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Aussie Open: History in the making as men’s semifinalists vie for glory

RAFAEL NADAL — REUTERS

MELBOURNE — An Australian Open that began with an unprecedented saga involving reigning champion Novak Djokovic will finish with a historic flourish on Sunday with all four men’s semifinalists having the chance to write their names into the record books.

Should 2009 champion Rafael “Rafa” Nadal win the Australian Open for a second time the Spaniard will become the first man to claim 21 Grand Slam titles, nosing ahead of great rivals Djokovic and Roger Federer.

The 35-year-old has said he is more motivated by the love of playing than finishing ahead of Djokovic and Federer.

“I don’t believe that my happiness, my future happiness, is (going to) depend on if I achieve one more Grand Slam than the others or if the others achieve more Grand Slams than me,” he said after his quarterfinal win on Tuesday.

Matteo Berrettini, who will play Nadal in the first semifinal on Friday, is seeking to become the first Italian to win the Australian Open.

“I like to think that I’m writing a little bit (of) Italian tennis history. We are a great country for tennis,” he said.

Daniil Medvedev can become the first man in the Open era to win a second major immediately after claiming his first following his 2021 US Open success.

“If it’s true, then it will be history. It’s perfect,” the Russian said.

Stefanos Tsitsipas, who will face Medvedev in Friday’s other last-four clash, would become the first Greek to win a Grand Slam should he lift the trophy.

“I’m headed towards the right direction and things look good for me so far,” Tsitsipas, the youngest of the four semifinalists at 23, said. “And, well, with the right mindset and with the right attitude and with the right development throughout the tournament, my chances are pretty good.”

DJOKOVIC DRAMA
The drama surrounding Djokovic’s deportation from Australia on the eve of the tournament has not been forgotten.

When Medvedev mentioned he had channeled the warrior spirit of Djokovic after overturning a two-set deficit against Felix Auger-Aliassime, he was booed by some fans.

Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley has also been jeered whenever he appeared on court during the tournament.

But the quality of the last four men standing is superb, with each either having lifted a Grand Slam title or made it to the final since Nadal’s 2020 French Open win.

The Spaniard and Berrettini have met only once, with Nadal proving too strong in a semifinal of the US Open in 2019 during his run to the title.

Berrettini said the sixth seed had been an inspiration to him for more than a decade but is confident he can be beaten.

“I know I can do it. It’s going (to) be a really tough one,” the 2021 Wimbledon finalist said.

Tsitsipas, a runner-up at Roland Garros last year, and Medvedev have had their differences but became closer as teammates for Europe at the Laver Cup last September.

The Russian defeated Tsitsipas in straight-sets in last year’s Melbourne Park semifinals. — Reuters

Taiwan eases past Iran to advance to quarterfinals

TAIWAN joined China in the quarterfinals of the Women’s Asian Cup on Wednesday with a 5-0 win over debutant Iran in Navi Mumbai taking the three-time champions into the last eight.

Lai Li-chin scored a hat trick while Chen Yen-ping and Wang Hsiang-huei were also on target for Kazuo Echigo’s side as they picked up their first win of this year’s competition in Group A.

Taiwan was playing their second game in the tournament after Sunday’s meeting with India was canceled due to a coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak in the Indian squad that resulted in the host being forced to withdraw from the competition.

Lai opened the scoring after four minutes when she slotted her low shot past Zohreh Koudaei and she doubled her side’s advantage 27 minutes later with a miss-hit cross that went in off the inside of the post.

Chen put the Taiwanese three goals ahead when she struck from close range following a parry by Koudaei that saw the ball drop at her feet five minutes before the interval.

Lai completed her hat trick from the penalty spot 20 minutes into the second half and Wang slotted in 12 minutes from time to complete a comfortable win, securing second place in Group A in the process.

