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Microgrids touted as priority area for funding by Asian Dev’t Bank

THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) must fund more community microgrid projects to energize more households in developing countries, a sustainability think-tank said.

Ahead of the ADB’s annual governors meeting this week, the Center for Energy, Ecology, and Development (CEED) released a study on the multilateral lender’s energy policies and programs in the past decade. Among its recommendations is the assignment of greater priority to funding microgrid systems, which have become “increasingly” cheap and bankable, it said.

“Unlike fossil fuel technologies and large-scale hydropower and geothermal technologies, new renewable energy technologies such as solar PV (photo-voltaic) or pico-hydropower are much smaller in scale and can be owned and managed by communities themselves,” it said in a study published by NGO Forum on ADB, a network of the civil groups monitoring the bank’s lending activities. 

“If prioritized, access to energy may be expediently provided to unelectrified communities instead of waiting for grid or distribution extensions,” it added. ADB can invest in them through “aggrupation into larger bankable-sized projects.”

CEED said the bank must also help upgrade current grids to turn them into smart grids with increased capacity.

“Smart grids will enable better forecasting and management of renewable energy variability and uncertainty, (while) increased capacity will allow the integration of more electricity generated from renewable energy systems,” it said.

Despite the drop in the number of people in developing countries without electricity access to around 200 million in 2018 from 351 million previously, key issues, such as the limited capacity of microgrids and unreliable energy supply, prevent them from attaining the benefits of full electrification, according to ADB’s sustainable development and climate change department.

The region must therefore aim to increase electricity access with good supply quality and sufficient quantity, according to Yongping Zhai, chief of ADB’s Energy Sector Group, in a blog post in July.

CEED also called on the ADB to step out of coal financing and to update its energy policy to effect Asia’s energy transformation.

“ADB is guilty of having shaped Asia’s energy sector into its carbon-intensive state today,” Gerard C. Arances, the group’s executive director, said in a virtual briefing Friday.

About a half of the total installed capacity of power projects that ADB funded between 2009 and 2019 are powered by fossil fuel, CEED noted in its study.

On Aug. 31, the ADB’s independent evaluation department in a report proposed that the bank formally withdraw from funding fossil fuel projects, among other moves towards a new energy policy aligned with the global climate treaty.

“As a leading development partner in the region, ADB can play a key role in helping address these serious environmental challenges through its energy policy,” said Marvin Taylor-Dormond, the director-general of ADB’s Internal Evaluation office.

In the past decade, the ADB provided $42.5 billion in investment in the Asian energy sector, mostly for electricity transmission and distribution. However, its independent evaluation found that it “fell short” in addressing other priorities, such as demand-side efficiency, last-mile electrification, and sector reforms. — Adam J. Ang

Rising missionary charges called ‘misguided’ after Congress queries DoE

A BILL component that provides electrification to far-flung, unenergized parts of the country should be reduced, a consumer group said, after Congress questioned the Department of Energy (DoE) about the rising trend in such charges.

During budget hearings last week, Bayan Muna Representative Carlos I. Zarate asked Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi on the increases in the universal charge for missionary electrification since 2002.

Mr. Cusi said a subsidy component is authorized under Republic Act. No. 113711, or the Murang Kuryente Act, which requires the government to absorb some universal charges passed on to consumers using a P208-billion subsidy fund.

“This may be misguided because what (the) DoE should do is (to) instruct the National Power Corporation (Napocor) to reduce its UC-ME (universal charge for missionary electrification) claims,” Victorio A. Dimagiba, president of Laban Konsyumer, said in a statement.

Lowering the charge is “a good possible move to protect consumer welfare and sustain lower power rates,” considering that fuel costs of the Napocor went down “substantially” with the recent decline in fuel prices, he said. Since 2015, the average spot price of benchmark Brent Crude fell 23% to $40 per barrel this year.

The consumer group estimates that the missionary charge has risen around 318% to P0.1561 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) from 2003. The present rate was set in 2015.

A total of P99.66 billion in universal charge payments were remitted to Napocor as of December 2019, data from the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management (PSALM) Corp. showed.

In March, Napocor filed with the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) a petition to increase the missionary charges for 2021 by five centavos to P0.2055/kWh. The commission is still hearing the application.

Napocor was asked to comment on its ERC application but had not responded at deadline time.

Mr. Zarate said the DoE has a mandate under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act to not only ensure the country’s total electrification but to also do this “in a cost-effective manner and least burden” to power consumers and the government.

“Secretary Cusi, in particular, should ensure that unscrupulous individuals and/or companies involved in this irregularity should be held accountable,” he added.

For not bringing down power rates, Laban Konsyumer alleged that the government is “lacking in leadership… when many Filipinos are struggling to make ends meet.”

“They should be more proactive in developing schemes and plans to better benefit the customers, like the FM (force majeure) claims which lowered generation charge being charged to consumers,” Mr. Dimagiba said.

Laban Konsyumer has been pressing both the government and the private sector to trigger force majeure clauses in all power supply contracts to cut down generation charges paid for by consumers.

It cited the case of Manila Electric Co.’s (Meralco) rates, which recently fell for the fifth month since April, because of a force majeure invocation. To date, it was able to save P2.4 billion for its consumers.

Laban Konsyumer said the government can ask the other private power utilities to do the same. However, the decision to alter power supply agreements rests with the contracting parties, according to the DoE. — Adam J. Ang

Aiding recovery: VAT exemptions on imported medicine

Health is wealth, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. It would seem that the government concurs when it passed Republic Act (RA) No. 9502, otherwise known as the “Universally Accessible Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008.” The RA empowers the Department of Health (DoH) to keep medicine affordable and accessible to promote the health and well-being of Filipinos.

In light of this, the House and Senate included in RA No. 10963 (the TRAIN Law) a value-added tax (VAT) exemption on the sale of drugs prescribed for diabetes, high cholesterol and hypertension beginning Jan. 1, 2019.

Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 2-2018 clarified that the sale by manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers and retailers of drugs prescribed for the treatment of diabetes, high cholesterol and hypertension in its final form shall be exempt from VAT while the importation are subject to VAT.

