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JobStreet launches online job-seeking event for Filipinos

Image via JobStreet

Online job search website JobStreet launched “Job To Cart,” an online event that will make more than 73,000 career opportunities accessible to Filipino applicants via their website and Facebook page. 

From July 26 to 30, in addition to shoutouts of jobs available on the platform, there will be chatbots that can guide jobseekers through the application process and live chat features allowing direct, on-the-spot communication with hirers. 

As of this April, 4.14 million Filipinos are still looking for jobs because of the impact of the pandemic, according to JobStreet Philippines’ country manager Philip A. Gioca, who zeroed in on the word “languishing” as a descriptor for those struggling from the loss of income the past year and a half.

“However, we see that there’s a surge in jobs as we move forward, especially in the beginning of this year,” he added during the event’s press launch. 

The five-day event will showcase thousands of available jobs in an organized manner, giving a different focus each day. The first day is dedicated to Luzon-based jobs; the second, Visayas-Mindanao jobs; the third, entry-level jobs; the fourth, overseas opportunities; and the final day, government support and services. 

“JobStreet understands that moving forward can be a challenge this pandemic, so we want to make searching for a job feel like online shopping,” said Ryan C. Tordesillas, JobStreet’s senior sales manager for small and medium enterprises (SMEs).  

UPSKILLING
JobStreet also shared key findings on the Filipino workforce’s view on reskilling, upskilling, and digital learning from their 2021 Decoding Global Talent Survey released this May.  

A majority of Filipinos (77%) are willing to be retrained for a different job as needed, with the number even higher for blue collar workers (82%), said Mr. Gioca. Meanwhile, traditional on-the-job training remains the preferred form of training at 70%, followed by self-study at 63%.  

The report also featured jobs most and least at risk in terms of being affected by automation. JobStreet’s recommendation was for companies to expand the skills of workers in Customer Service, the Service Sector, and Administration and Secretariat, which are most at risk. 

Mr. Gioca also maintained that learning new skills was relevant no matter what the sector or circumstance, saying, “We can see that automation has become a key factor in the workplace, so it is an advantage to learn digital skills regardless of your job role.” 

On the expanding pool of vacancies, he added, “Large companies are now beginning to hire. SMEs are starting to pop up in different modes. Now, we are at 73,000 jobs, which means many more companies are accepting people because they’re trying to go back to business as usual.” — Brontë H. Lacsamana

Australia to extend COVID-19 lockdown in Victoria amid Delta outbreak

SYDNEY — Australian authorities on Monday said Victoria state will extend a coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdown beyond Tuesday despite a slight drop in new infections as the country’s two biggest cities fight to stop the spread of the highly infectious Delta variant. 

Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews said lockdown rules would not be lifted as cases were still being detected in the community, promising more details would be provided on Tuesday. 

“It would be perhaps a few days of sunshine and then there is a very high chance that we’d be back in lockdown again. That’s what I’m trying to avoid,” said Mr. Andrews in explaining why the lockdown would not be lifted as scheduled. 

Victoria, the country’s second most populous state which includes Melbourne, on Monday reported 13 locally acquired cases, down from 16 a day earlier. All new local cases are linked. 

Nearly half of Australia’s 25 million population has been confined to their homes with Sydney, the country’s largest city, in a five-week lockdown, and all of Victoria state under stay at home rules, after the fast-moving Delta strain triggered the country’s worst outbreak for this year. 

New South Wales (NSW) state, of which Sydney is the capital, reported 98 new locally acquired cases, down from 105 a day earlier. At least 20 of the new cases were infectious while in the community, roughly in line with the last few days. 

“That 20 number is the number we are really keen to nudge … the closer we get that number to zero, the sooner we can end the lockdown,” NSW state Premier Gladys Berejiklian said during a televised media conference. 

There are currently 82 people in hospitals, with 24 in intensive care, seven of whom require ventilation. 

NSW has twice extended lockdown measures in Sydney since it was first imposed on June 26, with the tough restrictions now scheduled to end on July 30. 

Though cases dipped on Monday, Ms. Berejiklian said the state would not see the effects of the hard lockdown for “another four or five days” and pleaded with people not to mingle with extended family as most infections are occurring within families. 

Swift contact tracing, a high community compliance of tough social distancing rules and lockdowns have helped Australia quash past outbreaks and keep its COVID-19 numbers relatively low. Just over 31,900 cases and 914 deaths have been reported. 

VACCINE ROLLOUT
Australia could be heading into a new cycle of stop-and-start lockdowns until the end of the year until it hits high vaccination coverage, experts have said. 

A poll by the Australian newspaper on Monday showed the slow immunization drive, with just 13% of the country’s adult population fully vaccinated, has pulled down Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s approval ratings to the lowest level in more than a year. 

