Home Blog Page 769

Is historically arid Beijing ready for a wetter future?

A MAN wades through floodwaters as he walks past village houses, after heavy rainfall flooded the area in Miyun district of Beijing, China, July 29. — REUTERS/FLORENCE LO

BEIJING — During last month’s deadly floods in Beijing, rural hotel owner Cui Jian and his guests spent the night stranded on a rooftop in torrential rain before rescuers battled through meter-high mud and silt to get to them the next day.

Beijing’s mountainous northern Huairou district and neighboring Miyun district received a year’s worth of rain in a single week, triggering flash floods that devastated entire villages and killed 44 people in the deadliest flood since 2012.

The authorities’ most serious weather warning came too late for most villagers in Huairou, who were already asleep by the time it was issued.

“In the past, they closed scenic areas and campsites, evacuated tourists and relocated villagers. If you warn people in time, good, but if not, it’s a natural disaster,” said Mr. Cui, whose 10 properties in the same Huairou district village, which he had spent 35 million yuan ($4.87 million) renovating, were submerged.

The floods exposed weaknesses in the rural emergency response infrastructure for Beijing, whose urban core is surrounded by several rural districts.

But they also revealed how historically dry Beijing, home to 22 million people, remains insufficiently prepared for what experts say will be an increasingly wet future. The Chinese capital has experienced three deluges since 2012 that forecasters said could only happen once every 100 years, and climate experts warn there is a growing risk of disasters on a previously unthinkable scale.

Chinese experts are increasingly calling for city planners to prioritize “ecological resilience” given the disastrous effects of climate change.

“The current understanding of the climate crisis and its future challenges is insufficient, which naturally leads to insufficient deployment and planning,” said Zhou Jinfeng, Secretary-General of the China Biodiversity Conservation and Green Development Foundation.

China’s ministries of housing and environment, and the Beijing city government, did not respond to faxed requests for comment.

While two Beijing districts devastated by floods in 2023 have issued long-term reconstruction plans prioritizing “climate-adaptive city construction” and proposing measures to improve rural flood control systems and upgrade infrastructure, the vast majority of recently commissioned infrastructure projects in the capital do not prioritize climate adaptation in their plans.

A Chinese government database showed only three Beijing infrastructure projects in the past five years whose procurement tenders mentioned “ecological resilience,” while several hundred tenders mentioning “climate change” were mostly related to research projects at state scientific institutes in Beijing.

Ecological resilience refers to measures such as restoring natural river embankments, reducing the use of concrete and other hard materials and excessive artificial landscaping, as well as increasing biodiversity, according to Zhou.

In a shift away from decades of breakneck urbanization that propelled China’s economic growth, a top-level urban planning meeting in July emphasized building “liveable, sustainable and resilient” cities.

Mid-July is typically when northern China’s rainy season starts, but this year it had its earliest start since records began in 1961, while several Beijing rivers experienced their largest-ever recorded floods.

Citywide rainfall in June and July surged 75% from a year earlier, official data showed.

This is due to the “significant northward expansion of China’s rain belt since 2011” linked to climate change, the director of China’s National Climate Center told state-owned China Newsweek, marking a shift towards “multiple, long-term, sustained cycles of rainfall” in the traditionally arid north.

‘SPONGE CITIES’
China’s policymakers have taken some steps to combat urban flooding. “Sponge city” projects have been underway across the country since 2015, transforming concrete-laden megacities with hidden drainage infrastructure such as permeable asphalt pavements, sunken rain gardens and modernized sewage systems.

The concept, originating in China, refers to mimicking a sponge’s ability to absorb and release rainwater.

In Beijing, recently-built projects include flood control pumping stations, riverside parks and man-made lakes.

China spent more than 2.9 trillion yuan ($403.78 billion) on more than 60,000 “sponge city” infrastructure projects in 2024, according to official data.

Authorities aim to have covered 80% of urban areas in all cities by 2030, although many provinces and major cities are behind schedule.

In Beijing, new “sponge city” projects worth at least 155 million yuan have begun this year, according to a Chinese procurement tender database. Currently, 38% of Beijing’s urban areas meet “sponge city” standards, media reports say.

But experts say such initiatives cannot help in Beijing’s rural fringes because the mountainous landscape makes villages, usually built at the foot of steep hillsides and lacking emergency response infrastructure, more vulnerable to secondary disasters such as landslides.