Evidently, the TRAIN Law and RMC No. 2-2018 were issued to address the objectives of RA No. 9502. However, apparently not taken into consideration when the law was passed was the effect on the pharmaceutical industry (manufacturers, importers, distributors, wholesalers and retailers) of imports not covered by the VAT exemption.

VAT-EXEMPT SALES
Prior to the passage of TRAIN Law, sales of drugs and medicines prescribed for diabetes, high cholesterol and hypertension were subject to 12% VAT. In turn, input VAT passed on to pharmaceutical companies from imports and local purchases of goods and services could be claimed against the output VAT. Due to the TRAIN Law and under Revenue Regulations (RR) No. 16-05, as amended, the input tax attributable to VAT-exempt sales was not allowed to be credited against output tax but should be treated as an expense.

This finds support in Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) Ruling [DA-646-06] and BIR Ruling [DA-234-04] where the BIR held that the input taxes directly attributable or allocable to exempt transactions become part of the cost of capital goods purchased or of operating expenses. In other words, the input tax attributable to VAT-exempt sales shall not be allowed as credit against the output tax but should be treated as part of cost or expense.

Input VAT from the following purchases which are directly attributable to VAT-exempt sales should be treated as follows:

Purchases of goods for sale — should form part of the cost of the inventory

Purchases of capital goods — should form part of the capitalized cost subject to depreciation

Purchases of services/consumable goods — should form part of the operating expenses

Since the VAT paid on imports is being paid and passed on to the pharmaceutical companies and forms part of the cost or expense, these companies are unable to significantly reduce the selling price to the public, which was not the intention of the legislators when the TRAIN Law was passed.

INPUT TAX ON IMPORTED GOODS
Pursuant to Section 110 (A) (2) of the 1997 Tax Code, as amended, input tax on imported goods or property by a VAT-registered person is creditable to the importer upon payment of the VAT prior to the release from the custody of the Bureau of Customs (BoC).

To address this issue, the BIR issued RMC No. 34-2019 which provides that considering that input tax attributable to VAT-exempt sale cannot be passed on to the buyer, the inventory list as of Dec. 31, 2018 of drugs and medicine which became VAT-exempt beginning Jan. 1, 2019 is required from all manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors and retailers regardless of whether or not there is an existing excess input tax. As the sale of VAT-exempt drugs and medicines are made, the input tax corresponding to the sale shall be closed to cost or expense.

It appears that the BIR, in issuing RMC No. 34-2019, has given credence to the Tax Code provision that input taxes attributable to VAT-exempt sales cannot be claimed as input tax credits but should be expensed out.

Under the RMC, if the input VAT was already claimed in the 2018 VAT returns when VAT was paid on imports prior to release from the BoC’s custody, the RMC resolved to reverse the input taxes previously claimed at the time the related inventories were sold.

This had a negative impact on the industry since the pharmaceutical companies were not able to recover fully the VAT paid on the importation of these VAT-exempt medicines.

NEW HOPE FOR RECOVERY
RA No. 11467 was signed and approved on Jan. 22, 2020. This law amended the VAT-exempt provision to now cover imports of these medicines beginning Jan. 1 2020 and to include the sale or importation of prescription drugs for cancer, mental illness, tuberculosis, and kidney diseases beginning Jan. 1, 2023.

Another positive development for the industry is the issuance of RR No. 18-2020. In its transitory provisions, the RR specified that the VAT on imports of DoH-approved prescription drugs for diabetes, high cholesterol and hypertension from the effectivity of RA No. 11467 on Jan. 27, 2020 until the effectivity of RR No. 18-2020, shall be refunded in accordance with the existing procedures for refund of VAT on imports, provided that the input tax on the imported items has not been reported and claimed as input tax credit in the monthly and/or quarterly VAT declarations/returns.

This is certainly good news for pharmaceutical companies, as including the imports as VAT-exempt transactions and allowing companies to claim refunds will surely help ease the strain on them during these trying times.

This article is for general information only and is not a substitute for professional advice where the facts and circumstances warrant. The views and opinions expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of SGV & Co.

 

Joanne Macainag-Cobacha is a Tax Senior Director from the Global Compliance Reporting Service Line of SGV & Co.

Patse-patse na, pitsi-pitsi pa (and a way forward)

An important task of national leadership is to highlight information that would otherwise be ignored or set aside. Sometimes this can be as vital as telling the public that it is possible to sterilize their face masks with kerosene. At other times it is to place items on the national agenda that were previously thought to be too contentious or difficult to implement but which new circumstances have made urgent.

Unemployment insurance is one such item.

To be honest, I did not expect to write on this topic — at least not this soon. But I caught Vice-President Leni Robredo’s televised address on Aug. 24 and was pleased to hear that among her suggestions to address the current health-cum-economic crisis was to institute an unemployment insurance system. She also pointed to the fact that a bill towards that end (HB 7208) had already been filed by Marikina Rep. Stella Quimbo. (Call me biased: but with two eminent alumnae of the UP School of Economics behind it, the idea cannot be ignored.)

Far from being a nefarious Opposition Idea, unemployment insurance (UI) is in fact buried somewhere in the government’s 2017-2022 Philippine Development Plan (p. 158), which calls for an “unemployment protection system possibly in the form of unemployment insurance.” (Medyo nag-hesitate pa nang slight. [They hesitated slightly.]) Given the kilometric laundry-list that constitutes the government’s “priorities” however, this proposal would likely have been left to shrivel and die if the vice-president and the Marikina representative had not picked up on the matter — and the pandemic had not happened.

The pandemic has shown up the shortcomings of the country’s social protection system. At the height of the lockdown in April, more than 7.2 million workers were unemployed. Though this has come down somewhat to 4.6 million by July, the number is still 88% more than the unemployed in the same period last year.