Nearly one million Pfizer vaccine doses arrived overnight in the country, officials said, after the federal government reached an agreement to bring forward weekly shipments scheduled from September, tripling the current supply. 

Officials are also frustrated after reports of people breaching social distancing rules in Sydney, prompting the state police to begin “high-visibility patrols” along the coast, including the popular tourist spots of Bondi and Manly. 

Controversial British commentator Katie Hopkins will be deported after she posted a video on Instagram joking about answering the door naked and maskless to people delivering meals while she was in quarantine in a Sydney hotel. 

“To think that she could think that the measures we are taking to keep our community safe can be treated with such juvenile, imbecile behavior is mind-boggling,” NSW state Health Minister Brad Hazzard told reporters. — Renju Jose/Reuters

All aboard the hyperloop: How your commute could be changing

Image via Virgin Hyperloop

NEW YORK — Think about the future of transportation, and you might envision the old animated show The Jetsons, with everyone flying around in personal spaceships. 

Not only did that never happen, but we are still piling into creaky old subways and buses. 

Josh Giegel wants to start from scratch. The chief executive and co-founder of Virgin Hyperloop foresees us zipping between cities in minutes, a future not as far off as you may think. 

Mr. Giegel sat down with Reuters to talk about how this budding technology could change the way we live and work. 

Q: Humanity is facing all sorts of transportation challenges, so why do you think hyperloop is the right solution? 

A: We’re looking at moving massive amounts of people, at the speed of an aircraft, giving them the opportunity to live where they want to live and work where they want to work. A hyperloop would move as many people and goods as a 30-lane highway. 

Q: How does the hyperloop work? 

A: We take you inside a tube, which gives you lots of advantages. It’s impervious to weather, and you avoid lots of things that cause accidents, like crossings. 

Inside the tube we take almost all the air out, allowing you to go at high speeds with very little energy consumption. We use magnetic levitation technology, so there is no grinding, and everything is contactless and smooth. With electromagnetic propulsion, and 20-30 passengers per pod, we could move tens of thousands of passengers per hour. 

Q: You actually rode in one at your Nevada test facility, so what was it like? 

A: From starting this in a garage seven years ago, to drawing it up on a whiteboard, to sitting inside it, it was all very surreal. 

The acceleration was similar to a sportscar, and we were giddy. The biggest piece of that test was that the world saw two people get on a hyperloop, and saw two people get off. 

Until that moment, everyone wondered “Could it be safe for people?” Now we know that it is. 

Q: How will this speed up travel between cities? 

A: It transforms the math. Look at how long it takes you right now to get across Manhattan. Maybe 40 minutes. You could go from NYC to Washington, D.C., in less time. 

You could go from LA to Las Vegas in 40 minutes. 

What we’re doing is similar to what Roman roads, and Spanish ships, and airplanes did – shrinking the time associated with distance. 

Q: What is the timeline to have it up and running? 

A: This is not 10 or 20 years away. Cities can start incorporating this into their planning right now. 

I couldn’t put my finger on who will be the very first, but in addition to America, we are also looking at places like India, Europe and the Middle East. We are probably looking at a timeframe of 2025–27. 

Q: Since you are a Virgin company, what has your interaction with Sir Richard Branson been like? 

A: He is a consummate dreamer who believes in what we are trying to do. What I enjoy about Richard is that he not only started his own business from nothing, but he’s an adventurer. 

We are not only building a new type of transportation system, but we are trying to attract passengers to something new — and that’s what he has done, from Virgin Atlantic to Virgin Cruises to Virgin Galactic. He knows how to build customer acceptance and loyalty. 

Q: If this tech catches on, will it change how people live and work? 

A: One hundred percent. I have a two-year-old son, and the way he will be able to live is unlike anything we can imagine. 

If you look at the cities of the future, people might want to live in one area, and work in other areas. We’re already seeing that with the pandemic. My dream is to live near Yosemite and then work with my team in LA. A hyperloop would give you the potential to do both. 

Q: What do you want people to know about this technology? 

A: Big ideas don’t have to take long periods of time. You can go from a garage to a moonshot idea in a couple of years. 

This decade could end with hundreds of millions of people riding hyperloop. For people who think this technology is many years away, I rode on one. It’s right now. 

Chris Taylor/Reuters 

Recyclable waste collection app expands service to Muntinlupa and Las Piñas

By Patricia B. Mirasol 

Trash Panda, a collection service app for recyclable waste, has expanded its service to Muntinlupa and Las Piñas, bringing its coverage to 13 cities in Metro Manila, and Cainta in Rizal. 

It also rolled out a web-based app for non-Android users. (The Android app was launched this March.)

Through the service, users can book the collection of recyclable items (like plastics, paper and cardboard, metals, and used beverage cartons), track the collector’s estimated time of arrival, and earn from the sale of their items directly to recyclers. An impact tracker feature helps users view the total weight of the waste they had turned over to Trash Panda collectors for recycling and recovery. 