The Chinese, who had originally been scheduled to face India on Wednesday, had already booked their place in the quarterfinals as Group A winners following wins over the Taiwanese and Iranians in their opening two matches. — Reuters

Sotto, 36ers to go against Tasmania in Australia NBL today

ADELAIDE 36ERS FB PAGE

ALL EYES will be on Filipino sensation Kai Sotto as Adelaide tries to arrest its skid with a road assignment against Tasmania in the Australia National Basketball League (NBL) at the MyState Bank Arena.

With NBA veteran Isaac Humphries still out (right knee) as per the 36ers injury update on Thursday, Mr. Sotto is tipped to fill a bigger role especially after earning his stripes the last two games.

The 7-foot-3 wunderkind served as the silver lining in Adelaide’s losses to Melbourne and Illawarra with an average of 9.5 points and 6.5 rebounds in only 15 minutes coming off a knee soreness injury.

Mr. Sotto’s exploits included a career-high of 12 points, which he is determined to surpass as Adelaide (3-5) seeks to prevail over Tasmania (2-6) in the battle of struggling clubs at 4:30 p.m. (Manila time).

In Japan, the match between Kiefer Ravena (Shiga) and Dwight Ramos (Toyama) has been postponed due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) protocols while Kobe Paras (Niigata) and Ray Parks, Jr. (Nagoya) suffered contrasting results.

Mr. Paras scored 16 but cellar-dweller Niigata (2-27) crashed to its 26th straight defeat while Mr. Parks had 10 markers in Nagoya’s jump to fourth spot with a 21-8 slate.

Other stalwarts in Gilas Pilipinas guard Jordan Heading (Taichung) and top PBA draft prospect Jason Brickman (Kaohsiung), meanwhile, cross paths in Taiwan’s T1 League at 7 p.m. tonight.

DeMar DeRozan, Chicago Bulls hold off Raptors

DEMAR DeRozan produced 29 points, seven rebounds and seven assists and Zach LaVine scored 23 points, grabbed eight rebounds and dished eight assists to lead the host Chicago Bulls past the Toronto Raptors 111-105 on Wednesday.

DeRozan set the tone against his former team, shooting 8 of 14 in the first half as the Bulls built a 67-50 lead by intermission.

Chicago leveraged a 68-46 scoring advantage in the paint to lead most of the way, but Toronto battled back to pull ahead 103-102 with 3:11 remaining.

Gary Trent, Jr. scored 32 points for a second consecutive game to lead Toronto. He shot 6 of 10 from the 3-point arc.

On the last attempt of his 11-of-22 shooting night, Trent pulled the Raptors to within 107-105 with 2:03 to play, but he was ejected when he received his second technical foul of the night.

LaVine made the ensuing technical-foul free throw, and after Nikola Vučević grabbed his game-high 15th rebound, Vučević hit a 3-pointer to put the game away. He finished with 17 points and eight assists.

Javonte Green added 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting and grabbed six rebounds for the Bulls, and Coby White finished with nine points off the bench. Reserve Troy Brown, Jr. chipped in another eight, hitting 2 of 3 3-point attempts.

Wednesday marked Chicago’s 24th game this season in which both DeRozan and LaVine scored at least 20 points.

OG Anunoby scored 23 points on 10-of-15 shooting from the floor for Toronto, making 3 of 7 from beyond the arc. Scottie Barnes added 16 points, seven assists and five rebounds.

The Raptors’ Pascal Siakam snared seven rebounds and matched Barnes’ team-high seven assists, but he shot just 3 of 12 from the floor en route to 12 points. Chris Boucher added nine points to lead Toronto’s reserves. — Reuters

Chiefs, Bengals AFC title game realization of Patrick Mahomes’ prophecy

A VICTORIOUS Joe Burrow walked across the field earlier this month to smack palms with Patrick Mahomes, and the Kansas City Chiefs quarterback offered five prophetic words that made Burrow smile.

“See you in the playoffs.”