Current “sponge city” standards are also based on historical precipitation data and are poorly-equipped to deal with extreme rainfall, said Yuan Yuan, Greenpeace East Asia’s climate and energy campaigner.

Future contingency plans must also consider ensuring preemptive evacuation of residents and improving early warning systems, in particular identifying vulnerable populations with limited mobility, she added.

In the recent Beijing floods, 31 elderly residents of a nursing home in Miyun were among the dead. They had not been included in evacuation plans and were trapped in the rising waters.

“It’s necessary to rationally plan the infrastructure needed by local communities and… coordinate risk response plans and countermeasures, to create an integrated system to minimize future losses,” Ms. Yuan said.Reuters

Trump administration to vet immigration applications for ‘anti-Americanism’

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Pixabay

WASHINGTON — President Donald J. Trump’s administration has said it will assess applicants for US work, study and immigration visas for “anti-Americanism” and count any such finding against them, sparking concern about implications for free speech.

The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said in a “policy alert” dated Tuesday that it gave immigration officers new guidance on how to exercise discretion in cases where foreign applicants “support or promote anti-American ideologies or activities” as well as “antisemitic terrorism.”

Mr. Trump has labeled a range of voices as anti-American, including historians and museums documenting US slavery and pro-Palestinian protesters opposing US ally Israel’s military assault on Gaza.

“Anti-American activity will be an overwhelmingly negative factor in any discretionary analysis,” USCIS said.

“America’s benefits should not be given to those who despise the country and promote anti-American ideologies.”

The announcement did not define anti-Americanism. But the policy manual refers to a section of federal law about prohibiting naturalization of people “opposed to government or law, or who favor totalitarian forms of government.”

The full text mentions supporters of communism or totalitarian regimes and people who advocate the overthrow of the US government and violence against government officers, among other factors.

USCIS said it expanded the types of applications that have social media vetting, and reviews for “anti-American activity” will be added to that vetting.

Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, said the step hearkened to the 1950s when Senator Joseph McCarthy hunted alleged communists in a campaign that became synonymous with political persecution.

“McCarthyism returns to immigration law,” he said. Anti-Americanism “has no prior precedent in immigration law and its definition is entirely up to the Trump admin.”

In April, the US government said it would begin screening the social media of immigrants and visa applicants for what it called antisemitic activity. Rights advocates raised free speech and surveillance concerns. — Reuters

UN chief urges immediate Gaza ceasefire, warns of casualties from Israeli operation

TOKYO — United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Thursday called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, after Israel announced the first steps of an operation to take over Gaza City.

“It is vital to reach immediately a ceasefire in Gaza,” that was necessary “to avoid the death and destruction that a military operation against Gaza City would inevitably cause,” Mr. Guterres said in Japan where he is attending the Tokyo International Conference on African Development.

Israel, which has called up tens of thousands of army reservists, is pressing ahead with its plan to seize Gaza’s biggest urban center despite international criticism of an operation likely to force the displacement of many more Palestinians. Israel currently holds about 75% of the Gaza Strip.

The war in Gaza began on Oct. 7, 2023, when gunmen led by Hamas attacked southern Israeli communities, killing some 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and taking 251 hostages including children into Gaza, according to Israeli figures.

Israel’s military offensive on the Gaza Strip has killed at least 60,000 Palestinians, according to enclave’s health ministry.

Mr. Guterres called for the unconditional release of hostages held by Hamas. He also urged Israel to reverse a decision to expand “illegal” settlement construction in the West Bank.

The Israeli settlement plan, which would bisect the occupied West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem, was announced last week and received the final go-ahead from a defense ministry planning commission on Wednesday.

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry said the construction would isolate Palestinian communities living in the area and undermine the possibility of a two-state solution. — Reuters

Taiwan to massively hike 2026 defense budget

A soldier salutes Taiwan president Lai Ching-te in front of US-made M1A2T Abrams tanks after taking part in live-fire exercises in Hsinchu, Taiwan on July 10. — REUTERS/ANN WANG

TAIPEI — Taiwan plans to boost defense spending by a fifth next year, surpassing 3% of gross domestic product (GDP), as it invests billions more in new equipment to better face down China and convince the United States it takes seriously calls to bolster its military.

The move comes as China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has ramped up military and political pressure over the past five years to assert its claims, which Taipei strongly rejects.