To date, Trash Panda has at least 2,200 registered users, with a high concentration in Quezon City, Manila, Pasig, Mandaluyong, and Makati. Cities covered by the app aside from those already mentioned are: Marikina, Parañaque, Pasay, Pateros, San Juan, and Taguig.

LALAMOVE FOR RECYCLABLES
The idea for Trash Panda was based on a class project one of the co-founders had under the College of Engineering’s Department of Computer Science in the University of the Philippines (UP). 

“Beyond the class exercise, I gradually did more research on how to make the [solid waste management assisting] system usable in real life, and even went back to school… to gain more knowledge about environmental policy, programs, and planning,” said Marie P. Sapuay, co-founder of Circula Recoon, the startup company behind the app. It was at the UP School of Urban and Regional Planning that she met her co-founder, Francis C. Dimalanta, who helped flesh out what is now Trash Panda. 

The business model is similar to delivery and courier services such as Lalamove and Transportify, Ms. Sapuay told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview. 

Fees cover the cost of collection and transport of recyclable items, which are sent directly to recyclers under the Philippine Alliance for Recycling and Materials Sustainability. Trash Panda’s fleet of light trucks collect and transport items that are clean, dry, and free from oil, food/beverage residue, and strong smells.

The startup operates independently from the traditional waste haulers that are under contract with local government units (LGUs) for regular waste collection. Its collectors are jeepney drivers and junkshop sorters whose livelihoods were displaced during the pandemic.

“They are already specialists in their own domains,” said Ms. Sapuay of jeepney drivers, who already know how to move around the metro, and sorters, who know the market value of collected items. Trash Panda also trains new hires on how recyclers expect the items to be grouped together.

WASTE MANAGEMENT CRISIS
According to a Philippine Institute for Development Studies report, “waste management has been simply dumped on the shoulders of LGUs while they lack resources.” 

“Barangays are also given so much in terms of mandate and responsibility, but they are the least empowered in terms of capacity and resource,” said Sonny N. Domingo, one of the authors of the report.  

Meanwhile, a November 2020 opinion piece on BusinessWorld said the nation is experiencing a waste management crisis. The Philippines generated 40,000 tons of waste daily in 2016, of which only 85% are brought to landfills and dumpsites. Globally, an estimated 50% of collected urban wastes are landfilled, while 20% are combusted in waste-to-energy power plants. 

In the waste management hierarchy, methods such as prevention, minimization, and the recovery of materials through recycling and reusing are preferred over incineration and landfilling. Landfilling, in particular, produces 0.51 ton more greenhouse gas emissions than combustion with energy recovery. It also produces leachate, a toxic substance that can pollute land, ground water, and waterways. 

There are two different ways to interpret a zero-landfill future, Ms. Sapuay said: “Either we will easily fill in our landfills with waste well before the expected end of their lifespans and run out of land to reserve for more landfills entirely, or we Filipinos as a society would evolve to a point that landfills just won’t be needed anymore.” 

As temperatures rise, ‘aliens’ threaten Nepal’s oldest national park

PIXABAY

CHITWAN, Nepal — When botany professor Bharat Babu Shrestha visited Nepal’s Chitwan National Park in 2013, feverfew — a flowering plant in the daisy family — was rare. 

Today, large areas of the park’s grasslands are covered in the invasive plant, said Mr. Shrestha, who teaches at Tribhuvan University on the outskirts of Kathmandu. 

Non-native plants have been spreading fast in Nepal’s oldest national park in recent years — and part of the reason is rising temperatures as fossil fuel use heats up the planet, said the expert in “invasion ecology.” 

“The changing climate appears to be conducive for invasive alien plants to grow faster,” Mr. Shrestha said. 

The surge in alien plants in Chitwan, a 950-sq-km park in Nepal’s southern plains, is now crowding out  grasslands and wetlands that provide food and shelter for the park’s iconic wildlife, say park authorities. 

It’s a problem seen in parks and reserves around the world as climate change shifts what it means to “conserve” natural areas. 

“Like never before, the park faces habitat loss at an alarming rate,” said Ananath Baral, chief conservation officer at Chitwan. “We are concerned about the wildlife’s future.” 

In the past decade, the park’s grasslands have been heavily invaded by plants such as feverfew, lantana, a vine known as “mile-a-minute” weed — and Siam weed, considered one of the world’s most problematic invaders, Mr. Baral said. 

As a result, in some parts of the park, the grass favoured by the park’s wildlife — including the one-horned rhino, deer and antelope — has partially or totally disappeared, he said. 

Chitwan’s most recent grassland mapping, published in 2016, shows the area of the park and its buffer zone covered by grass has shrunk to 6%, down from 20% in 1973 when the reserve was established. 