The government response has been disjointed and patchy, to say the least. The Social Security System (SSS), the institution that comes closest to providing any formal unemployment benefits at all, gave a whopping one-time maximum grant of ₱20,000 each (i.e., ₱10,000 tops for two months) to an equally-whopping 60,000 members — a joke in the face of the millions who became unemployed. But one must remember this system itself was always far from being comprehensive: SSS membership even today covers less than one-fourth of all private sector wage- and salary-earners. The nonexistence of any formal unemployment insurance system has led instead to the exigency — some would say the excuse — of assistance having to be coursed in multiple forms through different channels. Hence we have cash assistance to formal workers through the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE; ₱3.2 billion); SSS subsidy to small-business owners based on employment (₱51 billion); cash assistance from DoLE for overseas Filipino workers (OFWs; ₱1.5 billion); various loan programs and credit guarantees to small businesses (₱120 billion); support coursed through local governments (₱36 billion); training programs and livelihood kits through the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI; ₱1.2 billion); and of course the ₱250-billion biggie: the subsidy program distributed through the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) to low-income families.

There is not even a pretense that any of these programs would systematically cover the majority of their intended beneficiaries. Nor that the amounts given are sufficient for the scale of the problem and the urgency of need. Still, billions are given willy-nilly by agencies to this or that sector, following one or the other set of priorities or procedures, at times conflicting, at times overlapping, but never really quite scrutable with respect to how well they achieve their overall goals. Rep. Quimbo’s bill — which is well argued and worth reading* — describes the system as “fragmented,” “non-inclusive,” and “limited.” Or we might simply say: patse-patse na, pitsi-pitsi pa (not just patchy, but skimpy).

How differently (and transparently) things might have gone if a comprehensive UI system had been in place instead. One must proceed from the presumption that the vast majority of the formally employed will have been covered (oh, and please do away with silly multiple IDs; just have a single and portable national ID). In any case, because it promises more proximate benefits than just distant retirement pensions (which is what SSS and GSIS — Government Service Insurance System — mainly offer today), a UI scheme would likely induce a stronger motive and pressure for membership, especially among “endo” workers who today are beyond the pale of the formal system. With UI, workers, once laid off, would simply file unemployment claims for predictable benefits that were theirs by right and by statute. This typically entails being paid at least half — in Stella Quimbo’s bill it is 80% — of one’s previous salary for three months.

The principal impact of such a social protection system is to eliminate rationing: no more lucky 60,000, no more favoritism, and no more cruel lottery of the devil-catch-the-hindmost until the budget runs out. If the crisis was more severe and lasted longer than anticipated, the government could simply pass a law topping up or extending unemployment benefits beyond what was normally stipulated. The US, for example, topped up its usual unemployment benefits by $600 a week and extended the payout for an additional three months owing to the pandemic. What is crucial, however, is that the same distribution system is used without arbitrarily changing the list of beneficiaries and by applying uniform criteria. In this way one minimizes arbitrariness and the dissipation of resources.

To be sure, even a UI system would not cover everyone — it is mainly a safeguard against income insecurity for the benefit of wage and salary workers, who in any case now make up almost 60% of total employment. But UI would not cover the informally employed; nor overseas workers; nor the self-employed, who must opt in and pay their share. UI is also not a substitute for the system of direct transfers for poverty-alleviation such as the 4Ps; or loans for returning OFWs to start businesses; or emergency employment for farmers in a province hit by a drought. Such programs exist for other objectives, or for other beneficiaries. Improving income security for the vulnerable and the middle classes — which is what UI does — is not the same as alleviating poverty for the bottom-30%. Tinbergen’s iron rule prevails as always: thou shalt have at least the same number of instruments as you have objectives; only fools think they can kill two birds with one stone.

A UI system must instead be viewed as part of a broader spectrum of programs that address the heterogeneous needs of an increasingly differentiated Philippine society. Implied here is the need to move beyond a simple rich-poor dichotomy and, at a minimum, to distinguish between the poor, the vulnerable, the middle class, and the rich. While society is obliged to help all classes thrive, the extent and form of its support must differ for each.

In its normal functioning and short of a deep recession, UI is sustained by mandatory contributions (i.e., payroll taxes) shared between employers, employees, and the government. Much like a paluwagan, funds are shared and risks are pooled: since not everyone is likely to be simultaneously unemployed, those who are out of work at any one time can be supported by the cumulative past contributions of those who remained employed (i.e., plus of course employers’ contributions, government subsidies, and earnings from system investments). Given the actuarial risk that one could be laid off at some point, it makes sense for an employed worker to pay a premium (say, 1.5% of salary) for compensation benefits in the off-chance she loses her job.

A payroll tax obviously cannot be imposed on the very poor — many of whom (e.g., small farmers and fishers, informal workers) are outside the formal employment system anyway — so such a program obviously makes sense only when applied to the vulnerable, the middle, and the upper classes who can afford it. It is not meant primarily as a poverty-alleviation measure. It would be wrong to think, however, that this makes the matter any less relevant or urgent.

First, it was already a fact — at least until this crisis — that the vulnerable and the middle classes made up the majority of the population. In practice, therefore, income security was and will remain a major problem for most of society. Indeed, the current pandemic shows that the failure to provide social protection in this form is what can pull back many into the ranks of the poor. Second, the fact that some classes in society can pool risks and pay part of their way towards their own income-security relieves the government of some of the burden of direct provision. This then allows the government to focus more of its resources where these are more urgently needed, i.e., direct poverty-alleviation and overall social and human development (e.g., improving the quality of public education, raising the standards of healthcare, providing better infrastructure, etc.). Third, a comprehensive UI system can mitigate economic fluctuations — as it could have done in the current recession — by automatically maintaining minimal levels of income and consumption when aggregate demand and employment fall off. It is, as old-style Keynesians called it, an “automatic stabilizer.”

Finally, UI can reduce the social costs incurred when firms and industries must restructure to become efficient in the face of changing markets and technology. In most cases, affected firms must reduce or change the composition of their workforce. The current crisis, in particular, will likely entail large changes in the types of viable industries, skill requirements, employment size, and work-arrangements in a future “new normal.” The absence of income-alternatives for current employees, however, increases the social resistance — and the pressure on both government and firms — to preserve employment even in what may likely to be “zombie firms” in the future. Absent UI, the resistance and conflict arising from the employment consequences of such structural changes would be far greater.

With UI, on the other hand, labor mobility is improved and the search for jobs that better match employee characteristics is facilitated. My colleague Ma. Cristina Epetia** has found, for example, that college graduates from poorer families are more likely to end up in jobs that are inferior relative to their educational attainment. An important reason for this mismatch is the lack of financial means to engage in a more thorough job-search — a constraint that unemployment insurance could relieve and from which society as a whole would benefit in terms of both higher productivity and lower poverty.