But Taiwan also faces calls from Washington to spend more on its own defense, mirroring pressure from the United States on Europe. This month, President Lai Ching-te said he wanted to boost defence spending to more than 3% of GDP next year.

Taiwan Premier Cho Jung-tai told reporters that 2026 defense spending would reach T$949.5 billion ($31.27 billion). At 3.32% of GDP, the figure crosses a threshold of 3% for the first time since 2009, government figures showed.

“This is another concrete demonstration to the world and to our people of our determination and ability to safeguard national sovereignty and security, maintain stability and security in the Indo-Pacific region, and fulfil our shared responsibilities to the world,” Mr. Cho said on Thursday.

Taiwan was following the “NATO model” to include spending on the coast guard and veterans in total defense expenditure, he added.

That represents a rise of 22.9% over this year, Hsieh Chi-hsien, head of the defense ministry’s comptroller bureau, told reporters.

The plans included several special defense budget proposals totaling T$117.6 billion, for new fighter jets and boosting naval defenses among others, which had been widely expected from the defense ministry in the coming parliament session this year.

Taiwan was including spending for the coast guard in its total defense budget for the first time, two senior officials briefed on the matter separately told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“They are standing on the frontline,” said one, referring to the coast guard, which figures in regular stand-offs with China’s coast guard and would, in time of war, be pressed into the navy’s effort to defend Taiwan.

“Facing new types of threat, including gray-zone tactics, it is necessary to include the coast guard in defense spending,” the official said, referring to Chinese pressure tactics such as regular coast guard patrols near Taiwan’s islands.

Taiwan’s government has made military modernization a key policy platform and has repeatedly pledged to spend more on its defenses given the rising threat from China, including developing made-in-Taiwan submarines.

China’s air force flies almost daily missions into the skies near Taiwan, and holds periodic war games, the last in April.

China is also rapidly modernizing its armed forces, with new aircraft carriers, stealth fighter jets and missiles.

In March China unveiled a rise of 7.2% in this year’s defense spending, to 1.78 trillion yuan ($248.17 billion), outpacing its 2025 economic growth target of about 5%. — Reuters

FBI warns of Russian hacks targeting US critical infrastructure

REUTERS

HACKERS associated with some of Russia’s most prolific cyber espionage units have over the last year been leveraging a vulnerability in older Cisco software to target thousands of networking devices associated with critical infrastructure IT systems, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Cisco said on Wednesday.

Hackers working within the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) Center 16 are extracting “device configuration information en masse, which can later be leveraged as needed based on then-current strategic goals and interests of the Russian government,” Cisco Talos researchers Sara McBroom and Brandon White wrote in a threat advisory published to the company’s blog.

In a separate advisory, the FBI said that over the last year it had detected the hackers collecting configuration files “for thousands of networking devices associated with US entities across critical infrastructure sectors.”

In some cases the configuration files are modified to enable long-term access for the hackers, who use that access to conduct reconnaissance in targeted networks, with a particular interest in industrial control systems.

The Russian embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment. Moscow denies conducting cyber espionage operations.

The hackers are exploiting a seven-year-old vulnerability in Cisco IOS software, targeting unpatched and end-of-life network devices, according to a separate threat advisory published on Wednesday by Cisco Talos, Cisco’s threat intelligence research unit.

Other state-backed hackers are likely conducting similar hacking operations targeting the devices, the Cisco Talos researchers wrote.

Organizations within the telecommunications, higher education and manufacturing sectors across North America, Asia, Africa and Europe have been most targeted, “with victims selected based on their strategic interest to the Russian government,” the researchers said.

The hacking unit linked to the activity has been operating for at least a decade, according to the researchers, and is likely a subgroup within the FSB’s Center 16. In March 2022 the US Department of Justice charged four Russian nationals within the group of illegally targeting the global energy sector between 2012 and 2018. — Reuters

Adamson, Ateneo face off vs local bets in Cebu leg of SSL

ADAMSON VS ATENEO during the UAAP Season 87 women’s volleyball tournament — UAAP

Games today
(Mandaue Sports Complex)
5 p.m. – USPF vs Ateneo
7 p.m. – USC vs Adamson

THE SHAKEY’S Super League (SSL) makes a stop in Cebu to pit UAAP bets against Visayan standouts starting today at the Mandaue Sports Complex after a successful opening leg of the National Invitationals in Davao.