Both rising temperatures and more erratic rainfall have allowed non-native plants to thrive, said Uttam Babu Shrestha, who has looked at invasive species in Chitwan as director of the Kathmandu-based Global Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies. 

With global temperatures predicted to keep climbing as the world struggles to curb use of fossil fuels, “plant invasion is likely to increase in the near future”, he warned. 

DOUBLE TROUBLE
Like the grasslands, the park’s wetlands also are under stress: covered by plants that the local wildlife do not eat and squeezed by unprecedented floods and unpredictable droughts, biologists say. 

Babu Ram Lamichhane, head of the Biodiversity Conservation Center in Sauraha, at the gateway to Chitwan, said the combination of intense rain with flash floods in the monsoon season and prolonged dry spells in the spring are degrading Chitwan’s wetlands. 

Many of the park’s ponds and wallows have dried up and turned into woodland or bare ground, and others have been filled in by sand, silt and pebbles carried by floodwaters, he said. 

“Too much and too little water — both are the problems today. They threaten the park’s rich biodiversity, altering the wildlife’s habitat,” Mr. Lamichhane said. 

The spring of 2019 was so dry that park authorities had to install a well to pump water into watering holes used by wild buffalo, he said. 

And one-horned rhinos have left two areas on the eastern side of the park because the more intense dry seasons mean the marshes they live in no longer fill with water, he added. 

As water sources dry and grasslands shrink, some park animals have started entering human settlements in search of better grazing and water, increasing the chances of human-wildlife conflict, park authorities say. 

People living in the villages near the park now frequently report incidents of wildlife attacks and damage to their crops, conservation officer Mr. Baral said. 

HIGHER COSTS
Trying to deal with the problems is proving costly in both manpower and budget, Nepal’s wildlife officials say. 

“We must dig new ponds and construct grasslands every year to keep wildlife habitat intact,” said Haribhadra Acharya, a spokesperson for the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC). 

Since last July, park rangers have dug 16 new ponds and repaired another 35 to try to capture and store rainwater and monsoon runoff, said ranger Pushpa Deep Shrestha. 

They also worked to create 2,500 hectares (6,200 acres) of new grasslands in the park, he said. 

The maintenance efforts — which also included removing invasive weeds, uprooting trees and burning grasses – took about 50 million Nepalese rupees ($420,000) — 40% of the park’s total development budget, the ranger said. 

Five years back, just 9.5 million Nepalese rupees were spent on maintenance efforts, according to the Chitwan National Park’s annual report. 

The hard work protecting the park’s ecosystems and wildlife mean the climate-driven shifts have so far not hurt park tourism — but Mr. Baral, the conservation officer, worries they could one day. 

Chitwan National Park brings in more than 295 million Nepalese rupees each year — nearly 40% of the total revenue generated by Nepal’s 20 protected areas, according to a report by the DNPWC. 

“Over one-third of the tourists who come to Nepal to visit protected areas want to come here for wildlife sightseeing and adventurous jungle safaris,” Mr. Baral said. 

But if the park’s animals and the habitat they need are not protected adequately, “they will stop coming”, he warned. 

Until a few years ago, the park’s primary concern was stopping poachers. But now “habitat conservation is getting tough in the time of climate change,” conservation biologist Mr. Lamichhane said. — Pramod Acharya/Thomson Reuters Foundation

Tourism slump threatens conservation of endangered sharks

Albert Kok/CC BY-SA 3.0/Wikimedia Commons

Grey reef sharks, six-foot long on average and officially endangered, are an ordinary sight in Tubbataha Reef, a protected national marine park in Palawan. The existence of these sharks and their brethren are threatened by water pollution, shark fishing, and — more recently — by the sudden halt of marine wildlife tourism due to the pandemic. 

Shark conservation efforts that depend on tourism income continue to struggle in 2021.

“Even though Tubbataha Reef is efficiently managed, sharks still can’t escape their threats,” said Anna R. Oposa, Executive Director of Save Philippine Seas (SPS), who shared that surveyors found a reef shark suffocated by a plastic bag this year. “If we can’t completely protect them here, what chance do they have in places that aren’t protected at all?” 

Shark-based tourism is vital to the local economy and sharks themselves are essential to keeping marine ecosystems robust. Of the 1,000 shark species around the world, 200 can be found in the Philippines. Of these, only 25 are protected.

A shark study conducted in Tubbataha this year saw grey reef sharks, whitetips, and tiger sharks (including a three-meter specimen lingering in shallow water). “It shows Tubbataha is still doing very well,” said Maria Retchie C. Pagliawan, Tubbataha Reef National Park (TRNP) research officer, who shared the findings from their scientific trip at a virtual event organized by Marine Wildlife Watch of the Philippines (MWWP) and Save Philippine Seas (SPS). 

“A Virtual Dive with Sharks” took viewers on a virtual underwater tour of Sulu Sea’s Tubbataha Reef and Negros Occidental’s Danjugan Island during Shark Awareness Week.  