Burrow and the Cincinnati Bengals (12-7) hit the road for the American Football Conference (AFC) Championship game on Sunday at Arrowhead Stadium with Mahomes and the Chiefs (14-5) riding high following a 42-36 overtime win over the Buffalo Bills in the divisional playoffs.

“We play really good on the road,” a red-nosed Burrow, replete with stocking cap and sweatshirt, said before on Wednesday’s frigid practice of the team’s 6-3 road record this season. “You want to get out to a strong start. You can’t let a team like this get out in front of you. They put a lot of pressure on you on defense.”

Cincinnati has the only win over the Chiefs since Oct. 24 and Burrow passed for 446 yards and four scores. He was sacked four times.

“These young quarterbacks are great for this league and he’s one of them,” Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said of Burrow. “He’s a heckuva football player. He does a nice job. He’s a coach’s kid that knows the game and kind of gets it.”

Perhaps the biggest health concern on either team is Chiefs safety Tyrann Mathieu. He missed practice on Wednesday and remains in concussion protocol, but Reid said there’s a chance he’ll be on the field Thursday.

Bengals head coach Zac Taylor said the Bengals plan to spend “a lot of time” working on protection of Burrow. He was hit 13 times at Tennessee and sacked five times in the first half alone. Taylor said noise at Arrowhead comes with the territory, and the peripheral complications — silent counts, Burrow calling plays due to headset challenges — aren’t easy to replicate in practice.

“Arrowhead is pretty loud,” Mahomes said. “I don’t think you can get around that. I’m sure it’ll be pretty loud this weekend. They’re coming in trying to win a big football game. But I’m glad we’re at Arrowhead and we’re able to use our crowd to our advantage in trying to get a win.”

Burrow offers mostly a pained smirk when the prospect of being cast as the underdog bubbles up again for the Bengals. The Jan. 2 win over Kansas City has been a confidence-building rallying cry since the 34-31 win in Ohio. Rookie first-round pick Ja’Marr Chase was fourth in the National Football League (NFL) with 1,455 receiving yards and 13 touchdowns. Chase set career bests with 11 receptions for 266 yards and three touchdowns against Kansas City in the Week 17 clash.

Chase said he “didn’t watch” last week’s game to study how the Chiefs handled Gabriel Davis of the Bills, who exploded for 201 yards and four TDs, while Buffalo’s No. 1 receiver Stefon Diggs had three catches for seven yards plus a two-point conversion pass.

“They’re a great defense, they’re a great secondary,” Chase said on Wednesday.

But familiarity is a two-way street. Mahomes gets another look at the Bengals defense, too, playing in his fourth straight conference title game. He’s 8-2 in the playoffs with 25 touchdowns and five interceptions.

“It’s hard to beat a team twice,” Bengals safety Vonn Bell said. “Especially that caliber, those guys are always in the postseason, the Super Bowl. That’s what we’re trying to do.”

A win would put the Bengals in the Super Bowl for the first time since 1988 (SB XXIII). Kansas City is the first team to host four consecutive NFL conference championship games. A Chiefs’ victory puts the franchise in elite company with three others who have played in three consecutive Super Bowls (Miami Dolphins, 1971-73), Buffalo Bills (1990-93) and New England Patriots (2016-18).

“I’ve been in some of these situations before, I’ve been in some big games… I know what it takes to go out there and find a way to win,” Mahomes said. “I think preparation and experience helps me in those situations.”

In his playoff career, including LSU, Burrow is 6-0 with a 69.7 completion percentage, 22 touchdowns and two interceptions. He’s 2-0 in the NFL playoffs, beating the Raiders and Titans despite being sacked 11 times this postseason. He’s the first No. 1 overall draft pick to start in a conference championship game within his first two seasons. — Reuters

Billy Horschel fires 63 to take early lead at Farmers

BILLY Horschel opened with a sizzling 9-under 63 on Wednesday to take a one-shot lead at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in La Jolla, CA.