Adamson takes on CESAFI champion University of San Carlos (USC) in the main game at 7 p.m. after the curtain-raiser between Ateneo and University of Southern Philippines Foundation (USPF) at 5 p.m.

Led by UAAP Rookie of the Year, former UAAP juniors MVP and now Alas Pilipinas stalwart Shaina Nitura, the Lady Falcons loom as the heavy favorite to the win the tournament, which is a single-round robin format with the top team being crowned champion.

But coach JP Yude warns his charges against complacency especially with the capability of bets from Cebu, a hotbed for homegrown players, and the vastly-improved Ateneo squad.

“Lagi kong sinasabi sa team na huwag magpakampante. Alam naman natin na lahat kami rito gustong talunin ang mga makakalaban. Siyempre home town din nila. We expect na magkakaroon kami ng magandang laban,” Mr. Yude said.

USC went winless while USPF reached the quarterfinals in their last SSL stints, making it a perfect opportunity to perform better in front of their home crowd.

Ateneo, for its part, shored up its roster with the addition of high school sensations Ana Francesca Hermosura and Dona Mae De Leon from the 2025 Shakey’s Girls Volleyball Invitational League and Palarong Pambansa runner-up Bacolod Tay Tung.

“This tournament celebrates not just talent but unity, sportsmanship and the passion of our youth. Mandaue City is honored to be your stage. Together, let’s make this a tournament to remember,” Mandaue City Mayor Thadeo Jovito Ouano said.

“Cebu has been the center of volleyball in the Visayas for the longest time. Every year, we invite the best teams from the provincial championship, which is CESAFI but this time it’s different. We’re giving them the home court advantage. We want them to experience the excitement of their home crowd,” added league organizer Athletic Events and Sports Management, Inc. (ACES) President Dr. Ian Laurel.

Reigning UAAP champion National U swept the Mindanao leg of the SSL National Invitationals against University of the Philippines, Notre Dame of Dadiangas University and the Davao Selection featuring players from Ateneo de Davao University, Holy Cross of Davao College, and the University of Mindanao.

Incoming rookie and former UAAP juniors MVP Sam Cantada was named the Best Player of the Davao leg.

The next leg of the renewed SSL National Invitationals under a regional format will be in Batangas City next month. — John Bryan Ulanday

Kuzma wraps up second Manila visit

KYLE KUZMA — MPIO/SEF ROBRIGADO

MILWAUKEE Bucks forward Kyle Kuzma became the latest NBA standout to visit the Philippines this offseason following this “KuzManila II” Asian Tour.

The 30-year-old Kuzma on Thursday wrapped up his three-day tour by attending the unveiling of his mural at the Barangay 901 basketball court, North Compound Tenement in Sta. Ana, Manila.

Manila Mayor Isko Moreno welcomed the former NBA champion, who also held basketball clinics and scrimmages with Manila kids and aspiring ballers.

Mr. Kuzma made other stops in Singapore and China ahead of his first full season with the Bucks.

Mr. Kuzma, an NBA champ with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2020, was traded midseason to the Bucks from by Washington Wizards for Khris Middleton.

He played 33 games with averages of 14.5 points on 33% shooting from downtown, 5.5 rebounds and 2.6 assists, but Milwaukee bowed to eventual NBA finalist Indiana Pacers in the first round.

It’s the second Manila visit for Mr. Kuzma after his KuzManila Asian Tour last year.

Earlier this month, Memphis Grizzlies star guard Ja Morant also visited Manila for the first time as part of his Asia tour, which included Japan and China. — John Bryan Ulanday

Specialists beat singles stars in US Open mixed doubles final

NEW YORK — Italians Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori retained their mixed doubles title at the US Open on Wednesday, overcoming Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud 6-3, 5-7, 10-6, in the competition’s reimagined format that drew some of the top singles players.

The defending champions, who needed a wild card entry into the competition that prioritized singles rankings, relied on their veteran experience to outfox the Polish-Norwegian duo.

The packed house at Arthur Ashe Stadium cheered wildly when Vavassori clinched it with a lethal forehand and hoisted Errani into the air in celebration, as the pair walked away with a $1-million prize.

“We are doing something amazing in these two years,” said Vavassori, who also won the French Open title with Errani earlier this year. “We showed today that doubles is a great product.”