MWWP and SPS are both members of the Save Sharks Network, a coalition petitioning for the Philippine Shark Conservation Bill, introduced by Senator Risa N. Hontiveros-Baraquel in 2017, to be made into a law. 

MARINE PROTECTED AREAS
In Negros Occidental, support for locally managed protected areas has been an issue, according to Kaila Ledesma-Trebol, a marine biologist and trustee of the Philippine Reef and Rainforest Conservation Foundation, Inc. (PRRCFI). The province is home to Danjugan Island, a marine sanctuary with lagoons, bat caves, limestone and mangrove forests, seagrass beds, and fringing coral reefs. 

“We haven’t caught anyone here with sharks again like in the early 1990s, so that’s a good thing,” Ms. Ledesma-Trebol said, referring to dwindling cases of unsustainable shark fishing due to the practice being banned. “But in nearby Sipalay and other local markets in the mainland [of Negros], sharks still show up, and we know not all species are protected.” 

Bought by PRRCFI in 1994 for conservation efforts, Danjugan Island is a marine haven in a region where ecological threats are rampant, boasting seven viable ecosystems that span limestone forests, caves, white-sand beaches, lagoons with mangroves, and coral reefs. Aside from conservation, Ms. Ledesma-Trebol and her team also hold marine wildlife camps that help connect people with nature (although these efforts are on hold due to the pandemic). 

RETURN OF MARINE WILDLIFE TOURISM
While limited mobility prevents people from experiencing marine wonders firsthand, virtual trips and webinars on safe practices must do for now, according to Maria Rica C. Bueno, Department of Tourism (DoT) assistant secretary, who also spoke at the virtual dive event. 

Quoting Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat’s speech for World Environment Month in June, Ms. Bueno said: “Respecting the ocean and its inhabitants must be the top priority of every tourist who wants to connect with marine wildlife. Learning how to properly engage with these species is a small but crucial step in protecting and sustaining our marine biodiversity.” 

The Joint Memorandum Circular No. 2020-01 (JMC) issued in 2020 establishes rules and regulations governing the conduct of marine wildlife tourism interaction in the Philippines. These include responsible behavior around marine animals while underwater, which they hope will be practiced when tourists return. 

In Danjugan Island, “silent, patient, and undisruptive campers” have spotted as many as 80 blacktip reef shark pups while snorkeling in shallow reefs, said Ms. Ledesma-Trebol.

“If allowed, we will open camps again once the pandemic is over, but we will probably be doing private groups and not mix groups together,” she added, expressing hope for the return of marine wildlife tourism next year. “Of course, we have to do all the proper testing [for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)].” — Brontë H. Lacsamana

UK PM Johnson reverses plan to skip quarantine after COVID exposure

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson via Chatham House/Flickr

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and finance minister Rishi Sunak will both self-isolate in line with national guidance, abandoning heavily criticized plans to take part in a pilot scheme that would have allowed them to continue working. 

The U-turn comes a day after health minister Sajid Javid said he had tested positive for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and at a time when the government’s coronavirus response is under intense scrutiny. 

Almost all remaining restrictions in England will be lifted on Monday despite a surge in infections as ministers put their faith in the advanced vaccine program. 

Cases are rising by more than 50,000 a day and hundreds of thousands of Britons are being asked to self isolate for 10 days, causing havoc for employers and parents, prompting train cancellations and forcing some businesses to close their doors. 

The government announced at 0700 GMT that Messrs. Johnson and Sunak had been exposed to a person with COVID-19 and would take part in a trial scheme that allowed them to keep working instead of self-isolating. 

But less than three hours later that decision had been reversed after a flurry of criticism from voters, political opponents and business owners. 

“We did look briefly at the idea of us taking part in the pilot scheme… but I think it’s far more important that everybody sticks to the same rules,” Mr. Johnson said in a video message from his country residence, where he will isolate until July 26. 

The Telegraph reported late on Sunday that ministers were urging Mr. Johnson to ditch the requirement for fully vaccinated people to self-isolate entirely. 

Opposition politicians had said it was hypocritical for Messrs. Johnson and Sunak to have tried to exempt themselves from some of the rules. 

“Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak have been busted yet again for thinking the rules that we are all following don’t apply to them,” said Labour Party leader Keir Starmer. 

Mr. Sunak also acknowledged the backlash over their initial decision. 

“I recognise that even the sense that the rules aren’t the same for everyone is wrong,” he said on Twitter. 

The government’s handling of the pandemic has been dogged with episodes that have damaged public trust — most recently when then-health minister Matt Hancock was pictured kissing an adviser, in breach of social distancing regulations. He later resigned. 

Housing minister Robert Jenrick confirmed that the government would go ahead with its “freedom day” plan on Monday, removing the requirement to wear face masks, lifting limits on social gatherings, and allowing high-risk businesses to reopen. 

