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Oscars ceremony in April to be live, in person and from many locations

LOS ANGELES — The Academy Awards, or Oscars, ceremony in April will be an in-person event that will air live from multiple locations, organizers said on Wednesday.

A spokesperson for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said in a statement that despite the coronavirus pandemic that has caused havoc in the entertainment industry, the group was “determined to present an Oscars like none other, while prioritizing the public health and safety of all those who will participate.”

“To create the in-person show our global audience wants to see, while adapting to the requirements of the pandemic, the ceremony will broadcast live from multiple locations, including the landmark Dolby Theater.”

The Dolby Theater in Hollywood has been the venue for the Oscars show for a number of years. Normally, hundreds of the world’s top movie stars would gather in the 3,400-seat theater for a live show preceded by a red carpet packed with photographers and camera crews.

Wednesday’s statement said more details would be forthcoming. No host has been announced.

California on Tuesday surpassed New York as the US state with the most coronavirus deaths and the Los Angeles area has been particularly badly hit.

The Academy re-scheduled the 2021 Oscar ceremony, the highest awards in the movie industry from Feb. 28 to April 25 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Other awards shows in recent months have replaced the usual gatherings at gala dinners and on stage with pre-recorded appearances or virtual events.

The Grammy Awards in January postponed its ceremony to March just three weeks before the scheduled date after talks with health experts and musicians.

The delayed Golden Globes ceremony for film and television on Feb. 28 will take part in both Los Angeles and New York with nominees taking part from locations around the world, organizers said last week.

Nominations for the 2021 Oscars will be announced on March 15. — Reuters

Companies signal some willingness to hire in 2021

MORE THAN a third of companies participating in a study conducted by recruitment firm Michael Page Philippines said they are looking to hire more employees.

In a statement Wednesday, Michael Page Philippines said its Talent Trends 2021 Report found that 35% of companies surveyed are “looking to increase their headcount” in 2021.

The report also found that 45% of employers chose to retain their employees this year even during the downturn in business caused by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

Michael Page reported that “56% of companies cited their continued investment in employees by upskilling the workforce with training while 56% turned to the use of automation for basic processes.”

It found strong hiring demand for technology professionals in financial technology, logistics, and consumer platforms.

Michael Page Managing Director Olly Riches said in a statement, “Acquiring and retaining high-potential talent will be crucial to enable companies to build sustainable operations to position for future growth.”

In-demand jobs apart from tech, Mr. Riches said, are in healthcare startups, adding “The talent demand in the healthcare and life sciences industries remain strong, as businesses continue to navigate the challenges of a pandemic and acknowledge the importance of having the right people at the top to maximize their outcomes.” — Gillian M. Cortez

Cua files bill seeking to lift bank secrecy

BPI-bank
BW FILE PHOTO

A LAWMAKER is pushing amendments to the Bank Secrecy Law to lift certain provisions to prevent criminal activities by giving the regulator authority to look into bank accounts.

In a House Committee on Banks and Financial Intermediaries hearing on Thursday, the committee chair Junie E. Cua said he wants to be “extra careful” in amending the 65-year-old law while emphasizing the need to revise provisions in the law as it “is used as a shield” for money laundering and other anomalous activities.

The Bank Secrecy Law currently prohibits the disclosure or inquiry into deposits as these are confidential in nature.

Mr. Cua authored House Bill 8634 amending the law to give the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) the authority to access accounts for investigative purposes. He said the proposed amendments will give parameters that will need to be satisfied before the BSP can check bank accounts.

“The basic objective is to empower the BSP or to authorize BSP to look into accounts of bank owners or bank stockholders, bank officials, or dummies in order to be able to investigate wrongdoings of that confined set of account holders, namely stockholders of the banks, officials of the banks who the BSP sees and believes that by some machinations, are doing activities that are fraudulent,” he added.

Mr. Cua said the proposal was crafted after the World Bank and International Monetary Fund recommended the relaxing of the strict Bank Secrecy Law.

