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DENR orders bamboo planting along Cagayan River

ENVIRONMENT Secretary Roy A. Cimatu has ordered the planting of bamboo along the banks of the Cagayan River as an anti-flooding measure to prevent the recurrence of the floods that hit Cagayan and Isabela provinces during Typhoon Ulysses (international name: Vamco).

Following a meeting with the Build Back Better Task Force (BBBTF), Mr. Cimatu ordered the regional offices of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) in Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, and Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon) to ensure that bamboo planting materials are available.

He also directed these regional offices to start identifying areas along the river banks suitable for bamboo planting, to be funded by the DENR’s national greening program.

Mr. Cimatu said bamboo was selected because it is hardy and fast-growing.

“It is ideal for stabilizing riverbanks,” Mr. Cimatu said.

“It can also be a potential sustainable source of livelihood for the people of Cagayan Valley while protecting the integrity of the Cagayan River,” he added.

In the same BBBTF meeting, Trade Undersecretary Blesilda A. Lantayona said the DENR’s decision to plant bamboo along the Cagayan River offers an opportunity to examine the crop’s economic potential.

Ms. Lantayona said the government has been developing a supply of engineered bamboo, but is unable to operate at full capacity due to lack of supply.

“Mr. Cimatu’s push to mainstream engineered bamboo as a major alternative to timber will finally enable the full implementation of Executive Order (EO) 879,” Ms. Lantayona said.

Under EO 879, at least 25% of the annual requirement of school desks and chairs in public elementary and secondary schools across the country need to be built with bamboo.

The EO also directs the DENR to use bamboo as a planting material for at least 20% of its targeted annual reforestation and rehabilitation projects.

“This should be done especially in provinces and towns which are engaged in or have the potential to engage in bamboo-based industries or where trees are difficult to grow because of poor site quality, susceptibility to erosion or adverse and steep gradients,” the DENR said. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

CREATE Bill: An early Christmas gift?

With Christmas just a few weeks away, most of us are preparing decorations and buying presents despite the quarantine. This year’s holiday season will be much different from the past celebrations. Most businesses, particularly the micro, small and medium enterprises, which used to get their fair share of consumer spending, were forced to temporarily close and retrench employees due to the pandemic.

Despite this, the government is still trying to improve the situation. One example of this effort was the passage of Republic Act No. 11494 or the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act (Bayanihan II), which provides tax breaks for corporate issuers, lenders and borrowers and businesses with operating losses.

On Nov. 26, the Senate also approved on third and final reading Senate Bill No. 1357 or the proposed Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act (CREATE). According to the Department of Finance, the bill is the first-ever revenue-negative tax reform package and the largest fiscal stimulus program for enterprises.

The CREATE Bill provides for the following major reform measures:

I. CORPORATE INCOME TAX (CIT)
The bill proposes a flat rate of 25%, from the current 30%, retroactive to July 1, 2020. This new rate is applicable to both domestic and foreign corporations. However, domestic corporations with total assets not exceeding P100 million and total net taxable income not exceeding P5 million, may end up paying as little as 20% CIT.

II. MINIMUM CORPORATE INCOME TAX (MCIT)
Effective also July 1, 2020, the MCIT drops to 1% from 2%. However, the rate will revert to 2% after June 30, 2023.

III. IMPOSITION OF IMPROPERLY ACCUMULATED EARNINGS TAX
Under the bill, the imposition of the 10% tax on the improperly accumulated earnings of corporations is repealed.

IV. DEDUCTIBLE INTEREST EXPENSE
The allowable deduction for interest expense is to be reduced by 20% (from 33%) of the interest income subjected to final tax.

V. PERCENTAGE TAX
As with the MCIT, the rate will also be reduced to 1% from 3% effective July 1, 2020. However, the rate will also revert to 3% after three years.

VI. PROPRIETARY EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS AND NON-PROFIT HOSPITALS
The bill proposes to reduce the income tax rate on proprietary educational institutions and non-profit hospitals to 1% (from 10%) effective July 1, 2020. After three years, the rate will increase to 3%.

VII. VAT EXEMPTION
a. Housing — The threshold for the VAT exemption of residential lots is set at P2.5 million (from P1.5 million). Any below that value will be exempt from VAT. For detached houses and other residential dwellings, the threshold is set at P4.2 million (from P2.5 million) and below.

b. E-Books — The sale, import, printing or publication of books, and any newspaper, magazine, journal, review bulletin on digital or electronic format is also be exempt from VAT.

c. Medicine — The sale or import of medicine for cancer, mental illness, tuberculosis, and kidney diseases will be exempted from VAT beginning 2021 instead of 2023.

d. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) — The sale and importation of the following shall be VAT exempt:

i. Capital equipment, its spare parts and raw materials, necessary for the production of PPEs

ii. All drugs, vaccines, and medical devices specifically prescribed and directly used for the treatment of COVID-19

iii. Drugs for the treatment of COVID-19 approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in clinical trials

VIII. APPROVAL OF INCENTIVES
Under the CREATE Bill, the role of Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) is to approve or disapprove the grant of tax incentives to the extent of the registered project or activity upon the recommendation of the Investment Promotion Agencies (IPA). However, the bill proposes to delegate the authority to the IPA for those projects or activities with investment capital of P1 billion and below.