Playing the North Course, Horschel carded a clean round with nine birdies to grab the 18-hole lead.

Michael Thompson shot 8 under to sit alone in second place. Kevin Tway and Germany’s Stephan Jaeger shot matching 65s to sit two shots back in third.

Four golfers, including world No. 1 Jon Rahm, are T5 at 6 under, three shots back.

Horschel opened with birdies on the first two holes, not bad for a guy who wasn’t sure if he would be able to play when he woke up Wednesday. The 35-year-old said he has been dealing with a stiff upper back since the Sony Open.

“Still a little worried when I woke up this morning and it felt pretty good. Thankfully, all the work we’ve done and everything I felt, it never got any tighter,” Horschel said. “It’s actually felt like it’s a little bit looser right now… I didn’t know if I was even going to tee it up today when I woke up. Even when I was hitting balls, I still wasn’t sure whether I was going to tee it up.”

Thompson also posted a clean round, finishing just one birdie shy of the leader while also playing the North Course.

“It’s shorter, I think the rough is a little bit lighter on the North, and you just know you’re going to have to take advantage because the South course can beat you up,” Thompson said. “I was really quite surprised with how I played today because my practice leading up into today wasn’t that great… Something clicked and I made a bunch of putts and I was hitting my lines, so nothing to complain about.”

Defending champion Patrick Reed opened on the South Course and shot even-par 72. He’s tied in 96th after two birdies and two bogeys. Hideki Matsuyama is right there with him after his first 18 on the South Course.

Other notables include Dustin Johnson, Justin Thomas and Xander Schaufele, all T31 after shooting 4-under 68s.

Rahm posted a chaotic round on the South Course. The Spaniard opened with three birdies on the front nine but carded two bogeys coming in to go with three birdies and an eagle on the par-5 18th. Rahm won the US Open at Torrey Pines in 2021.

“The conditions were relatively easy. I mean, there’s not much wind, but you’ve still got to play this golf course,” Rahm said. “I hit it great off the tee, put myself in really good positions, and the few times I was off, for the most part I was able to give myself a chance to save the hole so I think that was the key.” — Reuters

Serie A on the verge of financial ruin, says Inter CEO Marotta

ITALY’S Serie A is at risk of insolvency and needs more financial support from the government during the pandemic as well as stadiums at higher capacity, according to Inter Milan chief executive Giuseppe Marotta.

In an interview with Italian newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore, Marotta said that the country’s political institutions could no longer ignore the financial plight of Italian soccer.

“It is a system at the edge of the abyss, which without a doubt had already issues before COVID but which has received virtually no support in these two years in the pandemic,” he said.

Marotta is also a member of the federal board of the Italian football association (FIGC) representing Serie A. A spokesperson at the Italian FA told Reuters that they do not usually comment on statements made by board members.

Serie A clubs had agreed unanimously earlier this month to cut stadium capacity to 5,000 for two rounds of matches to help curb coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases, but Marotta urged all stakeholders to allow more spectators now.

Italy put off matches and closed stadiums soon after COVID-19 reached the country at the start of 2020 and has kept stadiums at a limited capacity of up to 50% ever since it started lifting restrictions.

“Outdoor facilities are without a doubt safe with FFP2 masks, super green pass and capacity reduced to 50%. Cutting tickets to 5,000 spectators has been further proof of taking things seriously and another sacrifice for us,” he said.

“If France is getting ready to welcome 100% supporters, like it is already happening in England, does it make sense for us to stick to a lower number (of spectators)?”

The former Juventus CEO added that the football industry does not get as much financial aid as other industries because it is not taken seriously.

“Football is still considered the world of ‘rich and stupid’ presidents who waste money away for fun,” he said. “Our world struggles to be recognized for what it is but how can you ignore the fact that professional soccer is an industry like any other?” — Reuters

Middling Lakers

To argue that the Lakers haven’t been very good this season would be underscoring the obvious. True, they’re still in the playoff hunt with their middling slate; were the 2021-22 campaign to end today, they would be in eighth and compelled to go through the play-in tournament before securing a spot in the first round. On the other hand, there can be no underestimating the numbers. They’re just five and a half games away from an early vacation, and there seems to be little on which to hang their hats.