BSP Senior Assistant Governor and General Counsel Elmore O. Capule said in the same hearing that the “very narrow lifting” of the Bank Secrecy Law will allow the central bank to effectively handle crimes committed by bank personnel. He said during the past three years, over P6 billion involved incidents within bank personnel.

“We’ve had 1,419 incidents relating to deposits. These are crimes and losses and had around 2,200 personnel of banks involved and it amounts to P6.3 billion from 2017 to 2020. We are…alarmed that there are a lot of insider abuses being done in the banks and we do not have the proper legal weapon to ensure that these kinds of abuses are…utilizing bank deposit secrecy as shield,” he said. — G.M. Cortez

PayMaya enters online shopping business

DIGITAL payments firm Paymaya Philippines, Inc. launched on Thursday its platform’s “digital mall” feature, where users can buy products from its partner merchants.

The new feature called Paymaya Mall is expected to “help foster the growth and recovery of local businesses,” Mark Jason Dee, head of PayMaya’s Growth Marketing and Partnerships, said in an e-mailed statement.

The digital payments company added that the innovation is also seen to “boost” e-commerce transactions in the country amid the ongoing pandemic crisis.

It noted that the coronavirus pandemic has drastically affected both consumers and retail merchants.

Among the merchants whose products are now available in PayMaya’s digital mall are Jollibee, McDonald’s, Goldilocks, Rustans, Park Outlet, Mercury Drug, Rose Pharmacy, Landers, AllHome, and Boozy.

“More brands are coming soon as PayMaya taps into its network of over 116,000 merchant touchpoints,” the company said.

PayMaya President Shailesh Baidwan said, “With this initiative, we are bringing our partner merchants closer to our more than 28 million customers nationwide.”

“Consumers, on the other hand, can get their regular shopping done from the convenience and safety of their own homes while enjoying exclusive perks and rewards — all through the PayMaya app,” he added.

PayMaya is a subsidiary of Voyager Innovations, Inc., the digital arm of PLDT, Inc.

Voyager’s portfolio, aside from the PayMaya e-wallet and app for consumers, includes PayMaya Enterprise for end-to-end merchant-acquiring solutions and Smart Padala, which has over 37,000 partner agent touchpoints nationwide.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Arjay L. Balinbin

A thousand words

MOVIE REVIEW
Portrait of the Artist as Filipino
Directed by Lamberto Avellana

CONFESSION: when I saw Lamberto Avellana’s revered film adaptation of Nick Joaquin’s classic play Portrait of the Artist as Filipino some (mumble mumble) years ago, I wasn’t thrilled. It was an adaptation of a stage play that at first glance looked unapologetically stagy, complete with well-timed entrances and exits, and its actors spoke a Spanish-accented English I’d never heard in a Filipino film before. It was filmed in an understated style, and after the low angles and looming closeups and deep shadows of Gerry de Leon’s Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo felt like a step backwards, a middlebrow work of art.

Viewing this restored version (financed partly by the Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP), partly by Mike De Leon, son of the film’s producer Manuel De Leon) and painstakingly rehabilitated by the L’Immagine Ritrovata was a revelation: the image is crisper, the mono sound clearer, the film’s very style effortlessly pellucid, and essential to expressing its theme.

Is much of the film confined to a single location, the longtime residence of the Marasigans? Yes, but it’s a magnificent residence (the 150-year-old Yatco-Yaptinchay house, found by the filmmakers in the town of Biñan, Laguna, now gone), one of those old-style mansions with massive stone foundations, richly dark narra staircase and doors, soaring ceilings, capiz windows, intricately carved furniture, glass chandeliers — if I had to be confined I wouldn’t mind being confined here. Avellana’s camera peers into rooms and hallways, allowing the wood furniture to speak for themselves, standing witnesses to a passing age. It’s Avellana’s response to Hitchcock’s challenge of telling a two-hour story in a confined space, less exhibitionist but drenched in nostalgia — Mike Velarde’s melancholic score setting the mood, the camera barely able to rouse itself from its dreamy lethargy. The lethargy however is a pose: the camera pans and glides and reframes its characters, draws in close to better hear crucial snatches of conversation, but does so unobtrusively, and you must pay attention to know it’s doing anything (the crisp, cleaned-up image helps). Avellana’s camera is a modern intruder to an old shrine — the family patriarch is said to have known the heroes of the Filipino revolution — but so modest a presence you’d think it belonged with the antique furnitures, or was equipment that existed before 1895.