In addition, the bill also proposes the following provisions for both export and domestic enterprises:

a. Income tax holiday (ITH) of 4 to 7 years

b. Special corporate income tax of 5% based on the gross income earned (GIE) for exporters and domestic enterprises classified as critical industries

c. Enhanced deductions duration of 10 years

d. Incentive duration, including expansion projects, of 14 to 17 years

e. Extension period of 10 years

f. Transition period — For enterprises currently in ITH, the enterprise can still avail of the ITH until its expiration. On the other hand, enterprises under the 5% GIE, can still avail of the said incentive until 10 years.

The reduction of the tax rates, additional exemptions and expansion of incentives will certainly help businesses recover and will also improve the country’s capability to attract investment after the pandemic. Considering that the bill was certified as urgent by the President, most investors and business owners are eagerly waiting for the passage of the bill. Such may be considered an early Christmas gift. Nonetheless, I hope that our legislators ensure that the benefits of the tax incentives will be given directly to the economy, workers, and businesses.

Let’s Talk Tax is a weekly newspaper column of P&A Grant Thornton that aims to keep the public informed of various developments in taxation. This article is not intended to be a substitute for competent professional advice.

 

Anthony Joseph A. Cometa is a manager of Tax Advisory & Compliance division of P&A Grant Thornton, the Philippine member firm of Grant Thornton International Ltd.

pagrantthornton@ph.gt.com

25M people may get vaccinated next year

By Gillian M. Cortez and Vann Marlo M. Villegas, Reporters

THE DEPARTMENT of Health (DoH) plans to vaccinate as many as 25 million people against the coronavirus next year, the agency’s chief said on Monday.

It also expects a large portion of the Philippines’ more than 100 million population to become immune to the virus by 2023 based on herd immunity, Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III told an online news briefing.

The vaccine doesn’t have to be given to all Filipinos based on herd immunity, when a large portion of the population becomes immune to the disease, making its spread unlikely.

“We might roll out the partial vaccination plan by 2021 and we are targeting to vaccinate 20 to 25 million people based on our prioritization list,” Mr. Duque said in Filipino.

At least 60 million Filipinos are expected to get vaccinated by as late as 2023, he added.

In the past, as many as 70% of the population had to be immunized to protect the entire population from a virus, DoH said.

The government’s mass vaccination program could start as early as June 2021, Jaime C. Montoya, executive director of the Philippine Council for Health Research and Development, told the same briefing.

An ethics committee from the Science and Technology department is reviewing applications for clinical trials from Sinovac Biotech Ltd. and Clover Biopharmaceuticals. The agency’s expert panel earlier approved the applications.

Once approved, clinical trials for their vaccines could start by December or January, Mr. Montoya said.

Three other drug makers have applied for clinical trials — Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology, Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca Plc.

FDA Director-General Rolando Enrique D. Domingo earlier said drug makers don’t have to conduct clinical trials here. They just have to register for product approval by the FDA.

Moderna, Inc. had informed Science and Technology officials that it does not plan to hold clinical trials here for a coronavirus vaccine it was developing. The company claims the drug is 94.5% effective. Pfizer, which claims its vaccine is 95% effective, also does not plan to conduct clinical trials in the Philippines.

VIRUS TALLY
DoH reported 1,773 coronavirus infections on Monday, bringing the total to 431,630.

The death toll rose to 8,392 after 19 more patients died, while recoveries increased by 44 to 398,658, it said in a bulletin.

There were 24,580 active cases, 83.5% of which were mild, 7.5% did not show symptoms, 5.7% were critical, 3% were severe and 0.31% were moderate.

Rizal reported the highest number of new cases at 104, followed by Cavite at 99, Negros Occidental at 88, Davao City at 79 and Laguna at 72.

DoH said seven duplicates had been removed from the tally, while six recoveries were reclassified as deaths. Eleven laboratories failed to submit their data on Nov. 29, it added.

The coronavirus has sickened about 63.1 million and killed 1.5 million people worldwide, according to the Worldometers website, citing various sources including data from the World Health Organization.

Also on Monday, health experts urged the public to hold activities outdoors during the holidays for better air circulation and limit interactions to avoid coronavirus infections.

Antonio Dans, convenor of the Health Professionals Alliance Against COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), told an online news briefing people should limit celebrations within the household.

If they can’t avoid going out, activities should be held outdoors where there is enough ventilation, he said. People should also eat at restaurants with tables outside the building.

People should observe physical distancing and wear face masks and shields, Mr. Dans said. Human interactions should be limited to less than 30 minutes, he added. “The shorter the time, the better.”

The presidential palace has said President Rodrigo R. Duterte would allow the emergency use of coronavirus vaccines, which would cut the approval process for drugs approved in countries where these were developed.

The President would issue an executive order for the emergency vaccine use, which allows local use after 21 days, shorter than the usual six months required for verification.

Mr. Duterte had also approved advanced orders for COVID-19 vaccines to ensure there is supply for the Philippines, vaccine czar Carlito G. Galvez, Jr. said.

Mr. Duterte last month said the government had funds to buy coronavirus vaccines, but it needs more so the entire population of more than 100 million could be inoculated.

He said he would look for more funds so all Filipinos could be vaccinated. The President said he was okay with vaccines developed either by Russia or China.

Mr. Duterte said he had spoken with outgoing Russian Ambassador Igor A. Khovaev and was told that Russia intends to set up a pharmaceutical company in the Philippines that will make the vaccines available here. He said soldiers and the police will be among the first ones to be vaccinated, along with poor Filipinos.

Duterte keeps metro under general lockdown

President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Monday night extended the lockdown in Metro Manila and nearby provinces until year-end after health experts warned of a fresh surge in coronavirus cases during the holidays.

In a televised speech, the President said the capital region, Batangas, Iloilo City, Tacloban, Lanao Del Sur, Iligan and Davao City would remain under a general community quarantine from Dec. 1 to 31.