All the above are arguments meant to show that unemployment insurance brings advantages above all for the employee, but also for the government, the employers, the macroeconomy, and society as a whole. While further public discussion will no doubt produce counter-arguments and require thrashing out many details (for which the proposed Philjobs Act is required reading), the more crucial step is to table an idea that is long overdue.

It would be foolish to wait for the next crisis to act.

* House Bill No. 7028: “An act instituting a national unemployment insurance program for the Philippines and appropriating funds therefor” (Philjobs Act of 2020). Introduced by Rep. Stella A. Quimbo.

** Epetia, Ma. Cristina [2018] “Overeducation among college graduates in the Philippine labor Market.” Ph.D. dissertation submitted to the UP School of Economics.

 

Emmanuel S. De Dios is professor emeritus at the University of the Philippines School of Economics.

Understanding post-COVID consumer trends

In the pre-COVID world, eating out, shopping, and weekend getaways generally characterized the way of life of middle to upper income Filipinos. For the affluent few, investments in cars, art, and properties were par for the course.

As much as 72% of the economy was driven by consumer spending. This was buoyed by OFW remittances, aggressive government spending and declining unemployment due to a robust business sector. Household incomes rose steadily and the average Filipino spent 84.8% of whatever he earned.

Voracious spending caused corporate earnings to soar, especially for businesses related to real estate, food and beverages, hospitality, tourism, retail, sports and entertainment, construction and healthcare. With economic think tanks foretelling sustained GDP growth of between 6% and 7% in the next five years, many were lulled into believing that the good times would never end.

But in one fell swoop, the pandemic changed everything. In a matter of months, Jollibee closed 255 stores and declared a P12-billion loss. For the first time ever, food and beverage giant San Miguel Corp. reported a P4-billion loss in the first semester. PAL, Cebu Pacific, and AirAsia claimed a collective loss of P22 billion for the same period. As of July, the Department of Trade and Industry reported that 26% of all micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) have permanently closed. Meanwhile, some 46% of all businesses in the Philippines have considerably downsized their labor force.

The consumer bubble has imploded and businesses across the country must now adapt to an environment characterized by consumer frugality and shifting buying habits. It will take years before we return to the pre-COVID heyday, says McKinsey & Co. The American consulting firm sees economic contraction to be at 10.4% in 2020, to rebound softly in 2021 with growth below 5%. They see consumer demand bouncing back to 2019 levels in the second quarter of 2022, or two years from today.

A survey conducted by McKinsey last July revealed drastic changes in Filipino consumer  characteristics.

Among the Filipino population, 59% claim that their incomes have been negatively affected by the pandemic; 63% said that their ability to work has been reduced since the lockdown began. With incomes curtailed, 74% said that they have already cut back on spending and will continue to do so until conditions improve. As much as 54% of the population said they are already finding it difficult to make ends meet. For those with precautionary savings, 58% said that economic uncertainty precludes them from spending on high-ticket items such as appliances, furniture, automobiles and property.

More than half the population, 53% to be exact, are still afraid to go out for fear of being infected. No surprise, 60% of the respondents say that product safety is their primary consideration when purchasing wet and dry goods. Merchants who give assurance of product safety are most preferred.

A whopping 77% of the population say that they will shop in stores and malls less frequently and 75% said they plan to do their shopping online. Even grocery shopping will be done over the internet. In fact, 30% of the respondents said that they have already begun purchasing food, personal care and household cleaning products online instead of in traditional supermarkets. Interestingly, 80% of all Filipinos are willing to leave their trusted brands and try new alternatives provided they offer equal or superior levels of safety, value and quality.

The shift away from brick and mortar stores and towards digital stores applies not only to consumer goods but also to healthcare services (eg. tele-consult, tele-medicines and PPD for patients) and banking services. Some banks already carry out more than 80% of their transactions online.

While cash has always been the preferred mode of payment of the Filipino, it has become the least preferred today. Studies show that payment through mobile app is most preferred, followed by phone and card tap payments. Payment through credit cards where PIN punching or a signature is required is looked upon with apprehension.

The pandemic has accelerated the migration of businesses into the digital sphere. Consider this — Netflix and Disney Plus booked as many subscribers in two months as they did in the last seven years. Telemedicine sites multiplied their subscribers by a factor of 10 in just 15 days. Online delivery of food and dry goods booked more transactions in eight weeks than they did in the last 10 years. There are now 250 million students on remote learning compared to less than two million before the pandemic.

The trends are clear — due to the permanence of the work from home phenomenon and a preference for home nesting, the internet has become the new marketplace for goods and services. Every merchant must have a digital strategy to remain competitive.

As far as products are concerned, manufacturers must adjust their offerings to be better suited for home consumption. Shakey’s was right to offer its Mojo Potatoes in supermarkets in ready-to-fry packs. Jollibee did the same for its pre-marinated Chicken Joy.

Other trends that have emerged is a preference towards healthy foods and products that focus on wellbeing and hygiene. Vitamin supplements are selling briskly as are organic produce. Beauty products and cosmetics are selling well as they are considered affordable luxuries. Sustainable and/or environmentally friendly products are preferred over those made of inorganic materials.

Families will have more time for play so products that cater to this need like toys and videogames are in high demand. Home improvement products like DIY furniture have booked a spike in sales. And since the greater majority are tightening their belts, online thrift shops like Carousel.com and Ayosdito.com have reported record transactions.

Consumer trends have shifted significantly in a matter of months and the depth and speed of change is unprecedented. In the same manner, businesses must evolve with the same swiftness to survive. Some businesses will have to change their whole business model — others will have to change their product line, services, and manner of distribution. One thing is for sure, those that can reimagine their value proposition, their business processes, and are fleet footed will have the best chance of making it to the finish line. The rest will fall on the wayside.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

A chance for the environment

“No, it is not white sand that is being used to fill up the Manila Bay shoreline,” Presidential Spokesman Harry Roque said when news photos flashed images of heavy machinery on the baywalk dumping what indeed looked like glistening white sand over the stony black murk of muddy sand.