As for the English — Filipino films have used Tagalog dialogue for so long so often it’s jarring to hear exceptions. Avellana’s own Huk sa Bagong Pamumuhay (Huk in a New Life) is narrated by the director himself in English; recently there have been films in Cebuano (Damgo ni Eleuteria [Dream of Eleuteria]) and Ilonggo (Yanggaw [Affliction]), a welcome development. But English for Portrait makes sense; this was 40 years into the American occupation, and Nick Joaquin along with a number of his contemporaries (Bienvenido Santos, F. Sionil Jose) started their careers in this period — writing and speaking in the language was encouraged, even fashionable. And it’s a beautifully melodic form of English, with pronunciation and cadences distinctly Castillan, decades away from the flatter, more Hollywood-influenced speech my generation grew up using.

Joaquin’s play revolves around the eponymously titled painting hung in the Marasigan home; it’s Don Lorenzo Marasigan’s last masterpiece: Retrato del Artista como Filipino, a huge canvas depicting a grim faced Aenas carrying an even grimmer Anchises on his back, away from the burning city of Troy — Don Lorenzo (Pianing Vidal) has bequeathed the work to his two unmarried daughters Candida (Daisy Avellana) and Paula (Naty Crame-Rogers) for them to keep or sell as they see fit. A boarder they have taken into their house, Tony Javier (the reptilian Conrad Parham), has found an American buyer willing to pay $2,000 (around $37,500 in 2020 dollars). Will Candida and Paula sell the painting — sell out in effect — or will they somehow earn enough money teaching Spanish and giving piano lessons to keep themselves afloat? Will they give in to pressure from their more successful siblings Pepang (Sarah Joaquin) and Manolo (Nick Agudo) to put Don Lorenzo in hospital care, sell the house, move out?

Pepang and Manolo represent the ever-practical, constantly disapproving middle class, who see their older sisters as hopelessly out-of-touch eccentrics; they reveal their true motives in a gem of a comic scene where they roam the house squabbling over which furniture will go to whom once the property is sold. Tony Javier and Bitoy (Vic Silayan) are the sleeker, even more predatory younger generation, who are not above using old friendships (Candida and Paula once babysat Bitoy) or even sexual appeal (Paula has a simmering crush on Tony) to get what they want from the spinsters.

Daisy Avellana’s Candida stands above them all. She’s Joaquin’s more demure Blanche DuBois, a faded lady trying to hold the tatters of her dignity together. When Senator Don Perico (Koko Trinidad) visits the pair and makes the gentle but insistent argument that they can better care for their father and themselves by selling the house, Candida responds with a grand appeal to Don Perico’s younger self, to the poet he used to be, composing alongside Don Lorenzo so many years ago. The chastened senator admits that Candida and her father (note the inclusion) stand “contra mundum” — against the world. She’s what Don Lorenzo in his prime must have been like, turning that crumbling mansion into an alternate world where time remains frozen while the rest of the world flows past. She recalls Philip K. Dick’s John Isidore, a social outcast sealed into a dusty apartment with piles of “kipple” (his word for useless junk) about him  — only Candida strikes a more defiant attitude, and celebrates the accumulating kipple.

Naty Crame-Rogers’ Paula acts as Candida’s foil, the more obedient more childlike sibling who takes all her cues from her (presumably) older sister — all the more reason to note her presence, as she quietly and with childlike simplicity breaks out of the sisters’ state of suspended animation and takes direct action.