His spokesman in a separate statement said Davao Del Norte would also be placed under a general lockdown.

The rest of the country would be under a more relaxed modified general community quarantine.

The President locked down the entire Luzon island in mid-March, suspending work, classes and public transportation to contain the pandemic. The lockdown in most areas have since been eased.

Researchers from the University of the Philippines on Monday warned of a potential surge to half-a-million cases by year-end as more sectors of the economy reopen and as people experience “pandemic fatigue.”

Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III at Monday night’s televised meeting with the President urged the public to continue observing health standards as the holidays draw near.

He also said the agency expects a post-holiday spike in COVID-19 cases.

People should avoid large meetings this holiday and limit celebrations to their own households, Interior Secretary Eduardo M. Año said at the meeting. — Gillian M. Cortez

Operations at MRT-3 resume on Dec. 1 after major repairs

THE METRO Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT-3) will resume operations on Dec. 1 after repair works at the Taft section were completed, according to the Transportation department.

The MRT-3 stopped operations starting Nov. 28 to give way to repair activities at the Taft Avenue section.

The repair activities were done by its maintenance service providers Sumitomo Corp., Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Engineering, Ltd. and TES Philippines, Inc.

The department aims to increase the MRT-3’s speed by 10 kilometers per hour to 60 km per hour by December.

The MRT-3 had increased train speeds to 50 kph in November from 40 kph, reducing waiting time between trains from as long as 9.5 minutes to as short as four minutes. MRT-3 operates 20 trains daily. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Malaria cases in West Pacific down by 43% since 2000, WHO says

MALARIA cases in the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Western Pacific region, which includes the Philippines, declined by 43% to 1.7 million last year from the year 2000, according to estimates by the group.

Estimated deaths from malaria — a preventable and treatable disease that continues to kill hundreds of thousands of people yearly — also fell by 52% to 3,200 during the period, the WHO said in a report posted on its website.

“Over the same period, malaria case incidence reduced from five to two cases per 1,000 population at risk, and malaria mortality rate reduced from 1 to 0.4 deaths per 100,000 population at risk,” it said.

Papua New Guinea accounted for 80% of all cases of malaria — an intermittent and remittent fever caused by a protozoan parasite that invades the red blood cells — in the region.

The parasite is transmitted by mosquitoes in many tropical regions.

The WHO said of the 10 countries, Cambodia, China Lao People’s Democratic Republic, and Malaysia are on target to achieve a more than 40% reduction in cases. South Korea and Vietnam are expected to cut the number of cases by as much as 40% this year.

Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu have experienced an increase in cases since 2015.

“All countries are on track to reduce the malaria mortality rate by at least 40% by 2020, except for Papua New Guinea, the Philippines and Solomon Islands,” the WHO said.

Of the estimated cases in 2019, 79% came from Papua New Guinea, 9.5% from Solomon Islands, 8.1% from Cambodia and 2.4% from the Philippines. The rest came from Laos, Vietnam, South Korea and Vanuatu. China and Malaysia did not report any cases.

Globally, there were about 229 million malaria cases and about 409,000 deaths last year, down from 238 million cases and 736,000 deaths in 2000.

About 1.5 billion malaria cases and 7.6 million deaths have been avoided in the past two decades, according to the WHO report.

Malaria cases in the WHO’s South-East Asia region fell by 74% to 6.3 million last year from the year 2000. Estimated deaths declined by 74%.

The WHO said the coronavirus pandemic and restrictions disrupted essential malaria services but it convened “cross-partner effort” to mitigate the impact in malaria-affected countries.

About $39 billion was invested in the fight against malaria between 2000 and 2019, $26 billion of which came from external donors.

Meanwhile, the Asia Pacific Leaders’ Malaria Alliance (APLMA) road map for 2015 to 2019 showed that countries in the Asia-Pacific region “remained committed and largely on track for elimination by 2030.”

“There is a growing sense of common purpose and increased funding across the region reflected in a near tripling of domestic financing,” the WHO said. “This has contributed to a 31% reduction of the disease burden overall since 2012.”

The goal of eliminating malaria by 2030 could be achieved through decisive leadership, sustained financing and universal coverage, it added. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Nationwide round-up (11/30/20)

TUCP asks gov’t to expand infra program to create employment

THE Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) called on the government to expand its infrastructure program to help address unemployment resulting from the coronavirus pandemic. “Putting our people back to work through public construction is the first step out of joblessness,” TUCP Party-list Representative Raymond C. Mendoza said in a statement on Monday. He also noted the construction industry’s multiplier effect in the economy. “The investment in infrastructure will lower the cost of business operations, and the improved conditions will entice investors to put up businesses in the provinces, and new private sector jobs will be created.” The labor coalition is also pushing for an P11,000 monthly financial subsidy for minimum wage workers affected by the crisis. In May, the Department of Labor and Employment estimated job loss due to the pandemic at 10 million by the end of the year. — Gillian M. Cortez