Needless to say, the aimlessness is why the Lakers want to be active on the trade front. And with the mid-February deadline fast approaching, they find themselves part of just about every piece of news regarding players potentially on the move. Not that any of the speculation on the grapevine has the legs to move into the realm of the possible, let alone likely; they simply do not have the assets to dangle in front of otherwise-willing partners.

Which explains the proliferation of memes that have fans suffering from a seemingly endless cycle of hope turning to disappointment to optimism and back to hope. For instance, the Lakers are in the middle of a road trip that has them going two and one so far. But with dangerous foes in the Sixers, Hornets, and Hawks on tap, the schedule can just as easily foretell a swoon. Indeed, they’re that inconsistent, and the reintegration of All-Star Anthony Davis — back from a five-week stint in the sidelines due to a medial collateral ligament sprain on his left knee.

Everything, therefore, is a matter of perspective. With Davis certain to shore up the Lakers’ poor defense and help with spacing on the other end of the floor, a marked improvement is expected. It’s also not wishful thinking to note that Russell Westbrook typically steps up in the second half of the season. In other words, the fire continues to burn — and especially because top god LeBron James has been on a remarkable tear in the last five and a half weeks.

All things considered, the Lakers will probably not be walking away with the Larry O’Brien Trophy when the battlesmoke clears. Then again, the ball is, as they say, round, and competing is the first step to winning. That’s what James has been arguing all this time, and why he has climbed to second in scoring and could conceivably be the National Basketball Association’s all-time leader in points put up by the end of the month. It’s a singular feat that serves to validate his accomplishments, but ultimately an empty one if he’s not able to lead the purple and gold anywhere at all.

 

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.

Peso retreats vs dollar as Fed signals rate increases

BW FILE PHOTO
THE PESO weakened against the dollar on Thursday as the US central bank said it wants to start hiking rates by March. — BW FILE PHOTO

THE PESO weakened versus the greenback on Thursday after hawkish signals from the US Federal Reserve and the stronger-than-expected Philippine economic growth in the fourth quarter.

The local unit closed at P51.34 per dollar on Thursday, depreciating by five centavos from its P51.29 finish on Wednesday, based on data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened Thursday’s session weaker at P51.45 versus the dollar, which was also its worst showing. Meanwhile, its intraday best was at P51.295 against the greenback.

Dollars exchanged increased to $886.8 million on Thursday from $787.8 million on Wednesday.

A trader said the Fed’s more hawkish tone on Thursday made investors opt for the safe-haven dollar.

Fed Chairman Jerome H. Powell said the central bank is eyeing a possible rate hike by March amid continued elevated inflation, Reuters reported.

“I would say that the committee is of a mind to raise the federal funds rate at the March meeting, assuming conditions are appropriate for doing so,” Mr. Powell said at a briefing after the central bank maintained its policy rates.

Meanwhile, the peso depreciated after the higher-than-expected Philippine economic growth in the last three months of the year, as this could increase imports and weaken the currency, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

“Stronger gross domestic product (GDP) data suggest more importation activities, as bloated by elevated prices of imported oil and other imported major global commodities,” Mr. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

The economy expanded by 7.7% year on year in the three months to December, quicker than the 6.9% logged in the third quarter, based on data released by the Philippine Statistics Authority. It also beat the 6.5% median estimate in a BusinessWorld poll last week.

This brought full-year growth to 5.6%, surpassing the government’s downgraded 5-5.5% target and a turnaround from the record 9.6% contraction logged in 2020.