At one point Senator Don Perico gazes at the old man’s picture and articulates its meaning: that Don Lorenzo can only save himself, there is no next generation to carry his burden for him — as sharply poignant a metaphor for the artist’s loneliness as anything in Philippine literature, and a sentiment Joaquin himself must have often felt. The moment seemed too on the nose at first glance, till I realized what Don Perico wasn’t saying: that the portrait was of Don Lorenzo and his younger self; that the children and wife (who isn’t even mentioned at any point in the play) are absent. That this is also a portrait of self-absorption — a necessary element, I suspect, as most great artists I know or have read about seem to need that bit of egotism to create (“I am special hence what I do is special”). That Don Lorenzo in bequeathing the self-portrait like an albatross on his two spinster daughters is in effect condemning them to a living death — a fate the two sisters ultimately affirm by joining him willingly. That Joaquin with this play reveals more than what he possibly intended about an artist’s thirst for martyred immortality, and how much that immortality costs.

Final note, about the film’s fairly literal style: most stagings of Portrait have the actors peering up at an empty frame, leaving Don Lorenzo’s painting to the audience’s imagination. Avellana gives us a huge canvas stretched across the wall, towering over its viewers. The work itself (conceived apparently by Maning P. de Leon) is impressive, looking somewhat in advance of what art was like in the 1940s (not in the world, not with Picasso around, but at least in the Philippines) — the film may be set before World War 2, but Don Lorenzo apparently has some insight into the future. The literalness grates — why show the painting? Why not continue using that angled shot where Avellana’s camera gazed down on awestruck viewers? The payoff I suspect comes in the film’s climax (skip the rest of this paragraph if you haven’t seen the film!) when childlike Paula does what she feels she must do, take a knife to the canvas. Her blade tearing at the old man’s precious masterwork has a satisfyingly transgressive sound and feel, like a virgin’s underwear being ripped apart — something you don’t get with an unseen painting.

Still perhaps not my favorite Avellana (that would be Badjao, and the pleasurable Pag-asa) but a great film, and for once I fully felt the greatness.

CA rules against ABS-CBN in employee dismissal case

THE Court of Appeals (CA) dismissed a petition from ABS-CBN Corp. to overturn a ruling by the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) which had ordered the network to pay compensation to two dismissed employees.

The NLRC in 2018 had ordered the network to pay two former employees, Ellen N. Lagat and Simonette C. Soriano, a total of P697,000 as compensation for their illegal dismissal in 2012.

In its petition, ABS-CBN alleged that the NLRC had committed “grave abuse of discretion” for issuing the order, as the company was still awaiting the decision of the Supreme Court (SC) on a motion for reconsideration.

The CA’s decision, issued on Feb. 4, called ABS-CBN’s claim “devoid of merit” because the SC had not issued a restraining order, which would have barred the NLRC from issuing its order.

The CA added that the principle of judicial courtesy that ABS-CBN’s petition referred to does not apply in this case because the CA and the SC have consistently upheld NLRC decisions on ABS-CBN labor cases.

It added that even if the SC later rules in favor of ABS-CBN, the company could still move for restitution or request a refund of the compensation payout.

The CA noted that NLRC’s February 2012 ruling of illegal dismissal against ABS-CBN became final and executory in April 2013 when NLRC denied ABS-CBN’s motion for reconsideration. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

US Treasury chief eyes financial innovation to fight the misuse of cryptocurrencies, narrow digital gaps

WASHINGTON — US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Wednesday warned about an “explosion of risk” from digital markets, including the misuse of cryptocurrencies, but said new financial technologies could also help fight crime and reduce inequality.

In remarks to a financial sector innovation roundtable, Ms. Yellen said such technologies could be used to stem the flow of dark money from organized crime and fight back against hackers, but also to reduce digital gaps in the US.

She said passage of the Anti-Money Laundering Act in December would allow the Treasury Department to rework a framework for combating illicit finance that has been largely unchanged since the 1970s.

“The update couldn’t have come at a better time,” Yellen told policy makers, regulators and private sector experts. “We’re living amidst an explosion of risk related to fraud, money laundering, terrorist financing, and data privacy.”