House committees approve bill updating passport law

A JOINT panel of the House of Representatives has approved a consolidated bill updating the law on the issuance of Philippine passports. The consolidated measure, endorsed by the committees on foreign affairs and appropriations, includes House Bill No. 6399, authored by Cagayan de Oro City Rep. Rufus B. Rodriguez. Mr. Rodriguez said the bill “aims to update and reflect the current laws that affect the process of issuing passports” by amending Republic Act No. 8239, otherwise known as the Philippine Passport Act of 1996. Under the measure, regular passports would be valid for 10 years, except those issued to persons under 18 years old, which would be good for five years. The bill allows the issuance of any of three travel papers under certain circumstances “like urgent travel of a person who has not been issued a passport yet or who has lost his passport,” he said. Under the measure, the right to travel may be impaired only when “national security, public safety or public health requires.” The former immigration commissioner pointed out that to enhance and protect the right to travel, “only minimum requirements for the application and issuance of passports and other travel documents shall be imposed, and such issuance shall be expedited.” The lawmaker said the existing law has to be updated because since the statute’s enactment 24 years ago, “Congress has passed at least three laws affecting the right to travel” such as the Domestic Adoption Act of 1998, the Citizenship and Reacquisition Act of 2003, and the Philippine Identification System Act. Other new provisions in the bill include giving authority to the secretary of foreign affairs to set “reasonable fees” for passport processing, and a 32% discount for senior citizens. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Regional Updates (11/30/20)

Baguio still pursuing airport reopening

THE Baguio City government is not abandoning its plan to reopen the Loakan Airport for commercial flights, City Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong said. “We are not going to abandon it, but it’s not a priority at the moment. It’s not even viable to operate airlines right now. They are losing,” Mr. Magalong told BusinessWorld in a recent phone interview. He said Baguio City is looking to resume talks with the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) by January next year. “By January na kasi busy pa rin kami sa pag-manage nitong COVID-19 and at the same time itong pag-boost ng economy (We will resume talks by January because we are still busy with the pandemic and boosting the local economy),” he explained. The city government started meeting with CAAP on the airport’s reopening in 2019. “We have been working with CAAP regarding the opening. In fact they already started cleaning it, but they temporarily stopped it because of the pandemic,” the mayor said. “We have been excited, pati yung (even) PAL express ay talagang (was really) excited.” In January this year, Mr. Magalong said San Miguel Corp. President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon S. Ang had expressed interest to operate and manage the airport, which has been closed to commercial flights for more than a decade. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Quezon provincial gov’t to block Kaliwa Dam project

THE provincial government of Quezon has joined the opposition to the Kaliwa Dam project, a P12-billion joint venture of the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) and China Energy Engineering Corporation Limited (CEECL) that is intended as a medium-term water supply source for the capital region. “I’m with you, I don’t like Kaliwa dam either. If you would continue Kaliwa Dam, I’d see you in court,” Governor Danilo E. Suarez told members of Save Sierra Madre Network when he visited Real, Infanta, and General Nakar towns in Quezon on Nov. 28. The Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board passed a resolution on Nov. 27 giving Mr. Suarez authority to take steps, on behalf of the provincial government, to stop the project. The resolution was approved by 11 of the 13 provincial board members. Catholic church leaders in the province also renewed their opposition, saying the fight was a matter of “survival of the people.” Bishop Bernardino Cortez of the prelature of Infanta said the dam would pose risks to lowland agricultural and fishing communities with a history of flash flooding. Mr. Cortez called on government to look for alternative water sources such as watershed rehabilitation and improve existing dams and water facilities. Kaliwa Dam, a flagship project of the government, has yet to start construction. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Marawi rehabilitation projects could be done ahead of Dec. 2021 target — Del Rosario

TASK Force Bangon Marawi Chair Eduardo D. del Rosario (in black vest) during a visit to Marawi in the last week of November. — DHSUD PHOTO RELEASE

REHABILITATION projects in war-torn Marawi City could be completed by August, ahead of the December 2021 target, according to Housing Secretary Eduardo D. del Rosario. “Lahat ng ongoing projects ngayon matatapos sila sa (All our ongoing projects now will be finished by the) early part of the fourth quarter or about August or September of next year… which is ahead of the December 2021 target,” Mr. Del Rosario, who heads the Marawi rehabilitation task force, said in a briefing on Monday. He added that groundbreaking ceremonies are being planned in January for the remaining projects under the rehabilitation program, including permanent housing for displaced residents. Marawi’s central part, including commercial and residential areas, was devastated by a five-month intense firefight between government forces and local extremist groups allied with the Islamic State who started a siege in May 2017. — Gillian M. Cortez

Forging collaborative pathways for a decarbonized and regenerative future — 1

(First of two parts)

This is a lightly edited version of the Acceptance Speech delivered by the author when he received “MAP Management Man of the Year” on Nov. 23.

It’s significant that you’re giving me this award exactly 20 years after MAP (the Management Association of the Philippines) conferred the same on my father, Oscar Lopez. No one has influenced me and what FPH (First Philippine Holdings Corp.) is today more than him: his values, discipline, love for nature, zest for learning, his passion for social justice and his zeal for health and wellness. He’s a man of few words and rarely ever displays his approval (only his disapproval, and on that we’d get an earful) but he led us powerfully through his simplicity and his example. I’m doubly honored today because he and my Mom are here remotely to share this moment with me.

Let me share with you that the day after the news of your MMY (MAP Management Man of the Year) award, my wife Monina, my son Robert, and I were still in disbelief, refusing to celebrate given it could have been a mistake or a “Steve Harvey Miss Universe” moment which might still be retracted. You’ll find this odd but despite the warmth I’ve always experienced from fellow businessmen and the business organizations I belong to, I’ve always felt like an outsider or outlier in the world of Philippine business. Part of this likely stems from a lingering regret I’ve harbored that I never finished my Harvard MBA. After I prematurely left campus in 1988 and joined my father in the task of rebuilding a near-bankrupt FPH, I thought I’d return to complete my studies after three or four years in the business world. I never did. This was likely because the situations I encountered at work convinced me that immersion in the world of real-life business was better for my development than interrupting it with another year of school. I never resolved whether I’d done the right thing and spent the last 33 years without the three letters “MBA” embossed on my CV and wondering whether I’d just squandered an opportunity not available to many. After today, thanks to MAP, the three letters “MMY” more than makes up for that and resolves this unfinished goal in my mind once and for all.