Swiatek and Ruud had never played together before this year and at first appeared completely outmatched as the Italians went up 3-0 in the first set.

Six-times Grand Slam singles champion Swiatek broke back with a superbly placed volley in the seventh game but that momentum evaporated as her double fault helped the defending champions to another break in the eighth.

Vavassori then closed the first set with an unreturnable serve.

The Italians went up a break in the second set in the seventh game but Ruud and Swiatek broke back in the 10th and leveled the match when the Pole struck a backhand winner in the 12th.

Errani and Vavassori went up 4-0 in the tiebreak and were helped to the finish line after a double fault from Swiatek.

“We pushed to the end, we tried to make it competitive,” said Swiatek, standing on the same court where she won the US Open singles title three years ago.

Organizers were testing a novel format for the competition this year, hosting it during the week before the main singles draw with eight entries based on combined singles rankings of players and eight wild cards.

It was an undeniable marketing success with a star-studded lineup that included Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic, but the format rankled some who felt it unfairly excluded veteran doubles players.

Hundreds of fans had lined up in the rain outside Arthur Ashe Stadium 90 minutes before the first of two semifinal matches on Wednesday, hardly the crowd one might have expected for the penultimate stage of the mixed doubles in past years.

“Playing with all these people is something incredible for us,” said Errani. “This one is for all the doubles players who couldn’t play this tournament.” Reuters

Ohtani roughed up as Rockies top Dodgers

HUNTER GOODMAN had three hits and three RBIs, Jordan Beck also had three hits, and the Colorado Rockies got six solid innings from Tanner Gordon to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-3 in Denver on Wednesday night.

Tyler Freeman, Brenton Doyle and Mickey Moniak had two hits each for Colorado, which took advantage of a shaky night by Dodgers starter Shohei Ohtani to win for the fifth time in six games.

Teoscar Hernandez homered and Miguel Rojas had two hits and two RBIs for Los Angeles, which is 14-16 since the All-Star break.

The Dodgers got a scare when a comebacker by Orlando Arcia hit Ohtani in the right thigh during Colorado’s three-run fourth inning. Ohtani fielded the ball but was in visible pain, and the trainer and manager Dave Roberts came to the mound.

Ohtani stayed in the game after throwing one warm-up pitch but left for a pinch hitter in the eighth.

The Rockies jumped on Ohtani in the second inning. Beck led off with a single, and after Warming Bernabel hit into a fielder’s choice, Moniak singled, Doyle had an RBI double and Arcia hit a sacrifice fly to give Colorado a 2-0 lead.

Beck led off the fourth inning with a single and Bernabel followed with a double. Beck scored on a throwing error by left fielder Michael Conforto but Bernabel was tagged out trying to advance to third.

Moniak and Doyle singled before Moniak scored on Arcia’s liner off of Ohtani’s leg, Doyle was thrown out trying to score on a grounder and Arcia scored on Freeman’s single.

Ohtani (0-1) allowed five runs on nine hits, both season highs, and struck out three over four innings.

Gordon (4-5) fanned just three and scattered four hits. His only mistake was a one-out home run by Hernandez, his 21st, in the sixth inning.

Goodman’s RBI single in the bottom of the sixth restored Colorado’s five-run lead, and Goodman added a two-run double in the eighth.

Rojas drove in a pair with a two-out double in the ninth. Reuters

Tiger takes PGA job with orders to reimagine competition format

ATLANTA — Brian Rolapp has a new job — and now so does Tiger Woods.

Rolapp, the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour’s new chief executive officer (CEO) 18 days into his tenure, announced the formation of the Future Competition Committee on Wednesday in advance of the Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club.

Woods agreed to serve as chairman for the nine-person committee. The aim of the newly formed group, which has yet to meet, is to define a competitive model for PGA Tour events.

The committee will consist of five other players — Patrick Cantlay, Adam Scott, Camilo Villegas, Maverick McNealy and Keith Mitchell — and three business advisors with Joe Gorder, who serves on the Tour’s policy board, and John Henry and Theo Epstein, both of the Fenway Sports Group.

Rolapp comes to the PGA Tour as the CEO after a career with the NFL after commissioner Jay Monahan stepped aside.

“We’re going to focus on the evolution of our competitive model and the corresponding media products and sponsorship elements and model of the entire sport,” Rolapp said. “The goal is not incremental change. The goal is significant change.”