“Citing information from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Presidential Spokesman Harry Roque said crushed ‘dolomite boulders’ are actually being used in… the Manila Bay Rehabilitation Program with an allocated budget, which began even before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic,” newspapers reported on Friday (mb.com.ph Sept. 4).

“The Palace apparently found nothing wrong with the use of these materials for the Manila Bay,” the news report continued. But on the Monday immediately following the debut of “dolomite” in the lingua franca of the concerned Filipino, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire, she who gives daily official updates on the raging COVID-19 pandemic, said crushed dolomite rocks may lead to “adverse” effects, mainly on the respiratory system, once inhaled. Dolomite particles could also cause eye irritation and gastro-intestinal discomfort such as stomach pain and diarrhea if ingested, she candidly said in a news briefing reported in The Philippine Star on Sept. 7.

Dr. Vergeire hedged her comment saying that the DENR “would not push through with the project if its study found that pulverized dolomite rocks would cause harm to the environment and the people” (Ibid.). Crushed dolomite rocks, which will be used to beautify the Manila Bay, are not toxic even though their physical properties may pose respiratory risks, the chief science research specialist of the Mines and Geoscience Bureau (MGB)-Region 7 Chief Armando Malicse told Dobol B sa News TV. “It’s not because it is dolomite but it is because of the dust,” he said. The DENR, which oversees the MGB simply said that the P389-million project will not affect Manila Bay’s ecosystem (GMA News online, Sept. 7).

But Cebu Governor Gwendolyn Garcia cried out that the mining of dolomite certainly harms the environment, particularly the small town of Alcoy, from where the 3,500 wet metric tons of crushed dolomite rocks have already been partially quarried for the P389-million aesthetic project on a 500-meter stretch of Manila Bay’s shore. Garcia said the cease-and-desist order she issued against Dolomite Mining Corp. (DMC) and that of the Philippine Mining Services Corp. (PMSC) were to stop the shipment of the synthetic fine sand to Manila because these were not covered by the 25-year Mineral Production Sharing Agreement (MPSA) with the government for the export of the dolomite to Japan and South Korea with specific years and volume of minerals to be extracted from Alcoy.

Environmental and human rights groups vocally protested against the dolomite project of the DENR for the mining of natural resources and the damage to the ecosystem, especially since the quarries destroyed the cliffs and caves which were the natural habitat of endangered species. Gov. Garcia threatened to sue all those involved in the mining of dolomite rocks in Alcoy, saying she had issued a memorandum when she assumed office in August 2019 to stop all quarrying activities in the entire island of Cebu.

Health advocates are angry for the belittling of so-called dust pollution from powdered dolomite and the seeming dismissal of substance toxicity, particularly that respiratory weakness and eyes, nose, and throat afflictions been identified by epidemiologists as critical vulnerabilities to the present still-vicious COVID-19 pandemic. The Philippine Star of Sept. 7 cited a safety report of US cement company Lehigh Hanson in 2012 that inhaling dolomite dust may “cause discomfort in the chest, shortness of breath and coughing” and may even cause cancer. Another company from the US, Lhoist North America, said that dolomite “causes damage to lungs through prolonged or repeated exposure when inhaled.”

The common tao (person) is surely perplexed that the government has so thoughtlessly inflicted one more critical concern to add to the anxieties of the protracted coronavirus — when the only parting words now, in any virtual and/or limited socialization and communication, is “Stay Safe.”  And why insist on doing that P389-million Manila Bay beautification project when the money could be used for the health of the people — more medicines, research for a vaccine, testing and treatments, facilities, incentives for frontliners — or at least partially fund the P165.5-billion ($3.4 billion) emergency relief fund signed by President Rodrigo Duterte on Friday, Sept.

11? “Bayanihan II” will expand healthcare and help businesses after the coronavirus pandemic plunged the economy into a deep recession. BusinessWorld on Sept. 9 says the Philippines may see the worst (economic) slump in Asia. The question begging to be asked: Do we need any beautification project at this time?

The environment has already been slowly regaining its beauty in the forced slowdown of human activity in the quarantines and lockdowns of the coronavirus pandemic. Pollution has dropped dramatically all over the world from the standstill of carbon-breathing factories and practically no land, air, and sea travel emissions. The European Space Agency (ESA), through satellite imaging, saw a 45-50% drop in nitrogen dioxide levels across Europe at the end of March, from 2019 levels (and that was only early in the lockdowns). In China, up to a 90% reduction of certain emissions during the city-lockdown period were identified from satellite and ground-based observation. Here in the Philippines, the skies are now dramatically an azure blue, from when only a gray cloud could be seen over Makati from the hills of Antipolo.

Now is the perfect chance to help our environment recover its glory, and for us humans to make amends for the damage we have done to Nature in our greedy pursuits for wealth and comfort. Note that the Philippines is a poor number-111 among 180 countries ranked in the 2020 Environmental Performance Index (EPI) by the Yale University Center for Environmental Law and Policy. The study shows a decline of the Philippine performance of 4.1% over 10 years

in metrics that gauge waste management, carbon dioxide emissions from land cover change, and black carbon emissions — all important drivers of climate change.

A decline in our EPI means our country has failed dismally in efforts to preserve and respect our environment. But we have some 50+ laws specifically on the environment, listed in the Chan Robles virtual law library. It seems the problem is in the implementation of these laws.

Why are our skies now blue, in time of the coronavirus, when there is now minimal traffic on the roads? Why were our skies gray before? We have Republic Act No. 8749, “The Clean Air Act of 1999,” which ensures that “the State shall protect and advance the right of the people to a   balanced and healthful ecology in accord with the rhythm and harmony of nature.” Smoke belching vehicles on the road, carbon emitting sea and air vehicles, and noxious factory exhausts were perhaps not strictly monitored and sanctioned.

Why do our own environment functionaries seem clueless (or in denial) as to the possible health hazards, the social costs, and degradation of natural resources in quarrying and mining our patrimony and future reserves? We have Executive Order No. 79 signed by President Benigno Simeon Aquino III on July 6, 2012: “Institutionalizing and implementing reforms in the Philippine mining sector providing policies and guidelines to ensure environmental protection and responsible mining in the utilization of mineral resources” that quotes the same Section 16, Article II of the 1987 Constitution as in the Clean Air Act.

