Lolita Tang of the Philippine Association of Management Accountants (PAMA) acknowledged the challenges faced by everyone observing that, “When we, as organizations, support each other, talk to each other and learn from each other, we optimize our operations and the result is a net addition for everyone involved. Today’s event is truly a great opportunity, indeed! Today is a celebration of our persistence and our resilience.”

“Profit should not and cannot be all that matters in our new world.”

PICPA President Jun Lope Bato Jr also shared a message for the event, starting off by showing his gratitude to the Honorable Noe G. Quiñanola, Chairman of the Philippine Board of  Accountancy, to The Association’s Asia Pacific Regional Vice President Mr. Venkkat Ramanan FCMA, CGMA, Ms. Lolita Tang, President of the Philippine Association of Management Accountants, PAMA Board of Directors and Board of Trustees and past presidents in attendance, PICPA Executive Director Estelita Aguirre, and fellow Board of Directors of PICPA, CIMA working team, and friends.

“Coming together is a beginning. Keeping together is progress. Working together is Success.”

He shared how this collaboration is cooperation among parties in respect to corporate governance, professional ethics, technical research, continuing professional development, professional accountancy training, quality control, education and examination, and that this tripartite agreement provided an opportunity for PICPA to increase the number of PICPAns becoming CGMAs.

“None of us is as smart as all of us, and alone we can do so little, together we can do so much.”

The Association’s Asia Pacific Regional Vice President, Mr. Venkkat Ramanan FCMA, CGMA, delivered his presentation on the Transformation of the Finance Profession. In his speech, he highlighted the rationality of man, the complexity of the world, financial challenges, and the importance of technology in the present day. He ended his message by stating how financial professionals needed to provide insights as businesses go on because those insights create an impact on an organization.

The partnership with CIMA, PICPA, and PAMA enables creating impact for organizations, and this will help in addressing the sustainability of organizations in the midst of financial risks.

As The Association’s Asia Pacific Regional Vice President, Mr. Venkkat Ramanan FCMA, CGMA, noted:

“The future of finance and transformation of the finance profession requires us to go beyond and above our technical skills. We have to bring in our capability into managing people, people skills, to be able to get the business supported by the technical skills they have at the bottom. That is why finance professionals are better suited to become strategic partners. And with this partnership with PICMA and PAMA, we hope to develop strategic business partners that can deliver and develop our future sustainably in the Philippines.”

All Certified Public Accountants in the Philippines should not miss out on this opportunity. Interested parties may contact info@picpa.com.ph or pama2013_mail@yahoo.com for more details.

Foodsphere receives Safety Seal from DOLE

Food Company, Foodsphere Inc. becomes the first manufacturing company in the country to receive the Safety Seal certification from the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE). This was personally awarded to them by Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III last June 18 at the company’s office in Brgy. Paso de Blas, Valenzuela City.

The Safety Seal is included in the Joint Memorandum Circular 21-01 between DOLE, DTI, DOH, DOT and DILG and is an initiative that certifies that an establishment is compliant in the guidelines set by the agencies to ensure the safety and health of the general public to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in their premises. This includes having a working contact tracing process such as StaySafe.PH thus encouraging the safe opening of the economy.

“More than being compliant to the minimum health standards and having an active process for contact tracing, Foodsphere has been consistently compliant with labor laws and guidelines in the past three years. It has maintained industrial peace and has looked after the welfare of its employees,” said DOLE Secretary Bello.

The placing of the Safety Seal at the main entrance of the company was witnessed by the officers of the Department of Labor & Employment Central and regional offices as well as Paso de Blas Barangay Captain Lucy Nolasco. Also present are CDO Foodsphere President and CEO Jerome D. Ong, Sr. Vice President Dra. Charmaine Ong-Castro and Vice President Jason D. Ong.

“We are grateful to be the very first manufacturing company to receive the Safety Seal from the Department of Labor and Employment and to have the privilege of having Secretary Bello himself to award this to us,” said Jerome Ong. “This is an affirmation and an encouragement to our employees on our joint efforts to keep our workplace safe for all of them. For over a year since the community quarantines started in March 2020 we have proactively and continuously adapted to the evolving guidelines and protocols. It paid off since we have very little cases in the organization and the cases did not originate from our facilities.”