Mr. Johnson used his video message to plead with the public to take a cautious approach to the change of rules. 

“Please, please, please, be cautious,” he said. 

“Go forward tomorrow into the next step with all the right prudence and respect for other people, for the risks that the disease continues to present and, above all, please, please, please when you’re asked to get that second jab … please come forward and do it.” 

Ministers argue that the vaccination program, under which 87.8% of the adult population has had one vaccine dose and 67.8% have been double vaccinated, has largely broken the link between cases and mortality. 

“The last time we had cases at the level we do today, the number of people dying from the virus was 30 times the number it is today,” Mr. Jenrick told the BBC. — William James/Reuters

‘It’s terrifying’: Merkel shaken as flood deaths rise to 188 in Europe

Image of flooding in Miesenheim, Germany, via Andreas Janke/Flickr/CC BY-SA

BERCHTESGADEN/BISCHOFSWIESEN, Germany — German Chancellor Angela Merkel described the flooding that has devastated parts of Europe as “terrifying” on Sunday after the death toll across the region rose to 188 and a district of Bavaria was battered by the extreme weather.

Ms. Merkel promised swift financial aid after visiting one of the areas worst affected by the record rainfall and floods that have killed at least 157 in Germany alone in recent days, in the country’s worst natural disaster in almost six decades.

She also said governments would have to get better and faster in their efforts to tackle the impact of climate change only days after Europe outlined a package of steps towards “net zero” emissions by the middle of the century.

“It is terrifying,” she told residents of the small town of Adenau in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate. “The German language can barely describe the devastation that’s taken place.”

As efforts continued to track down missing people, the devastation continued on Sunday when a district of Bavaria, southern Germany, was hit by flash floods that killed at least one person.

Roads were turned into rivers, some vehicles were swept away and swathes of land buried under thick mud in Berchtesgadener Land. Hundreds of rescue workers were searching for survivors in the district, which borders Austria.

“We were not prepared for this,” said Berchtesgadener Land district administrator Bernhard Kern, adding that the situation had deteriorated “drastically” late on Saturday, leaving little time for emergency services to act.

About 110 people have been killed in the worst-hit Ahrweiler district south of Cologne. More bodies are expected to be found there as the flood waters recede, police say.

The European floods, which began on Wednesday, have mainly hit the German states of Rhineland Palatinate, North Rhine-Westphalia as well as parts of Belgium. Entire communities have been cut off, without power or communications.

In North Rhine-Westphalia at least 46 people have died. The death toll in Belgium climbed to 31 on Sunday.

AID UP, POWER DOWN

The scale of the floods mean they could shake up Germany’s general election in September next year.

North Rhine-Westphalia state premier Armin Laschet, the CDU party’s candidate to replace Ms. Merkel, apologised for laughing in the background while German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier spoke to media after visiting the devastated town of Erftstadt.

The German government will be readying more than 300 million euros ($354 million) in immediate relief and billions of euros to fix collapsed houses, streets and bridges, Finance Minister Olaf Scholz told weekly newspaper Bild am Sonntag.

“There is huge damage and that much is clear: those who lost their businesses, their houses, cannot stem the losses alone.”

There could also be a 10,000 euro short-term payment for businesses affected by the impact of the floods as well as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, Economy Minister Peter Altmaier told the paper.

Scientists, who have long said that climate change will lead to heavier downpours, said it would still take several weeks to determine its role in these relentless rainfalls.

Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said the link with climate change was clear.

In Belgium, which will hold a national day of mourning on Tuesday, 163 people are still missing or unreachable. The crisis centre said water levels were falling and a huge clean-up operation was underway. The military was sent into the eastern town of Pepinster, where a dozen buildings have collapsed, to search for any further victims.

About 37,0000 households were without electricity and Belgian authorities said the supply of clean drinking water was also a major concern.

BRIDGES BATTERED

Emergency services officials in the Netherlands said the situation had somewhat stabilized in the southern part of Limburg province, where tens of thousands were evacuated in recent days, although the northern part was still on high alert.

“In the north they are tensely monitoring the dykes and whether they will hold,” Jos Teeuwen of the regional water authority told a press conference on Sunday.

In southern Limburg, authorities are still concerned about the safety of traffic infrastructure such as roads and bridges battered by the high water.

The Netherlands has so far only reported property damage from the flooding and no dead or missing people.

In Hallein, an Austrian town near Salzburg, powerful flood waters tore through the town centre on Saturday evening as the Kothbach river burst its banks, but no injuries were reported.

Many areas of Salzburg province and neighbouring provinces remain on alert, with rains set to continue on Sunday. Western Tyrol province reported that water levels in some areas were at highs not seen for more than 30 years.