If only those two environmental laws were adhered to, and strictly implemented, the Philippines would be happier and safer with Nature, and with its conscience.

Let’s give the environment a chance.

 

Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Philippine Coast Guard: A small service with a big job in COVID-19 response

Not many are aware of the role of the Philippine Coast Guard in fighting the pandemic.

When President Rodrigo Duterte placed Metro Manila  under “community quarantine” on March 14, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) was tasked to ensure that the instruction was strictly carried out. The PCG, together with the Philippine National Police-Maritime Group and the Armed Forces of the Philippines-Joint Task Force NCR, composed the Task Group Laban COVID-19 Water Cluster. The primary role of the Task Group, to combat the spread of COVID-19, is to screen with the use of thermal scanners all the crew of the vessels and watercraft that enter the ports in Manila. Further, it conducts seaborne operations to apprehend those watercraft that are not permitted to enter the maritime boundary of the nation’s capital.

Although the task force is a composite unit, the PCG serves as the backbone of its operation. Given that the PCG has existing units in various ports surrounding Manila Bay, it became easier for the Task Group to rely on these coast guard units on the ground. Likewise, the strategically deployed PCG small craft and prepositioned logistical requirements made it more manageable for the task group to sustain its 24/7 maritime patrols. Accordingly, the PCG and the other Task Group members checked approximately 3,500 vessels and more than 50,000 fishing boats. The group was able to carry out 857 seaborne patrols to caution some watercraft that violated the guidelines set forth by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF).

In ZamBaSulTa (the Zamboanga, Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi area), when the threat of COVID-19 became apparent in the wake of  hundreds and hundreds of Filipinos sailing to cross the border from Malaysia, the PCG vessels served as a blocking force. These PCG vessels became the frontliners guarding the shores of this region to ensure that all of those who came from Malaysia would be quarantined before joining their respective families. The PCG members acted as quarantine officers, carrying thermal scanners to check the body temperature of each of the passengers of the arriving boat. Further, these PCG vessels served as logistical carriers in constructing the quarantine tents on Sibakel Island and delivering the necessities to support those in quarantine. Until now, the PCG units ashore and afloat remain vigilant in guarding the shores of these provinces.

When the cruise ships carrying Filipino seafarers were permitted by the IATF to anchor at  Manila Bay, the PCG’s role was amplified. At first, its function was only to supervise the Filipino seafarers’ disembarkation from the cruise ships since it was initially the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) that facilitated their accommodations to observe the 14-day quarantine.

With the support of Transportation Secretary Arturo Tugade, the PCG was able to convert the Eva Macapagal Terminal and two floating facilities into COVID-19 quarantine facilities which could accommodate approximately 1,000 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs). The coast guard did not just provide medical personnel to operate and man these facilities, but it also stationed buses and coasters at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport to shuttle those returning Filipino seafarers.

Due to the massive influx of returning OFWs, the IATF created the Sub-Task Group for Repatriation of OFW, headed by the PCG Commandant, Admiral Joel Garcia. The arrival of OFWs from countries with a high number of COVID-19 cases exposed the government agencies’ lack of personnel and resources to immediately address COVID-19 testing, transportation requirements, accommodation, and security detail.

The arrival of OFWs from countries with high infection rates is one of the weakest links in our fight against COVID-19. Hence, arriving OFWs need to be tested and quarantined. However, the huge number of daily arrivals require an efficient way of testing them to free up the quarantine centers. Their prompt testing, immediate mobility, and transportation requirements have to be effectively carried out. Since the PCG already started running the OFWs’ quarantine facilities and had the logistical capability, it has been put in a position to undertake new tasks and fill in the gaps.

At present, PCG personnel are deployed at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) to guide the arriving OFWs. They are brought to the Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing locations for swabbing, also carried out by coast guard medical technologists. Notably, the Philippine Red Cross has entrusted to the PCG the testing kits for the OFWs. The PCG was the first government agency to receive training from the health department and the Red Cross in conducting RT-PCR testing. The PCG has proactively recruited medical technologists and has utilized its trainees who have had medical courses to sustain the swab testing of the OFWs as well as address the backlogs in testing.

The PCG personnel carry out swabbing, be it at the airport, hotels, or even onboard the cruise ships. The majority of these testing sites are in 121 different hotels in Metro Manila where the OFWs are temporarily housed. Likewise, the PCG personnel went onboard 20 cruise ships that anchored on Manila Bay to test the Filipino crew that were quarantined there. The PCG teams also conducted testing at the NAIA Terminals 1 and 2, the Eva Macapagal Terminal, and the Palacio Gobernador Mass Testing Center. Additionally, the international airports that will soon be reopened like those in Cebu and Davao will have PCG-manned testing booths.

The PCG’s role does not end with testing. The agency’s buses and vehicles are being used to transport the OFWs from the airport or seaports to various quarantine facilities or hotel accommodations. The PCG has deployed covert and overt security personnel to quarantine facilities to ensure that the OFWs strictly observe the 14-day quarantine.

From serving as guardians of our coastal areas and port facilities, the PCG’s role has evolved significantly as frontliners in ensuring the health and safety of our OFWs, their families,  and the community. The PCG’s duty is no longer limited to safeguarding our shores and waters. The coast guard has now become the gatekeepers for our OFWs who deserve to be welcomed despite the threat that they may bring COVID-19 into the country. The PCG may be a small service of approximately 16,700 personnel nationwide, but they are performing a big job in the country’s COVID-19 response.

 

Jay Tristan Tarriela is a commissioned officer of the PCG with the rank of Lieutenant Commander and a Japan International Cooperation Agency scholar at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo. He collaborates with Action for Economic Reforms on issues relating to maritime security.

OPEC+ bid to rescue market falters as recovery stalls

IT WAS MEANT to be the week when OPEC nations gathered in Baghdad to celebrate the cartel’s six decades as a dominant force in global oil markets.

Instead, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies will convene online, and reflect on whether the coranavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has thwarted their best efforts to keep the market afloat.