Foodsphere is one of the essential businesses during the pandemic and has over 5000 workers who worked endlessly to meet the food supply requirements. Despite the challenges of lockdowns and travel restrictions, the company has adapted measures that helped its employees to keep their jobs and to perform them.

The awarding of the Safety Seal coincides with the company’s 46th anniversary this June 2021. The company is now one of the largest food manufacturing companies in the country today and owns some of the biggest and most well-loved brands in the market such as San Marino, Highlands, Danes Cheese and the CDO brand. The company also bagged the 2020 ASEAN Business Award distinction for Large Family Business Category last year.

EXPLAINER: What’s happening with Tesla’s $7 billion German ‘gigafactory’?

GRUENHEIDE – Next Thursday, July 1, was supposed to be a day of celebration for Tesla: the opening of its self-styled “gigafactory” in the tranquil German municipality of Gruenheide, just outside Berlin.

But thanks to fierce environmental resistance, red tape and planning tweaks it is completely unclear when the first vehicles will roll off the production line of the electric carmaker’s first European factory.

Tesla has already pushed back the expected opening to late 2021. Yet the environmental agency in Brandenburg, the state where the 5.8 billion euro ($6.9 billion) plant is being built, has still not given final approval – meaning a further delay cannot be ruled out, even into 2022.

 

WHAT’S THE PROBLEM?

It’s complicated.

Tesla and its billionaire boss Elon Musk unveiled plans in late 2019 to build the factory.

However the site partly overlaps a drinking water protection zone and borders on a nature reserve, which has drawn heavy opposition from local residents and environmental groups.

Last year, Tesla had to suspend clearing of a forest at the site after environmentalists from local group Nabu highlighted the risk posed to a rare local snake species whose winter slumber could be disturbed by tree-cutting activity.

The snakes had to be rescued before Tesla could proceed but there have been numerous other efforts to stop work at the site on environmental grounds.

“Thousands of hectares of forest will be cleared to create the needed infrastructure and housing space,” said Manuela Hoyer, who lives about 9 km from the site and is a member of a local campaign opposed to it.

“To build such a plant in a protected drinking water area is actually a crime against the environment.”

Her comments reflects a broader trend in Germany that has also seen renewable projects, such as wind farms, coming under fire from residents that fear the impact on the local habitat.

 

IS THAT REALLY IT?

No.

Bureaucracy has been a headache for Tesla, too, pitting the company’s hands-on approach against Germany’s infamous red tape.

So far, Tesla is working based on preliminary construction permits, with large factory halls and structures already built on the 740 acres of land it bought for 43.4 million euros.

But only when Brandenburg’s State Environmental Agency provides the final permit can the plant be opened.

While it has previously said that it cannot say when that is every project that has obtained preliminary permits in Brandenburg eventually received the final ok.

But that’s not discouraging environmentalists from throwing spanners in the works.

Last week Gruene Liga and Nabu submitted an injunction to a German court against provisional building permits for site, in the latest attempt to ensure Tesla is adhering to environmental laws.

“I think there could be less bureaucracy, that would be better,” Musk said during his last visit to Gruenheide in May, markedly less enthusiastic than his “Deutschland rocks” verdict eight months earlier.

 

THE BATTERY CELL PLANT

Tesla’s construction plans had to be fully resubmitted earlier this month to reflect the addition of battery cell production to the site, costing valuable months.

The Gruenheide plant comprises several units to handle component manufacturing and final vehicle assembly, including a press shop, foundry and body production.

It also includes a water recycling facility, a local fire brigade as well as a depot to ensure more efficient transport of components and other goods. Under the plans, the site’s power needs are to be met via local renewable energy sources.

But adding battery cell production meant the company had to tweak and refile the whole application. Based on the most recent version, the plant will have the capacity to produce 500 million cells totalling 50 gigawatt hours (GWh) a year.

That’s more than the 40 GWh facility rival Volkswagen plans to set up about 300 kilometres west in Salzgitter near its home base.