To be honest, although I read a lot and always relished the process of learning new things both in breadth and in depth, formal schooling in my youth never worked well for me. While I was never the unruly kid at the back of the class, my Zen-like calm during dull class lectures belied a mind that was distracted and already racing in many directions toward future life plans and adventures. Of course, all that showed up in unexceptional grades and academic struggles. A diagnosis then might have tagged me with a learning disability; the more enlightened today might instead have correctly identified this as a learning difference.

Whatever it was, the world I always felt so at home with was the world of water. I grew up a competitive swimmer and my dearth of academic honors was way compensated for by the profusion of competitive swimming medals and records broken. Water was always my element which later translated to a love for the sea. I ruefully admit though that in my earlier days as a scuba diver, I was also an avid spear fisherman and we’d justify this by claiming that we’d spear only what we’d eat.

Then one day while spearfishing off the Verde Island Passage in Batangas, known as the “Center of the Center of Marine Biodiversity in the World,” I was approached at close range by a solitary 14-foot Great Hammerhead Shark whose curiosity was roused by my spearing activity. Fortunately, I wasn’t on this shark’s menu and had no bloodied fish to defend against this gigantic predator so he casually departed after deciding we had nothing exciting to offer. But at the sight of something this magnificent, this powerful, and this beautiful being, my steel-shaft speargun didn’t only feel like a toothpick pointing at an armored tank but also that it didn’t belong there. I retired the speargun forever after that dive and exchanged it for an underwater camera instead.

My ensuing years with an underwater camera brought me even closer to the sea I had grown up loving and ultimately brought me face-to-face with a similar-sized Tiger shark in Fiji. There were initially only two of us divers underwater when this monster-sized shark began circling and his very presence warded off all the other Bull sharks, Gray Reef sharks, Nurse sharks, Whitetip, and Blacktip sharks that had been with us the previous four days. That commanding aura defined exactly what an apex predator was. But what I found in that cageless encounter with a shark, infamously branded among the three most responsible for attacks on humans, was something completely different from what I had expected. He was never menacing or terrifying, but more cautious, gentle, and even playful. As he directly approached me for the first time, I could feel his nose glide gently just a foot or so above my head, sort of playing with the bubbles rising from my regulator. Instinctively, I gently lifted my gloved fingers to touch his underbelly as he passed. At that moment, decades of fear inspired by the movie Jaws simply vanished from my mind and my perspective of sharks changed forever. I wrote an article about that encounter which became a magazine cover a few months later. Of course, it helped that my cousin Ernie happened to be its publisher at the time. I never had shark’s fin soup ever again.

A few years later I had a similar encounter, also in the Verde Island Passage Batangas, with a startled octopus that scurried beneath a rock, warily watching me. As we sized each other up from a distance, I stayed with it for the next 20 minutes, edging closer as time lapsed. Finally, as I calmly placed my hand out a few inches from where he was, out came a tentacle gently touching my hand in what looked like an effort to connect, saying, “I think I can trust you.”

The thousands of hours I’ve spent in the underwater world over the last 33 years were priceless. I sometimes wonder whether the majesty and beauty of what I’ve experienced will still be there for my son, and his own children someday, to see and feel just as I have, as even just a 1.5 degree C warmer world (which is the best we can hope for now) will wipe out 70% of all coral reefs; and in a 2 degree C warmer world (although applauded in Paris COP 21), they’ll all but vanish and go extinct. I’m having a hard time getting my mind around the scale of what humanity is losing, and the speed at which it’s happening.

Persistently immersing myself in new worlds was the magic that broadened my perspectives exponentially. But these life-changing insights only unfold themselves for you if you approach those new worlds with respect, empathy, a learning mind, and most of all with an openness to being vulnerable.

Beyond the underwater world, I’ve taken this same pattern of thinking with me as I mountain biked anonymously, and sometimes alone, into off-grid barangays and sitios in the mountains right outside the city. In these communities there are no roads or bridges as we know them. When the rains come, the rivers swell and isolate barangays from one another for hours, or even days at a time. Currents are strong enough to move huge boulders that alter the landscape and routes along the way. I’d bump into troops of fully armed PNP special forces on patrol, fully decked with jungle camo and grenade launchers, with bandoliers of high-powered ammo slung around their chests. Idle talk around town was they were looking for escaped prisoners. Not sure why all the high-powered hardware though. Once, I encountered the lifeless body of a man wrapped in banana tree leaves hastily being carried down the trails from the mountains with nothing more than a bamboo pole. This after being killed in a subsistence mining altercation with his partner.

Life is raw, tenuous, fleeting, and fragile just hours from our doorsteps in Metro Manila. Yet in sharp contrast, the warmth by which I was welcomed into many homes there brought me countless conversations that taught me one very important detail of life under these conditions. And that is, that life thrives amidst poverty and harsh environments because the elements oblige people to build a strong sense of community and caring for one another. Life may be hard, but not necessarily unhappy because of these unseen bonds. I met a Dumagat woman, I’d even call her a true lady, who selflessly chose to raise the five children of a neighbor whose wife died during childbirth. This so he could continue to work in the fields. Helping without counting the cost came naturally to many people I came across. Kindness, gentleness, gratefulness and reciprocity for simple things was everywhere. It changed my traditional economist’s view of poverty, and gave me a glimpse of the richness of life beyond GDP that’s not always measured. More importantly, it speaks of our folly of being trapped in a single narrative. To instead see beyond just black or white, beyond just good or evil, rich or poor, happy or unhappy, and to experience the world through the eyes of others that help us see the millions of shades and colors truly out there. I value those experiences tremendously, as today, we badly need senses that help us respect diversity and differences so we can more deeply understand the web of complex and dynamic systems that we are all a part of. I hope my own learning here never stops.