After reviving crude prices from an unprecedented collapse over the spring, OPEC+ is seeing the recovery stall and fuel demand falter as the deadly pandemic surges once again. Prices slipped below $40 a barrel last week for the first time since June.

On Thursday, Saudi Arabia and Russia — the leading members of the alliance — will chair a monitoring meeting to assess whether the vast production cuts, which they started easing in August, are still staving off an oil glut. New signs of exporters reneging on the deal aren’t helping.

“There were some major assumptions built in on where demand and the recovery would be now, and it just hasn’t happened,” said Mohammad Darwazah, an analyst at research firm Medley Global Advisors LLC. “If I’m OPEC and if I’m Saudi Arabia, I would be concerned.”

The relapse is a source of acute financial distress for OPEC nations, from poorer members like Nigeria and Venezuela — who need crude prices far above current levels to cover government spending — all the way up to wealthy Gulf monarchies like Kuwait.

Riyadh and Moscow had anticipated that a resumption in global economic activity, combined with the supply curbs, would sharply deplete the hoard of surplus oil inventory accumulated during lockdowns. But there are growing signs the market isn’t tightening so fast.

The peak holiday driving season has passed in the U.S., yet rush-hour traffic is still sparse and crude inventories stubbornly high. In India, the third-biggest consumer, transport-fuel sales remained 20% below year-ago levels last month. Even in China, where refiners binged on crude at the height of the crisis, buying has slowed.

Trading houses are hiring oil tankers on long-term contracts once again to store surplus barrels.

The downturn isn’t yet severe enough for OPEC+ to reimpose the full output cutbacks made in the second quarter, according to Helima Croft, head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets LLC. After tapering the cuts last month from 9.7 million barrels a day to 7.7 million, a sense of inertia means there will be a “high bar” for any new action, she said.

“For the men who reside in the palaces and the presidential halls, there is a price at which they make a panicked phone call,” said Ms. Croft. “The question is, what is the price?”

In theory, OPEC’s task should get easier next quarter as demand for winter fuels kicks in and a gradually mending global economy rekindles the need for road and aviation fuels, data from the International Energy Agency in Paris shows.

But as the outlook continues to darken, the Saudis may choose to underscore their readiness to act.

“We expect a strong statement that if markets continue to weaken, the producer group will be prepared to trim output further,” said Ed Morse, head of commodities research at Citigroup, Inc.

In the meantime, the kingdom will press on with its mission to enforce rigorous implementation of the curbs.

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has achieved an unusual degree of success in this area, bringing habitual quota-violators like Iraq and Nigeria to heel by assigning them “compensation cuts” to make up for earlier cheating.

The two countries have so far implemented only a fraction of those extra curbs, and Baghdad is expected to seek more time to deliver the rest. Nonetheless, the punishment itself has apparently spurred them to previously unseen levels of compliance with the original quotas.

Just as they toe the line, Riyadh is encountering a new challenge from an unexpected quarter. The United Arab Emirates, traditionally a staunch ally, has admitted to flouting its limits by roughly 20%, while promising to correct the error. Export data from consultants like Petro-Logistics SA and Kpler SAS indicate the UAE’s transgression could be many times bigger.

The Saudis will likely to try discreetly address the misbehavior of their Gulf partner, which for now appears a minor blemish in an otherwise well-executed strategy, said RBC’s Ms. Croft. The bigger issue is whether OPEC+ responds promptly enough if the deterioration in oil demand continues.

“Judged on compliance, I think they could take a victory lap,” she said. “The real challenge is — is the organization nimble enough? If this really does stall out, how fast can they react?” — Bloomberg

Lakers eliminate Rockets

LEBRON JAMES had 29 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists, and the Los Angeles Lakers eliminated the Houston Rockets from the NBA playoffs with a 119-96 victory in Game 5 on Saturday at the NBA bubble near Orlando.

Kyle Kuzma scored 17 points, Markieff Morris added 16 and Danny Green chipped in 14 for the Lakers. Anthony Davis contributed 13 points and 11 boards but committed six turnovers.

James Harden had 30 points, six rebounds and five assists, and Jeff Green finished with 13 points off the bench for the Rockets. Russell Westbrook had 10 points on four-of-13 shooting.

It’s the Lakers’ first trip to the Western Conference finals in 10 years. They will meet the winner of the series between the Los Angeles Clippers and Denver Nuggets.

Like they did against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round, the Lakers dropped Game 1 of the series and then won four in a row.

The Lakers, who led by as much as 30, seized control of the game in the third quarter. A bucket by Harden allowed Houston to creep within 65-59, but Los Angeles answered with a 18-2 surge after a putback dunk by Davis made it 83-61 with 5:01 left in the third.

The Lakers carried a 95-69 lead into the fourth quarter. They outscored the Rockets 33-18 in the third.

The Lakers bolted out of the gate. They led by as many as 22 points in the first quarter before taking a 35-20 lead heading into the second quarter.

But the Rockets rallied, cutting the deficit to seven after a jumper by Westbrook capped an 8-0 run to open the second quarter.

However, the Lakers increased the lead again to double digits and took a 62-51 advantage at the break. James and Harden each scored 19 points in the first half.

The Lakers outshot the Rockets 52.7% to 37.1%. Los Angeles converted 19 of 37 3-pointers to 13 of 49 for Houston. — Reuters

New recruit Koon excited to play for UAAP champions Blue Eagles

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

DEEMED a talent who got away, Filipino-American player Chris Koon has had a change of heart and is now excited to play for the reigning three-time University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) men’s basketball champions Ateneo Blue Eagles.

A product of Rolling Hills Preparatory in California where he averaged 16 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 4.0 assists, and helped the school to three straight California Interscholastic Federation Southern Section titles and a CIF state championship, Koon is now focused on having the same success and impact in parlaying his wares in the local collegiate scene.

Koon, who traces his Filipino roots to Novaliches, Quezon City, through mother Iderlina Acosta, was being eyed by Ateneo in the last few years but in 2019, was recruited by California State Polytechnic University in Pomona, where he committed but redshirted in his rookie year.

Having had the chance to see the culture in Ateneo firsthand and the basketball program it had under coach Tab Baldwin in a visit to the country last year, Koon said he just felt he needed to come over and play for the Blue Eagles and get his education in Ateneo.