The governing principles of the player-led committee are:

Parity: to strengthen a commitment to a meritocratic structure.

Scarcity: to increase fan engagement by ensuring top players compete together more often.

Simplicity: to better connect the regular and postseason to magnify the season-ending Tour Championship.

“The strength of the PGA Tour is strong, but there’s much more we need to do, much more we need to change for the benefit of fans, players and our partners,” Rolapp said. “I said when I took the job that I would take it with a clean sheet of paper, and that is still true… I said, we’re going to honor tradition, but we will not be overly bound by it. Now we’re going to start turning that blank sheet of paper into action with an idea to aggressively build on the foundation that we have.”

PGA Tour player Harris English is one of about 20 players Rolapp has spoken with since joining the organization. English said the two spoke for about 45 minutes.

“I’ve been out here 14 years,” English said. “I’ve seen a lot of changes out here, and (I gave him) kind of my thoughts on what’s good, what’s bad, what needs to be changed.”

One of the key issues facing Rolapp will be the relationship between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf. The two entities continue on separate paths with no prospect of a resolution anytime soon.

Rolapp said he has not spoken with anyone from the Public Investment Fund, the Saudi-led group that finances LIV Golf. He was pressed about a possible resolution that would enable the world’s best players to compete against each other, or at be in the same tournament fields more often. Reuters

Coco Gauff ditches her coach

The life of a tennis coach can, unfortunately, be measured in weeks. A brief run of victories can create the impression of permanence, yet a few missteps are enough to dispel the illusion. In a sport where every stroke is examined and every loss magnified, recency bias reigns. The past is never a shield.

Coco Gauff’s decision to dismiss Matt Daly days before the start of the US Open tells a tale as old as time. The latter, a specialist in grip and technique, had joined her camp after her split with Brad Gilbert. His stint produced immediate results: podium finishes at the China Open and the WTA Finals, not to mention a second major championship at Roland Garros. Then the serve he had labored to strengthen collapsed under pressure; a first-round loss at Wimbledon and a rash of double faults shifted the conversation from progress to crisis. And just like that, the pairing ended.

In Daly’s place comes Gavin MacMillan, a biomechanics expert who once rebuilt Aryna Sabalenka’s motion. The choice is telling. Modern players look to science when nerves crack under pressure. There is no small measure of irony in seeing precision coaching give way to a search for engineered stability. Still, the calendar waits for no one. A Grand Slam approaches, and its runup has no place for patience.

The carousel has claimed countless others. Emma Raducanu turned to mentor after mentor in search of the formula that once had her clutching the hardware at Flushing Meadows. Naomi Osaka moved on from Sascha Bajin soon after back-to-back majors. Novak Djokovic has dismissed and recalled Marian Vajda multiple times. Serena Williams tested a line of voices before settling with Patrick Mouratoglou. The sequence rarely changes: success, scrutiny, split.

Clearly, coaches occupy an uneasy space. Their influence is undeniable, yet inseparable from the player’s own form, health, and confidence. When a toss unravels or a forehand wavers, they become the most visible target. In a team sport, responsibility can be spread across a roster. In tennis, the spotlight isolates the partnership, and one party becomes a natural casualty when results of the other decline. Gauff’s split with Daly is another reminder that in tennis, permanence is an illusion. The watching and the watch never stop.

 

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.

Circular Explorer and the business of sustainability in Philippine waters

The Circular Explorer is a solar-powered aluminum catamaran designed to help clean up Manila Bay. While the boat is capable of collecting plastic waste from the water, its primary mission is to serve as a platform for education, scientific research, and public engagement. The catamaran helps classify the types of plastic collected, contributing data to better understand marine pollution in the area, and helping shape environmental policies for the Philippines.

“Data alone is not enough for policymakers,” said Daniel Scheler, president of One Earth – One Ocean Manila. “What they need is a story created from that data.”

In 2023, the German environmental organization brought the Circular Explorer to the CCP Complex, located along the shores of Manila Bay, in partnership with Holcim Philippines, Inc.

“We are not only focusing on the consumers,” said Nathalie C. Inductivo, sustainability, OIC – sustainability manager of Holcim Philippines, Inc. “We need to also shift our outlook to the producers themselves.”

Interview by Patricia Mirasol
Video editing by Jayson Mariñas

#MarineConservation
#CircularEconomy
#ESGInAction
#CorporateSustainability
#BusinessWorldPH