These last 33 years in the business world, I’ve been blessed with either an active role or a front-row seat to many of our group’s notable and defining moments. Among them:

• The birth of the Philippine natural gas industry with Malampaya, its impending sunset, and of course the eventual birth of a new one involving LNG.

• The privatization and deregulation of the country’s power industry following the passage of EPIRA.

• The acquisition and transformation of world geothermal leader Energy Development Corp.

• The near-death experience of the Lopez group in 1999-2009 when, because of massive debts and regulatory problems, our stock price plummeted to P0.08 per share in 2002 from a high of P15.55 in 1993.

• Then subsequently, the turnaround and success of our North Luzon Expressway toll road project in 2005.

• And, our group’s resuscitation following the sale of MNTC in August 2008 and the sale of Meralco in 2009.

I was already at the helm during the devastation wrought by Typhoon Yolanda, and our defining response to this and other subsequent natural disasters. This led us to firming up our group’s definitive “no-to-coal” declaration in 2016 which was not easy to explain to shareholders and analysts who wondered whether it made sense to just shut the door, walk away from a profit opportunity, or compete in the power industry with one hand tied behind your back. Despite the doubters, let me say we never wavered and never once regretted the decision, most especially today.

• And of course, most gratifying was building up FPH’s recurring net income at a Compounded Annual Growth Rate of 29% over the past 10-year period.

If you include our family’s recent ABS-CBN challenges, simply from my 33 year timeframe you can see why we’re drawn to the romantic narrative of the mythical Phoenix, which is also the title of our two-volume, 200-year history of seven generations of Lopezes. I have always been moved and inspired by the colorful history of my family and the achievements of my predecessors. It definitely has and always will have a place in my heart. However, the notion of heroically rebuilding again and again from the ashes of a scorched bird is far from my idea of a narrative that should guide our destiny; I don’t believe future generations of Lopezes should romanticize and be trapped by it. I always remind myself that “the fault dear Brutus, may not always be in our stars, but in ourselves…” Learn, reflect with deep honesty, absorb the lessons wholeheartedly, then move on and proceed, always wiser.

However, the real lesson for me over the last 33 years has been that we could not have accomplished the things we did without professionalizing the management of our organizations and empowering these professionals to think like owners. I’m too aware of my own weaknesses, and the limitations of relying on the family gene pool alone to think it could have been done otherwise. I envied their work backgrounds, their experiences with the best global firms, or even just the exceptional discipline, tenacity, and professional creativity they brought to their work. It isn’t simply about attracting and compensating them well. More importantly, it’s about creating, nurturing, and often being very protective of a work environment that enables everyone to become their best selves and contribute toward a collective purpose larger than any of us individually. We sometimes describe our work at the top as that of gardeners tending, nurturing, and protecting everyone’s growth. Sounds passive and docile, but this often requires actively keeping egos and feelings of entitlement in check so that unbridgeable silos don’t take root, and relationships as well as communications are always strong. A lot of this underpins successful and agile teams that grow, solve problems, and create considerable value for all stakeholders together. Like with any garden, forest, or ecosystem, that kind of work requires eternal vigilance and never stops.

 

Federico “Piki” R. Lopez is the Chair and CEO of First Philippine Holdings Corporation

map@map.org.ph   

frlopez@firstgen.com.ph

map.org.ph

Towards a gender-equal world: A mission for all

IN EARLY 2020, Awa had just turned 15 years old when she heard that her marriage was being arranged. Escaping it seemed difficult, but Awa found the courage to defy her father’s decision. Her small village in Mali had a committee for the prevention of early marriage, and she took her case to them. This body of respected people presented Awa’s father with all the arguments against early marriage, and managed to convince him. It is to help the cause of young girls like Awa that the European Union (EU) supports this committee and many other projects in this area around the world.

Our goal in the EU is for everyone to have the same power to shape society and their own lives. We put it in black and white in our third Gender Action Plan, adopted on Nov. 24, calling for a gender-equal world. Now, due to the significant setback that COVID-19 has brought on the global work on equality and as we watch civil society organizations, including women’s and LGBTIQ organizations, facing a shrinking civic and democratic space, stepping up in building a gender-equal world is more important than ever.

Awa’s story is similar to those of many girls around the world who manage to gain control over their lives and stand up to gender-based inequalities and discrimination. They have a voice, they drive change, and they have the European Union by their side to support them. This is because women’s rights are human rights and because gender equality is a non-negotiable value of the EU, a value which should be reflected in the EU’s external action and in the design of all EU development programs.

It is with EU support that Tufahah Amin, Aziza Al-Hassi, and Amine Kashrouda developed an application for online education in Benghazi. And that the Gaziantep Women Platform was launched last year to help more women participate in Syria’s political process. It is in the framework of the EU supported Digital2Equal initiative for online platforms that 15,000 women in India will get training in hospitality skills and can improve their earnings.