“When I visited a year ago, I saw the school’s culture. Coach Tab is one of the best coaches out there and I felt the family vibe when I was there,” said Koon in an online interview session with local media on Friday.

“I’m excited to play for Ateneo and contribute the best way I can,” added the 6’5” player, who will be sitting out Season 83 of the UAAP to complete his one-year residency.

Koon is described as an all-around player who can create plays both for himself and his teammates.

“He’s a very smart and tough player and I think his transition into our program will be fairly seamless and won’t require a lot of adjustment and adaptability,” said Mr. Baldwin, who joined Koon and Ateneo team manager Chris Quimpo, in the interview.

“He has a high basketball I.Q., he is a leader, and I expect him to be one when he joins us,” added the coach of Koon, a school mate at Cal Poly Pomona of fellow Ateneo recruit Dwight Ramos.

But while Koon is expected to shore up the Blue Eagles’ basketball program for years to come, both Messrs. Baldwin and Quimpo said the move to Ateneo by the Filipino-American player could also be a boon to the latter, not only as a player but as an individual.

“He (Koon) wants to be with a winning program and I think Ateneo gives him that. We have a system here that identifies weaknesses in one’s game, addresses those weaknesses and turns them to strengths,” said Mr. Baldwin.

“And it’s not just as a player that we want to develop Chris but also academically. We want him to finish his studies,” Mr. Quimpo, for his part, said, taking note of Koon’s 4.5 grade point average (GPA) in high school.

Koon, the second prized recruit of the team recently after Filipino-Italian Gab Gomez, is now enrolled in Ateneo, taking up a Management Economics course.

He said eventually he wants to play in the Philippine Basketball Association or internationally, depending on how his game develops.

US Open champion Naomi Osaka

FACTBOX ON JAPAN’S NAOMI OSAKA, WHO BEAT VICTORIA AZARENKA OF BELARUS 1-6 6-3 6-3 TO WIN THE US OPEN TITLE ON SATURDAY.

Born: Oct. 16, 1997 in Osaka, Japan

Grand Slam titles: 3 (US Open 2018, 2020; Australian Open 2019)

EARLY LIFE
• Born to a Japanese mother and a Haitian father, Osaka grew up idolizing 23-times Grand Slam champion Serena Williams.

• Moved to New York when she was three-years-old and turned professional in 2013 aged 15.

• Played in the main draw of a WTA event for the first time at Stanford in 2014. Beat Sam Stosur in the first round before losing to Andrea Petkovic.

CAREER TO DATE
• Made her Grand Slam debut as a qualifier at the Australian Open in 2016, beating Elina Svitolina in the second round before losing to former champion Azarenka.

• Cracked the top 100 in the world for the first time in April 2016 and the top 50 later in the year.

• Named 2016 WTA “Newcomer of the Year” after making third-round appearances at three Grand Slams and reaching her first WTA final.

• Won her first WTA title in March 2018 in Indian Wells, beating Maria Sharapova, Karolina Pliskova and Simona Halep along the way.

• Beat Serena Williams in the 2018 US Open final to claim her maiden Grand Slam title and finished the year ranked fifth in the world.

• Beat Petra Kvitova in the 2019 Australian Open final to become the first player since Jennifer Capriati in 2001 to win the next Grand Slam after her maiden major.

• Beat Azarenka to win her second US Open title. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there were no fans in attendance at the hardcourt major in 2020. She turned up for each of her seven matches at Flushing Meadows wearing a face mask carrying the name of a Black American to highlight racial injustice in the United States. — Reuters

Kaya focuses on winning first PFL title after AFC Cup cancellation

HAD its 2020 AFC Cup campaign abruptly cut by the coronavirus pandemic, local football club Kaya FC-Iloilo now channels its focus in its bid in the Philippines Football League (PFL) where it hopes to win its first-ever league title.

Following the decision of the AFC Executive Committee late last week to cancel altogether the remainder of the AFC Cup because of logistical issues and concerns, Philippine clubs seeing action in the tournament had no choice but to accept what was seemingly an eventual decision amid the prevailing conditions in different parts of the world brought about by the health crisis.

For Kaya, while it laments the cancellation of the tournament, it is choosing to view the turn of events as an opportunity to give more focus on its campaign in the long-delayed 2020 edition of the PFL.

“The cancelation of this year’s AFC Cup only means we’re more focused than ever to get ourselves right for the start of #PFL2020!” said the team in a short post on its Facebook page.

“We’re going all out for our first ever Philippines Football League title!” it added.

In the fourth season of the PFL, originally scheduled to start in March but is now being angled to push through sometime in October, Kaya will be part of the six-team field, along with United City Football Club (formerly Ceres-Negros FC), Stallion Laguna FC, Mendiola FC 1991, Azkals Development Team, and new entrant Maharlika Football Club.

It is currently training in the Philippine Football Federation Training Center in Carmona, Cavite, the designated area for such as included in the protocols agreed upon by the league and the government as part of mitigating measures against the spread of the coronavirus.

Kaya has been part of the PFL since the start but has yet to win the league title. It, however, won the Copa Paulino Alcantara title back in 2018.

The club competed in the last two editions of the AFC Cup.

In this year’s edition of the regional tournament, Kaya was running second in Group H with 1-2-0 record and five points, two behind group leader Tampines Rovers FC (2-1-0) of Singapore.

It last played against PSM Makassar of Indonesia in Jakarta on March 10 where it settled for a 1-1 draw.

Kaya was scheduled to play PSM Makassar and Shan United FC of Myanmar on Sept. 23 and 26, respectively, until organizers decided to cancel.

“In view of the logistics in coordinating the five zones of the AFC Cup and completing the Inter Zone matches, the AFC Executive Committee also agreed that the pandemic created complexities which constituted a Force Majeure event and, with sadness, led to the cancellation of the 2020 competition,” the AFC said in its decision.

Apart from Kaya, also in the tournament was Ceres, the place of which was to be taken over by UCFC.

Before the cancellation, Ceres was on top of Group G with seven points built on a 2-1-0 record. Michael Angelo S. Murillo