For Friday, Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast range of P51.25 to P51.40 per dollar, while the trader expects the local unit to P51.30 to P51.50. — L.W.T. Noble

Shares rise on within-target 2021 GDP growth

STOCKS bounced back on Thursday as data showed the economy’s expansion in 2021 was within the government’s target, boosting recovery prospects.

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) went up 19.91 points or 0.27% to end at 7,273.52 on Thursday, while the broader all shares index advanced 5.38 points or 0.14% to close at 3,861.49.

“The market’s sideways movement ended in the green territory as positive sentiment stemming from the local economy’s 2021 performance eventually dominated,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Senior Research Analyst Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said in a Viber message.

The country’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 7.7% in the fourth quarter, a reversal of the 8.3% contraction in the comparable 2020 period, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported on Thursday. This was also faster than the revised 6.9% expansion logged in the third quarter.

This brought the full-year growth to 5.6%, rebounding from record 9.6% contraction in 2020. This was higher than the 5.3% median estimate and the 5%-5.5% 2021 growth assumption of the Development Budget Coordination Committee.

Mr. Tantiangco however noted that trading was still lethargic, with value turnover below last year’s daily average of P7.38 billion.

Value turnover went down to P6.25 billion with 1.66 billion shares switching hands on Thursday, from the P6.41 billion with 1.5 billion issues traded the previous day.

Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said the GDP data buoyed local sentiment as global markets have been seeing sell-offs amid inflation concerns.

“The local market managed to hold decently despite weakness seen from the US. Such weakness in the region surfaced after the US Federal Reserve said that they had more room to raise rates as the inflationary threat remains,” COL Financial Group, Inc. Chief Technical Analyst Juanis G. Barredo said in a Viber message.

Asian shares plunged to their lowest in nearly 15 months on Thursday after the Fed’s chairman signaled plans to steadily tighten policy, Reuters reported.

In its latest policy update on Wednesday, the Fed indicated it is likely to raise US interest rates in March, as has been widely expected, and reaffirmed plans to end its bond purchases that month before launching a significant reduction in its asset holdings.

Back home, most sectoral indices ended in the green except for mining and oil, which sank by 207.55 points or 1.99% to 10,207.68; and holding firms, which dropped 18.85 points or 0.26% to close at 7,131.28.

On the other hand, financials climbed 21.72 points or 1.34% to 1,642.60; services gained 12.25 points or 0.62% to 1,980.47; industrials went up 33.35 points or 0.31% to 10,507.76; and property inched up by 0.13 point to end at 3,180.20.

Decliners beat advancers, 102 against 74, while 62 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling declined to P676.14 million from the P870.31 million recorded on Wednesday. — M.C. Lucenio with Reuters

Expats head for the exit as ‘easy’ Singapore’s COVID controls bite

REUTERS

SINGAPORE — Atar Sandler arrived in Singapore in 2019, seizing the opportunity to live in a buzzing global city that is also a convenient base to jet off to more exotic locales nearby. 

But after two years of mask-wearing, socializing in small groups and travel restrictions to combat the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the Israeli human resources professional packed her bags for New York with her husband and children this month. 

“It’s been like this for so long. And it doesn’t feel like anything’s going to change here,” said Ms. Sandler. “Life is very, very easy here. [But] is it worth it to live such a convenient life without being able to see family, friends, without being able to travel?” 

Risk-averse Singapore is trying to balance its approach to living with COVID — aiming to protect people in the densely populated island from the disease while reopening its economy and borders to maintain its reputation as a hub for capital and talent. 

Companies and expatriate professionals have long been drawn to the business-friendly country, one of the safest places in the world with a high quality of living, political stability, a skilled workforce, ease of travel and low taxes. 

But COVID has prompted soul-searching among many relatively affluent expats in Singapore, where foreign workers make up a fifth of the 5.5 million population. 

Some compare its strict COVID rules with more freedom back home or bemoan the inability to travel freely to visit family, while others joined the “great resignation” wave seen around the world. 