The challenges to gender equality are as varied as the contexts in which they emerge and call for context-specific responses, whether through multilateral fora, dialogues with partner countries, to EU policy proposals or financing of concrete projects. Through our programs on education, we aim to help more girls attend school, learn, and think of themselves as future drivers of change. We believe that education is also one of the most powerful ways of putting an end to isolation and abuse, for there is no exit option without economic self-sufficiency. We are embracing the notion of human security and integrating gender equality into our training programs for EU crisis management operations, for example in the EUCAP Sahel Mali program for internal security forces (EU Capacity Building Mission).

During the coronavirus pandemic, the level of gender-based violence increased significantly and the EU partnered with the United Nations to offer shelters and helplines, and to give lifeline support to women’s grassroots organizations. The gender- and age-sensitive measures and mitigating the risks of gender-based violence are part of the DNA of our Team Europe global response to COVID-19. Yet, beyond immediate action, we must remain aware of the challenges facing women in a shrinking labor market and shifting global economy. But challenges also bring opportunities. We celebrate the fact that women and girls are increasingly taking part in shaping global transformations, with new generations active in grassroots movements for a green and just transition, equal rights for all, democracy, and for peaceful and inclusive societies. Positive change is possible and the post-COVID-19 recovery must be an opportunity to address structural inequalities and build more inclusive societies. Underscoring women’s roles in the green and digital transitions ahead is key.

Change is still needed. This year it has been 25 years since the Beijing Declaration on women’s rights and 20 years since UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on women and peace and security were adopted. While progress has been achieved since, not a single country in the world is on track to achieve gender equality by 2030. Not even Europe, as revealed by the European Institute for Gender Equality’s recent update of the gender equality index. Too many women still do not have access to resources, essential social services, and equal power. The call for more action is therefore immediate.

The EU’s Gender Action Plan is not a paper exercise. It is a call for action, with concrete measures. We want to empower more women and girls, in all their diversity, to be economic, political, or environmental actors and leaders. We want to continue integrating Women, Peace and Security in the broader gender equality and women’s empowerment agenda. We want to promote sexual and reproductive health and rights and make gender-responsive leadership the norm in the EU institutions, leading by example.

We believe that gender equality deserves to be put at the heart of European policies. Not only because a gender-equal, fair, and inclusive world means a more prosperous and safer world for all of us, but because we see gender equality is an objective in its own right and a mission for Europe, at home and abroad.

 

Josep Borrell is High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the European Commission. Jutta Urpilainen is Commissioner for International Partnerships of the European Commission.

Meralco, QPPL and expensive solar-wind

In the ongoing woke culture, demonizing fossil fuels and some big corporations while glorifying big government intervention are very common. The lobby against fossil fuels (oil, coal, gas) is based on a confused and irrational belief that fossil fuels, especially coal, cause less rain and more rain, less floods and more floods, less cold and more cold. The lobby against some big corporations is driven by envy and the socialist dream of forced equality.

For many years now there have been sustained attacks against coal power in the country and the world. Then, in recent months, these attacks targeted new and proposed 3,000+ MW coal power contracts by Meralco, the biggest electricity distributor in the Philippines.

Last week, it became an even more focused attack on Meralco by using its Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with the coal plant Quezon Power Phils. Ltd. Co. (QPPL). The attacks came from the Bayan Muna (BM, which I sometimes call Bayaan Mo Na) Party-list in Congress.

Among the accusations they hauled against Meralco-QPPL are: 1.) overcharging of P2.53/kwh or P4B from January to September 2020; 2.) implying that the PPA is recent and not approved by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC); and, 3.) that Meralco is self-dealing and getting its power supply from the gencos it controls. QPPL owner Electricity Generating Public Co. Ltd. (EGCO) of Thailand is a partner of Meralco in San Buenaventura Power Ltd. Co. (SBPLC), another coal plant.

I got interested in these accusations so I checked some numbers, particularly Meralco’s composite generation charge from its various power plant suppliers, using the latest data from the November 2020 billing then going backwards every six months until November 2017. Here is what I discovered.

One, the QPPL share is only about 9% of Meralco’s total power purchase. Two, while QPPL prices are generally higher than the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) prices and overall generation charge, there are months and years where QPPL’s prices are lower, like in May 2018 and May 2019. Three, despite big oil-coal tax hikes under the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law of 2017 that pushed upwards the cost of oil-based and coal plants, the generation charge has been declining in 2019 and 2020 (see Table 1).

Meralco’s biggest PPAs are the First Gen Power Corp. (FGPC) Sta. Rita and San Lorenzo plants in Batangas. These two plants alone supply about 33% or one third of the total power purchase by Meralco.

So the BM “study” is twisted to produce two false assertions.

One, that there is overcharging because the PPA of QPPL-Meralco is a sweetheart deal — wrong. The PPA was approved by the Energy Regulatory Board (ERB), the precursor of ERC, way back in 1995 or even before the EPIRA (Electric Power Industry Reform Act) of 2001. No PPA or power supply agreement (PSA) by Meralco and all other private distribution utilities, past and present, can proceed without public hearings and ERC approval.

Two, that QPPL is an indirect affiliate of Meralco and there is self-dealing — wrong. QPPL is 100% owned by Thailand’s Electricity Generating Public Co. Ltd.

The anti-coal, pro-renewable energy lobby still denies that solar-wind is “viable” only because of huge subsidies that are passed on to the consumers. Countries with the highest electricity prices in the world — Germany and Denmark — as shown in the Strom-Report 2020, also have the highest concentration of wind and solar generation (see Table 2).