Parts of Switzerland remained on flood alert, though the threat posed by some of the most at-risk bodies of water like Lake Lucerne and Bern’s Aare river has eased. — Ralph Brock and Romana Fuessel/Reuters

[B-SIDE Podcast] Data protection while working from anywhere

Follow us on Spotify BusinessWorld B-Side

With the Delta variant of the coronavirus spreading, remote work looks like it will continue throughout 2021. Data privacy and data protection are big concerns since hackers have become more aggressive, prompting stricter regulations around the world.

“A lot of companies are still in infancy stages of implementing their data protection management programs,” said Edwin A. Concepcion, Straits Interactive country manager for the Philippines, who made the same observation in a previous conversation with B-Side.  

In this B-Side episode, Mr. Concepcion tells BusinessWorld reporter Bianca Angelica D. Añago the outlook of data privacy and protection in the Philippines during the pandemic. 

TAKEAWAYS 

Organizations have to put a premium on protecting personal data.

“[Companies] still have to come up with a lot of policies, processes, and standard operating procedures to govern their management of personal information,” Mr. Concepcion said. 

While the responsibility of data protection falls on both companies and employees, companies do have to guide their remote workforce. 

“It’s high time for organizations to put a premium on protecting the personal data of individuals like us,” Mr. Concepcion said, adding that on top of workshops, there is a wealth of free information and materials on data protection on the National Privacy Commission’s website and on the websites of relevant offices worldwide. 

“This is the time to be data aware. Individuals must be aware that their personal information are being collected by various organizations, including the government, and they have to be aware on how they can control these data and decide which information they want to share and to keep,” he said. 

Processing private information has repercussions. 

Guidelines on the minimum amount of personal data that organizations can collect from their contact tracing efforts have been issued by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases, Department of Health, and Department of Trade and Industry.

The organizations collecting information using contact tracing forms must be aware of these guidelines, specifically of their obligations as they are accountable for anything that happens to the personal data that people give them. 

Mr. Concepcion reminded, however, that “the Data Privacy Act is not about restrictions, it’s about protection of the data being processed.” 

Privacy will soon become very important before collecting personal information. 

“With digital transformation, privacy will become front and center of the processing of personal information,” Mr. Concepcion said. 

As such, organizations must do everything they can to ensure that they can protect personal data. 

Organizations can only maintain and acquire the trust of their consumers and of the general public in terms of ensuring the protection of personal data given to them. 

“In two to three years, the ‘privacy first’ concept will become synonymous to the processing of personal information,” he added. 

Data protection will surely become an integral part of international trade and business. 

“More than 160 countries have come up with various forms of data protection regulation around the world,” Mr. Concepcion said. 

Other countries already have various laws that penalize organizations for failure to protect their clients’ data, such as the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation which penalizes organizations for as much as 4% of their global revenue if they fail to protect private information. 

As companies from these countries transact with businesses in the Philippines, Mr. Concepcion said they will definitely require local companies to comply with their respective privacy and data protection regulations. 

As such, “privacy and data protection would definitely become an integral part of negotiating for international trade and business,” Mr. Concepcion said. 

This episode was recorded remotely on July 2. Produced by Paolo L. Lopez and Sam L. Marcelo.

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Anflo Industrial Estate: Boosting agro-industry in and beyond Mindanao

The Philippines’ agro-industry is starting to thrive at the Anflo Industrial Estate (AIE), the premier hub of its kind in the country.

Tapping what it sees as the huge opportunity to advance the country’s agro-business sector and its inception, AIE is positioned and designed to further develop the vast potential of the agro-industry of the Davao Region and Mindanao by providing a ready market for the region’s agri-produce and efficiently exported to the rest of the world.

The 63-hectare AIE, strategically located between Davao City and Tagum City, is a self-sustaining ecozone with complete facilities for manufacturing, cottage industries, warehousing, and agro-industrial operations.

AIE has ready-built standard factory buildings for lease to locators who are looking to immediately start their businesses. Other facilities, which allow for a conducive environment for the operation of industries, include a wide road network; a drainage system; sufficient water and power supply from trusted providers; and sewage collection, treatment, and disposal systems.

AIE also offers a cold storage facility for lease, which is ideal for food processing companies and distributors of finished products. AIE shared in an e-mail that they saw the need of having such a facility due to the lack of cold storage facilities within the region and even in the Philippines, especially given the need to store vaccines.

Furthermore, AIE is registered under the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), allowing its locators to avail of attractive PEZA incentives such as tax holidays and other exemptions. This, ultimately, helps the hub further promote investments in the country and ensure a smoother and easier process of doing business in the country.

AIE is in close proximity to Davao International Container Terminal, Mindanao’s premier container terminal for the efficient import and export of mainly agricultural products.

AIE is also a key access point to different cities within Mindanao, in the Philippines, the Brunei Darussalam–Indonesia–Malaysia–Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA), and Southeast Asia in general.