The COVID-19 pandemic had triggered more — and more sophisticated — cyberattacks aimed at hospitals, schools, banks, and the government itself, she said.

Cryptocurrencies and virtual assets offered promise, but they had also been used to launder the profits of online drug traffickers and to finance terrorism.

Innovation in the sector could help address these problems while giving millions of people access to the financial system, she said.

Yellen, who has promised to prioritize fighting inequality and disparities, said the pandemic had exposed huge problems, including the dearth of broadband access in many areas of the country.

She said responsible and equitable innovation could make a big difference.

“Innovation should not just be a shield to protect against bad actors. Innovation should also be a ladder to help more people climb to a higher quality of life,” she said. — Reuters

DAVI and NielsenIQ platform offers customized shopping

A TECHNOLOGY called the Advanced Analytics Platform (AAP) will soon allow Robinsons Rewards loyalty members to customize their shopping experience.

The platform will be using consumer insights to present the right products in the preferred price range and use appropriate marketing campaigns specific to each Robinsons loyalty member.

It is a project between Data Analytics Ventures, Inc. (DAVI), a JG Summit Holdings, Inc. subsidiary, and consumer research firm NielsenIQ.

Already tried and tested in clients in Thailand and Hong kong, the platform is said to be the first of its kind in the Philippines.

“The AAP provides deep insights into shopper behavior over time — all calculated over time. We are thrilled to be able to introduce the platform to the Philippines with DAVI, and to put shoppers at the heart of decision making to drive growth for Robinsons and brands alike,” NielsenIQ Consumer Intelligence in Asia Executive Director Alex Morgan said in a statement.

DAVI Chief Executive Officer Jojo Malolos emphasized the need to uncover the everchanging shopping behaviors of Filipinos using data analytics.

“Through loyalty data, we are able to understand the spending habits of our shoppers and connect the dots to identify new programs to enrich our customer’s lives. These insights can immediately be acted upon through personalized campaigns tailored for specific individuals,” the official said in a statement. “It will be able to provide customized and relevant offers to its shoppers.”

The platform will also provide merchants with an easy to use system, allowing them easy access to the insights and research prepared by DAVI.

Robinsons Retail Holdings, Inc. President and CEO Robina Y. Gokongwei-Pe said the platform would help “make stronger, relevant and more responsive marketing and merchandising recommendations.”

The system is designed to help retailers collaborate through sharing insights and coming up with market plans to better serve their shoppers.

“Through this collaboration, we will be able to enhance the development of products and services to meet the needs of Robinsons Rewards members,” Ms. Pe said. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

Transpacific’s franchise clears final reading

THE House of Representatives approved on final reading a bill extending the franchise of Transpacific Broadband Group International, Inc. for another 25 years.

During a plenary session on Wednesday, the lawmakers approved House Bill 8551, which grants the renewal of Transpacific’s franchise.

If enacted into law, Transpacific will be allowed “to construct, install, establish, maintain and operate for commercial purposes and in the public interest, communications systems for the reception and transmissions of messages, such as but not limited to voice, audio, data, facsimile, video, and such other radio, write, satellite, and other means” for another 25 years.

Transpacific must secure a Certificate of Public Convenience and other required permits and licenses from the National Telecommunications Commission in relation to the operation of its telecommunication systems and facilities.

In terms of establishing or maintaining poles and other conductors, Transpacific will need to secure approval and permit from the Department of Public Works and Highways or the local government units.

The company should also offer its common stocks to at least 30% of Filipino citizens in any securities exchange or through any methods allowed by law.

Transpacific is a publicly listed company established in 1995 and is registered under the Clark Special Economic Zone. — Gillian M. Cortez

Larry Flynt, porn publisher and free speech activist, 78

HUSTLER magazine publisher Larry Flynt, Jr. — PHOTO BY GLENN FRANCIS OF PACIFICPRODIGITAL VIA WIKIPEDIA.ORG

LOS ANGELES — Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt, Jr., the self-described “smut peddler who cares,” who used his pornography empire and flair for the outrageous to push the limits of free speech, has died at the age of 78, The Washington Post reported on Wednesday.