Bulgaria does not believe in solar-wind mis-promises — its power generation largely comes from coal (in 2019, 0.21 Exajoules EJ or 58.3 TWH) and nuclear (16.6 TWH). And Bulgaria has the cheapest electricity in Europe.

During the BusinessWorld Economic Forum last week, attracting more investments including those that are exiting China was among the topics discussed. It was partly mentioned by National Economic and Development Authority Secretary Karl Chua and ADB’s Philippines Country Representative Kelly Bird.

Vietnam fully understands the value of high power supply from cheap and reliable sources. When it comes to power generation, Vietnam (producing 57.9 TWH) overtook the Philippines in 2006, it overtook Malaysia in 2015 (producing 157.9 TWH), and it overtook Thailand in 2017 (producing 191.6 TWH). And in 2019, Vietnam’s coal consumption of 2.07 EJ was nearly three times that of the Philippines’ 0.73 EJ.

Many self-styled greenie and socialist-leaning organizations like BM are inconsistent in their anti-fossil fuel lobby because they only demonize coal plants, but not gas plants or even diesel plants. It seems that the game plan here is to kill only new big coal plants so that gas plants — which will soon rely on imported LNG when Malampaya gas becomes depleted — will be given priority in the PPAs and PSAs of distribution utilities.

Complementary to rising power supply capacity should be transmission system expansion. Power generation has been deregulated and demonopolized, power distribution also demonopolized via retail competition and open access (RCOA) and many competing retail electricity suppliers (RES). Power transmission remains the only national monopoly, the biggest elephant in the room and where the biggest inefficiencies are hiding.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers

minimalgovernment@gmail.com

Reimagining the ‘Next Normal’ in Philippine business

What if big businesses were to make it their mission to address the leading social problems of the country? What if business leaders were to set the ethical tone from the top of their organizations and build corporate cultures that would make ethical business practice the norm and business scandals a thing of the past? What if business leaders were to have the empathy to know the needs of their customers, employees, and other stakeholders and take care of them accordingly? What if more business practitioners were to abandon the profit maximization mindset and, instead, aim for honoring human dignity and planetary sustainability while achieving their business goals?

These and other burning business questions of the day were answered during the Eighth National Business and Management Conference (NBMC) on Nov. 27 and 28 on the theme “Reimagining the ‘Next Normal’: Business and Management in the Philippines during times of uncertainty.” The event was co-organized by Ateneo de Manila University’s Jose Fernandez Ethics Center, De La Salle University’s Center for Business Research and Development, Miriam College, and the Philippine Academy of Management (PAoM). Business educators and scholars from around the country joined the virtual event to share and learn about the latest business and management research and to hear from leading-edge international scholars and local business leaders.

Ramon R. del Rosario, president and chief executive officer at Phinma Corp. and former president of the Management Association of the Philippines (MAP), reported how the Phinma Education Network entered the education field committed to delivering quality education at rates accessible to more Filipinos. With about 80% licensure examination passing rates and about the same hiring rates for its graduates, the Phinma schools have had to be quite inventive in supporting the learning needs of economically challenged students while remaining financially viable especially during the pandemic. For example, the group partnered with the telcos to provide mobile data access to students with limited means to access online learning during the pandemic. The Phinma story demonstrates how the private sector can embrace its role in helping meet the tough challenges faced by Philippine society today.

Professor Kirk Hanson, senior fellow of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University and former executive director of the Center, presented his analysis of why corporate misconduct tends to continue and what needs to be done about it. A pioneer in teaching and consulting on business ethics since the late 1970s, when he started teaching at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, Hanson has seen the panorama of business malpractice, which he discusses in his co-authored book with Marc Epstein, Rotten: Why Corporate Misconduct Continues and What to Do about It. Using a helpful apple metaphor, he said that corporate misconduct is a result of bad apples (business leaders whose characters predispose them to act unethically and are allowed to get away with it), bad barrels (CEO leadership and corporate cultures that condone unethical practices), and bad orchards (corrupt business environments that are left unaddressed). He argued for reforms within the corporation, ranging from reviewing its sense of purpose to its ethics promotion systems and transparency practices.

Dr. Michael Pirson, the social entrepreneurship track chair at Fordham University and founding partner of the Humanistic Management Network, explained that the economistic framework often taught in business schools has greatly limited the understanding of human nature as a purely self-interested agent. This portrayal of humans needs to be replaced with the humanistic paradigm, which recognizes that people can aspire to and act upon higher purpose, creativity, and intentionality. This alternative way of thinking replaces the presumption of profit-maximization with the search for optimal business practices that fully respect human dignity and the preservation of the environment for future generations.

Riza Mantaring, former CEO of Sunlife Philippines and former president of MAP, shared her experience in applying empathy for customers and employees in leading her company to new heights. During her stint as head of Sunlife, the company realized that the market did not understand financial products at all, and this severely limited the company’s ability to sell its insurance products. She led an unprecedented campaign to educate the public about the importance of financial planning and security. This move expanded the market for insurance products and led to record success for the company. Her experience proves that taking care of customers redounds to taking care of the business. Relatedly, Mantaring shared the recently launched Covenant for Shared Prosperity, which is supported by more than 20 business groups and which calls on businesses to show care for all their stakeholders by sharing the benefits of business growth and success.

The fresh thinking shared during the NBMC shows a silver lining in the dark cloud of the pandemic. We have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reset business practices to what they should have always been: an honorable service for the good of society.

 

Dr. Benito L. Teehankee is the Jose E. Cuisia Professor of Business Ethics and Head of the Business for Human Development Network at De La Salle University.

benito.teehankee@dlsu.edu.ph