For Ms. Sandler, it was “devastating” that giving birth to her daughter in the middle of the outbreak meant her family did not meet her second child for a year. 

Singapore has continued to attract new investment and foreign talent during the pandemic, but a drop in foreigners sent its population down by the most since 1950 — 4.1% lower year-on-year as of June 2021. 

That is mostly due to fewer numbers of lower-wage workers, typically employed in construction and marine services. 

But even the number of employment passholders, or professionals earning at least S$4,500 ($3,350) monthly, fell nearly 14% from 193,700 in December 2019 to 166,900 in June 2021. 

Expatriate life is, by nature, transient and many left because companies cut costs and jobs. As foreign workers departed, border restrictions meant businesses were unable to bring in replacements from overseas easily. 

But for Filipina Nessa Santos, who worked in the city-state for a decade, and her British husband, the pandemic was the push they needed to move from Singapore, a tiny urban island with no hinterland, to the English countryside with their children. 

“Even though our jobs were good, it was also very stressful and very demanding,” said Ms. Santos. “We didn’t want that kind of lifestyle anymore.” 

And Chris Anderson, who moved to Singapore in 2019 from Hong Kong, has returned home to the United States to join a tech start-up. He was perturbed by rules last year that restricted foreigners from returning to the city-state despite being residents. 

“You leave the country, you’re not a priority to get back in… that’s always at the back of your mind,” Mr. Anderson said. 

TRICKLE FROM HONG KONG
Still, Singapore has been making it easier for travelers to enter and is looking more attractive to expatriates living in rival financial center Hong Kong, which has far stiffer rules due to its zero-COVID strategy. 

There has been a “trickle” of movement from Hong Kong into Singapore, said Lee Quane, regional director at relocation firm ECA International. He expects expatriate outflows from Singapore to outpace inflows through 2022, citing tighter foreign worker policies and wariness over potential curbs due to virus variants. 

The net decline in the non-resident workforce slowed in 2021, with a small net gain in November, the manpower ministry said in a written response to parliamentary questions last week. 

Barring unforeseen circumstances, the government, which has stressed the importance of staying open, expects “to hold the course” of calibrated easing in border restrictions. 

“The government works hard to ensure that businesses and individuals continue to choose Singapore because of our openness, rule of law, and consistency in policies,” it said. 

Companies continue to bring in key talent and receive approvals for work passes, according to Hsien-Hsien Lei, the CEO of the American Chamber of Commerce in Singapore. “Sure, things aren’t perfect. But, Singapore, from a relative point of view, is a great place to live and do business,” said Ms. Lei. — Chen Lin and Aradhana Aravindan/Reuters

Borneo island’s Sabah state spearheads green palm oil revolution

PIXABAY

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia’s Sabah state, on Borneo island, is looking to revolutionize its palm oil industry with a decade-long initiative that will ensure all growers adopt ethical standards and are certified as sustainable producers by 2025. 

The innovative project, launched in 2015, brings together the state’s authorities, plantation owners, palm oil traders and buyers, green groups and local communities. 

Led by the Sabah government, the scheme will help all oil palm growers — big and small — first earn national-level green certification as a stepping stone to meeting the global standard managed by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). 

It is hoped the state’s effort will help protect and restore forests, improve agriculture practices and oil palm yields, resolve land disputes, end labor abuses and eventually give producers access to international premium-paying buyers. 

The “jurisdictional” approach being pursued across Sabah is “globally recognized as a pioneering model” to tackle deforestation and improve labor rights in the supply chain, said Robecca Jumin, head of conservation in Sabah for green group WWF-Malaysia, which is backing the initiative. 

While large companies have the resources to earn RSPO certification, small and medium-sized growers find it harder to comply and need a support system like Sabah’s, she added. 

Here’s why the state’s scheme matters, both to communities and global efforts to protect ecosystems and the climate: 

What is palm oil and what are its uses? 