The newspaper said Mr. Flynt’s brother Jimmy Flynt confirmed his death but did not cite a specific cause. Mr. Flynt suffered from a variety of health problems since a 1978 assassination attempt that left him a paraplegic.

Mr. Flynt loved to aggravate his critics with stunts such as wearing a diaper made from an American flag to court and was involved in a number of legal battles.

In the most famous, the US Supreme Court made an important First Amendment ruling in favor of Mr. Flynt in a libel battle with evangelist Jerry Falwell. Mr. Flynt had published a fake ad in Hustler which depicted Falwell saying his first sexual encounter had been with his mother in an outhouse. Falwell sued for $50 million and won a lower court ruling but in 1988 the Supreme Court said the ad was a parody and protected by free speech standards.

In his heyday, Mr. Flynt lived a life that could have made Caligula blush. He wrote in his autobiography that his first sexual experience was with a chicken and told of having sex every four or five hours during a workday. After he was paralyzed, Mr. Flynt had penile implant surgery so he could continue to have sex.

Mr. Flynt created a business with an estimated turnover of $150 million at one point. As magazine circulation slipped, he stayed ahead of trends by investing in adult-oriented television channels, a casino, film distribution and merchandise.

He said he never objected to being labeled a smut peddler as long as he was considered a First Amendment crusader, too. “Just because I publish pornography does not mean that I am not concerned about the social ills that all of us are,” he once told an interviewer.

Mr. Flynt was often in legal trouble, fighting obscenity charges or lawsuits, and he often turned courtroom appearances into spectacles. His obscene outbursts once prompted his own lawyer to ask a judge to have Mr. Flynt bound and gagged.

EXPLICIT PICS
Born in 1942, Mr. Flynt grew up in poverty in Kentucky and Indiana and dropped out of school after the eighth grade. After stints in the armed forces and a General Motors plant, he and his brother opened the Hustler Club in Dayton, Ohio, in 1968. By 1973 it had grown to a string of strip clubs across the state and Mr. Flynt put out a newsletter to promote them.

That newsletter evolved into Hustler magazine, his flagship publication, which came to be infamous for featuring explicit photos that made competitor Playboy seem mild. Virtually nothing was off limits on Hustler’s pages and Mr. Flynt made a point of publishing photos of women’s genitalia.

At its peak, Hustler reportedly had a circulation of 3 million. Larry Flynt Publications also put out other porn magazines, as well as movies and mainstream magazines.

Mr. Flynt reveled in controversy. He made news by publishing pictures of a nude Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis sunbathing in 1975 and a cover photo of a naked woman being fed head first into a meat grinder. In 1998 he offered $1 million to anyone who could catch high-ranking US government officials in a sex scandal.

“My competitors always masqueraded their pornography as art,” Mr. Flynt told the Cincinnati Post. “We never had any pretensions about what we did … We have proved that barnyard humor has a market appeal.”

In 1977 he was convicted in Cincinnati of pandering obscenity and participating in organized crime but the verdict was overturned.

In 1978 Mr. Flynt was on trial on similar charges in Lawrenceville, Georgia, when he and his attorney were shot. Joseph Paul Franklin, a white supremacist, later confessed to the shootings, saying he was upset by Hustler’s photographs of interracial sex, but was never prosecuted. Mr. Flynt was left paralyzed from the waist down by the shooting, restricted to a $17,000 gold-plated wheelchair for the rest of his life.

In October 2013, one month before Franklin was executed in Missouri for racially motivated murders not related to the Flynt shooting, Mr. Flynt wrote in the Hollywood Reporter that he did not believe in the death penalty and did not want Franklin put to death. He did want vengeance, however. “I would love an hour in a room with him and a pair of wire-cutters and pliers so I could inflict the same damage on him that he inflicted on me,” Mr. Flynt said.

His life was the basis of the 1996 movie The People vs. Larry Flynt which starred Woody Harrelson and was based in part on Flynt’s Supreme Court case.