 

DOES ANYONE SUPPORT THE FACTORY (APART FROM ELON)?

Yes.

Tesla’s move is seen as a major boost to eastern Germany, which has struggled with high unemployment rates and difficulties to attract large industrial firms.

Once fully up and running, the plant, which Tesla said will be the “most advanced high-volume electric vehicle production plant in the world”, is expected to create 12,000 jobs and have a capacity of up to 500,000 cars a year.

“We’re in favour of a shift towards emission-free mobility and the cars needed to achieve that must be built somewhere,” said Ralf Schmilewski, a member of the Greens Party in Gruenheide’s neighbouring town Erkner.

He said Tesla’s plans also address a demographical issue, which has seen younger generations to leave the structurally weak area in their desperate search for jobs.

“Now they have a perspective and don’t have to move.”

 

SO WHAT’S NEXT?

Until mid-July, members of the public can sift through the roughly 11,000 pages of Tesla’s application documents, including blueprints, tables and calculations, in the town hall of Gruenheide, the third time they have been put on display.

As part of the process, anyone can file objections until Aug. 16, before the Brandenburg environmental agency decides whether a public discussion should take place on Sept. 13.

When the documents were last made available publicly, in 2020, more than 400 objections were raised.

After that there is no clear timeline. At some point the agency is expected to grant final approval – but when is anyone’s guess. – Reuters

Biden says he has concerns about bipartisan infrastructure plan

US President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. — Image via Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0/Flickr

WASHINGTON – U.S. President Joe Biden held separate talks on Monday with two key Democratic senators about a bipartisan infrastructure plan and told them he was encouraged by the proposal but still had questions about how to pay for the bill, the White House said.

A bipartisan infrastructure plan costing a little over $1 trillion, only about a fourth of what Biden initially proposed, has been gaining support in the U.S. Senate, but disputes continue over how it should be funded.

Mr. Biden met separately with Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema and “told them he was encouraged by what has taken shape but that he still has questions about the policy as well as the means for financing the bipartisan group’s proposal,” the White House said.

Mr. Biden also told the senators that he was “focused on budget resolution discussions in the Senate,” it said, an apparent reference to Democratic preparations to pass parts of his broader infrastructure plans opposed by Republicans using a procedure called reconciliation that requires only a simple majority.

There are 50 Republicans, 48 Democrats and two independents who caucus with Democrats in the 100-seat Senate and Vice President Kamala Harris has the tie-breaking vote for the Democrats.

Mr. Manchin and Ms. Sinema have been noncommittal when asked if they would support a reconciliation bill.

Among other measures, members of the bipartisan group have discussed indexing the gas tax to inflation to help pay for the bill, a provision that Biden has consistently rejected.

“We still have some sticking points, particularly around how we pay for this,” Brian Deese, director of the White House National Economic Council, told CNN on Monday.

Twenty-one of the 100 U.S. senators – including 11 Republicans, nine Democrats and one independent who caucuses with Democrats – are working on the framework to rebuild roads, bridges and other traditional infrastructure that sources said would cost $1.2 trillion over eight years.

One of the 21 senators, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, said on Fox News Sunday that if Mr. Biden wanted a $1 trillion infrastructure deal, “it’s there for the taking. You just need to get involved and lead.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Monday that Mr. Biden is expected to talk to lawmakers as soon as Monday, but she added that there’s not many weeks left for negotiations before Democrats decide to move forward on a party-line vote.

Mr. Biden, seeking to fuel economic growth after the pandemic, had initially proposed about $4 trillion be spent on a broader range of infrastructure that included fighting climate change and providing care for children and the elderly.

The White House trimmed the offer to about $1.7 trillion in talks with senators in a bid to win Republican support in the closely divided U.S. Senate.

Ms. Psaki said on Monday that the White House has not ditched its plan for additional spending on items like free pre-kindergarten and paid family leave. She said the White House never saw the infrastructure negotiations as “one step.”

“There is a reconciliation process that’s ongoing, and that addresses and includes a number of the president’s priorities,” Ms Psaki said. – Reuters