The oil palm tree originates in West Africa where it grows in the wild to heights of more than 60 feet (18.3 meters). 

Oil palm was introduced to Malaysia by the British and to Indonesia by the Dutch in the mid-1800s, and was first planted as an ornamental tree. 

The palms start bearing fruit about 30 months after planting, and are productive for the next 20 to 30 years. They produce four to 10 times more oil than other vegetable oil crops per unit of cultivated land. 

Palm oil is used in a wide range of food and household products, from biscuits, ice-cream and chocolate spread to soaps and cosmetics, as well as in biofuels. 

Malaysia and Indonesia account for about 90% of global palm oil output, while India, China, Indonesia and Europe are the main consumers. 

Sabah produced about 5 million tonnes of palm oil in 2020, or 6% of the global total, according to WWF. 

How have palm plantations impacted Southeast Asia’s forests? 

Across Indonesia and Malaysia, about 4.5 million people earn their living from palm oil production. The business has helped lift millions out of poverty, industry officials say. 

But in many parts of the two Southeast Asian nations, the clearance of land to grow oil palm has caused deforestation, despite pledges by big firms to end it. 

Indonesia, which introduced a moratorium on primary forest clearing in 2011, was among the top four countries for rainforest loss in 2020, according to Global Forest Watch, a satellite monitoring service. Malaysia was ranked ninth. 

Malaysia, which has lost nearly a fifth of its old-growth forest since 2001, set a five-year cap on its total palm oil plantation area in 2019 and, before the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, had plans to increase fines and jail terms for illegal logging. 

About 65% of Sabah state is still covered by lush forests home to often-endangered wildlife including wild boar, orangutans, proboscis monkeys and pygmy elephants. 

Just over half of its forests are designated as reserves or protected by law, officials say. 

Why is forest protection so important globally? 

Destroying rainforest has major implications for international goals to curb climate change as trees absorb about a third of the planet-warming emissions produced worldwide, but release carbon back into the air when they rot or are burned. 

Forests also help clean up air and water, support human health, offer flood protection and mitigate heat in cities. 

Slash-and-burn practices linked to palm oil production are often blamed for the annual Indonesian forest fires whose smoke creates a thick haze over large parts of Southeast Asia. 

Malaysia and Indonesia are among the more than 100 nations that pledged to halt deforestation by 2030 at November’s COP26 climate summit, after previous efforts failed to make headway. 

Conservationists say Sabah’s green standards drive could be replicated elsewhere and help countries achieve their pledges to cut climate-heating emissions. 

What is the palm oil industry doing to stop deforestation? 

Over the last decade, pressure from consumers and campaigners has pushed big corporations that grow, trade and buy palm oil to tackle labour abuses on plantations and commit to ending deforestation. 

Some major buyers — including Italian confectioner Ferrero and Cheerios cereal-maker General Mills — have pledged only to procure supplies certified as sustainable. 

Both producers and buyers have also teamed up with green groups to monitor and rid supply chains of deforestation, including by investing in tracking technologies. 

Some other palm oil buyers have switched to using alternative vegetable oils. 

But all those efforts have yet to bear much fruit. 

High-profile companies in the Consumer Goods Forum struggled to meet a 2020 goal set a decade earlier to buy only sustainably produced commodities, including palm oil, soy and beef. 

Forum members, including Carrefour, Walmart, General Mills, Mars, Nestle, Unilever and PepsiCo, in 2020 launched a “Forest Positive Coalition of Action” in a new bid to stop commodity supply chains fueling forest loss and to curb climate change. 

The RSPO, an industry body of consumers, green groups and growers that promotes the use of certified sustainable palm-oil products, tightened its rules in 2018, imposing a ban on clearing forests and converting peatland for plantations. 

Singapore, meanwhile, has set its sights on becoming the first country to use only sustainable palm oil by 2023 under a green push to tackle forest fires and air pollution. — Michael Taylor/Thomson Reuters Foundation

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