Mr. Flynt was a Democrat whose magazines espoused liberal and libertarian views. He once ran for president against Ronald Reagan — promoting himself as “the smut peddler who cares” — and in 2003 campaigned for governor of California.

In 1977, he converted to evangelical Christianity at the urging of Ruth Carter Stapleton, sister of President Jimmy Carter, but renounced those beliefs the following year after the Georgia shooting.

Mr. Flynt’s 1996 autobiography was titled An Unseemly Man: My Life as a Pornographer, Pundit and Social Outcast.

He was married five times and had four surviving children. — Reuters

Manila Water in talks with gov’t on new contract, says DoJ chief

AYALA-LED Manila Water Co., Inc. is negotiating a new concession contract with the government ahead of a separate negotiation with Maynilad Water Services, Inc., the Justice secretary said on Thursday.

“[T]he water concession review panel is currently negotiating with Manila Water,” said Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra in a mobile phone message to BusinessWorld.

When asked at which stage the negotiation has reached, he said, “much progress has been achieved.”

According to Mr. Guevarra, the negotiation is led by the Department of Finance. He also said that the negotiation with the other water concessionaire, Maynilad, will start once talks with Manila Water are done.

In November last year, President Rodrigo R. Duterte tasked the Department of Justice to discuss with Metro Manila’s two water providers the revision of their existing concession contracts, which he claimed to contain “onerous” provisions.

Mr. Duterte’s directive was a response to an international arbitration court’s ruling that the Philippine government must pay Maynilad P3.4 billion and Manila Water P7.4 billion for losses incurred when the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System rejected their request for an increase in water rates.

The concessionaires opted not to demand payment, and said they were open to review the terms of their separate contracts with the government. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

EDC ties up with social enterprise for plastic waste collection

LOPEZ-LED Energy Development Corp. (EDC) has inked a deal with local social enterprise The Plastic Flamingo (PLAF) to collect plastic waste from the houses of the firm’s employees for recycling and upcycling, the company said on Thursday.

EDC signed the memorandum of agreement with PLAF in a virtual event that took place on Feb. 3. In a press release Thursday, EDC said that the partnership called “Plastic to Shelter” would help achieve its goal of becoming a zero-waste company.

Under the agreement, EDC would collect the plastic waste materials of its employees based in Manila and nearby areas once a month, and subsequently turn them over to PLAF, which would use the materials for recycling, upcycling and disposal.

“Part of PLAF’s program is segregating the collected plastics according to its classifications and then transforming them into Eco-Planks. The eco-planks are used in producing emergency shelter for populations hit by disaster,” EDC said in a statement.

EDC Corporate Support Functions Head and Assistant Vice President Regina Victoria J. Pascual said that the firm’s initiative in waste management was “nothing new” as it has been spearheading a number of programs in addressing the plastic waste situation, including information campaigns among its employees on how to properly dispose of waste, and encouraging employees to donate eco-bricks to its sister company First Balfour.

Eco-bricks, which are made of plastic bottles packed with used plastic materials, are known as reusable building blocks for construction.

“We knew that there’s always a way to do more, to have less waste, to have better environmental impact–which led to our desire to have zero waste in EDC. Our bigger hurdle came last year when we started working from home due to the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic and realized that all those food and grocery deliveries and items ordered online that came in layers of bubble wrap have resulted in accumulation of plastic waste in our employees’ respective houses,” Ms. Pascual said.

She added that EDC eventually found a partner in PLAF that could help manage its employees’ personal plastic waste while repurposing them into other products.

PLAF handles a pilot waste collection project in the country, with a collection network spanning Metro Manila and other areas.

According to a report released by the McKinsey Center for Business and Environment last year, the Philippines was identified as the world’s third-biggest polluter, generating 2.7 million metric tons of plastic wastes per year.

In December, House Deputy Speaker and Antique Rep. Loren B. Legarda said in a forum that plastic pollution in the country has aggravated flood levels in various parts of Luzon, following the onslaught of monsoons and typhoons that hit the country. — Angelica Y. Yang