Not limiting itself to locators engaged in the actual processing of agri-produce, AIE has 18 locators to date, represented by five different nationalities and coming from food processing, plastics, packaging, and warehousing and storage industries.

In spite of the ongoing pandemic, AIE showed resilience through job creation and added locators. As of last January, AIE reported that workers in the park doubled to 686, from 289 in January 2020. Four locators were able to start their operations last year, while a Japanese company engaged in the premium packaging of products is also set to start its operations within the park this month. Moreover, AIE is the first winner of the Best Industrial Development award at the 8th PropertyGuru Philippine Property Awards last November.

AIE looks forward to expansion in the near future, starting with launching its commercial phase this year to provide for the needs of employees within the park. In the next two years, AIE will roll out two additional industrial phases, which will be available for lease or sale starting at 4,000 square meters per industrial lot. AIE also opens its doors to locators who need cold storage facilities and those within the logistics sector.

For more information, visit anfloindustrialestate.com.

Hubs helping the agri sector thrive

By Bjorn Biel M. Beltran, Special Features Writer

For years, the Philippines’ story was about growth and development. Dubbed as Asia’s next rising tiger, the country’s economic narrative had been breaking expectations with its rapid and continued expansion. Then the pandemic struck. Moving forward, the question on everyone’s minds is how to return to such a state of growth and restart the journey to recovery. According to the World Bank, agriculture could be the key.

“Modernizing the country’s agricultural sector is a very important agenda for the Philippines,” Ndiame Diop, World Bank country director for Brunei, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines, said in a September 2020 report titled “Transforming Philippine Agriculture During COVID-19 and Beyond.

“With the exception of a few small natural resource-rich countries, no country has successfully transitioned from middle to high-income status without having achieved an effective transformation of their agri-food systems. Transforming agriculture and food systems is always challenging. But the country’s new vision for agriculture, it’s current thrust for diversification and use of modern technologies, and its effective management of food supply during this pandemic clearly indicate that the country is well-equipped to overcome the challenge,” he added.

The report, which was prepared as part of World Bank’s support to the Department of Agriculture’s “new thinking” in agricultural development, goes on to explain how transforming Philippine agriculture into a dynamic, high-growth sector is essential for the country to speed up recovery, poverty reduction and inclusive growth. Modernizing the industry could further lead towards improving the overall resilience, competitiveness, and sustainability of the rural sector.

Agro-industrial zones already exist around the country to take advantage of this opportunity. These zones are accredited by the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), and are created to support the agricultural sector and continuously create ways to develop communities through different programs for farmers and crop growers. PEZA awards accreditation to developers of agro-industrial parks and through this, provides several incentives to its locators, such as tax holidays and other exemptions.

Agro-industrial parks are industrial estates that process, warehouse, and manufacture agricultural products for both food and non-food output, with the main function of an enterprise hub for the agricultural industry in a specific location. It stimulates the development of the agricultural industry through the manufacturing of agronomic production to food processing.

Moreover, an agro-industrial park is an excellent opportunity for investors to implement projects on its site using its infrastructure and services.

“Agro-industrial hubs provide several opportunities for the country’s economic and inclusive growth from farmers to businesses. They leverage on the country’s abundance of natural resources, rich land, and raw materials which can differ in several parts of the Philippines. These are primary sources of livelihood for Filipinos,” Ricardo F. Lagdameo, president of Damosa Land, Inc. and Anflo Industrial Estate, said in an e-mail.

“Agro-industrial parks that can provide complete facilities including even a cold storage facility and direct access to a world-class container terminal have the potential to fill in supply chain gaps in the industry. We aim to spur rapid development and economic growth in the countryside through developments such as this,” he added.

Mr. Lagdameo said that modern industrial parks are excellent catalysts for economic development and attract businesses to meet the requirements and demands of several industries, a boon for rural communities that rely on agriculture as their economic output.

For instance, Anflo Industrial Estate provides opportunities for businesses and investors to locate in the heart of the Davao region with ample tools, support facilities and services required for processing and agro-based manufacturing.

Mindanao, it bears noting, is dubbed as the “Food Basket of the Philippines,” largely producing 40% of the country’s food needs and 30% of the national food trade. Agricultural produce from Davao are exported to countries like China, Japan, the Netherlands, and the United States. Locators at the park export products such as banana, coconut, cacao, and rubber and have given vast opportunities for farmers to market their produce.

“The agro-industry is considered one of the top 10 priorities of the Davao Region. Its vast cropland is conducive for various investments in agribusiness and addresses matters on food security in the country while safeguarding sustainable development by providing employment and income generation for its community. Its integration with industrial real estate means opportunities for the local farmer to companies of different industries,” Mr. Lagdameo said.

Agro-industrial hubs’ potential for rural development will further support the government’s push to decentralize Metro Manila and direct investors to the provinces, contributing to the financial inclusion.