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House committee approves rent subsidies to assist informal settlers in relocating

A CONSOLIDATED BILL providing for subsidized rent in aid of relocating informal settler households was approved at committee level in the House of Representatives.

The still-unnumbered consolidated bill, which hurdled the House committee on housing and urban development is intended to help such households transition to rental accommodations in the public and private housing markets.

The legislation, if passed, may also be invoked to support families displaced by natural and man-made disasters.

The bill provides for a rent subsidy of P3,500 monthly for qualified beneficiaries in Metro Manila. In the provinces, the subsidy is subject to adjustment by the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) and the National Economic and Development Authority, but capped at P3,500.

The DHSUD will pay the subsidy to qualified beneficiaries identified by the National Housing Authority. The department will also initially fund the subsidy from its own budget. Later, the subsidy will be sourced from the national budget. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Trade delegation to China generates $462M in prospective orders

THE PHILIPPINE delegation to a trade show in China last month generated $462 million in export sales commitments and onsite bookings for food products, or almost three times the overall target.

Philippine businesses at the China International Import Expo held at the National Exhibition and Convention Center in Shanghai took in $455.689 million worth of export deals from “signings and commitments” for purchases in the next few years, while it received $6.17 million in onsite booked sales.

The delegation targeted $160 million in overall export deals this year, including $31 million from onsite sales. Last year, the Philippine delegation generated $300 million in on-site and post-event sales.

The Trade department had initially lowered its target due to pandemic-related restrictions, such as the reduced pavilion size and the expected lower number of buyers in attendance.

The 40 Philippine companies this year showcased tropical fruit, processed fruit and vegetables, healthy snacks, and seafood and marine products, the Trade department’s Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions (CITEM) said in a statement Monday.

The commitments valued at $455 million were signed mostly by China-based firms looking to buy fruit from the Philippines.

CITEM said that the largest orders were placed by Sinopec North Energy (Dalian) Co., Ltd. which signed a procurement letter of intent for $245 million worth of young coconut and dried fruit snacks from Eng Seng Food Products over five years.

“Under the deal, the Philippines will supply dried fruit snacks to Sinopec Group’s import business, Easy Joy, while fresh young coconut will be supplied to partners and distributors in China,” CITEM said.

Dole China also committed to buy P180.6 million worth of Philippine fruit next year. Purchases include eight million boxes of bananas, seven million boxes of pineapples, 300,000 boxes of papaya, and 38,400 boxes of avocados. China-based fresh fruit importer Goodfarmer Foods Holding also said it intends to buy $25 million worth of Philippine fruit in 2021.

“We hit our target with our initial sales tally and we expect more sales as negotiations and commitments from the event come to fruition in the coming weeks,” CITEM Executive Director Pauline Suaco-Juan said. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Proposed fisheries dep’t budget estimated at P2B

A SEPARATE fisheries department will cost about P2 billion a year to run if the budgets of the agencies currently dealing with fisheries are combined, a former industry regulator said.

In a virtual briefing Monday, Asis G. Perez, convenor of advocacy group Tugon Kabuhayan, said a proposed Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources will also ensure centralize the management of fisheries, benefiting coastal communities that depend on it for livelihood.

“The idea to combine all agencies under one roof is to integrate their functions and for better management,” Mr. Perez, a former Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) national director, said.

He said agencies currently overseeing the sector can be combined and will not require much more funding because they have their own buildings and personnel.

These agencies include BFAR, the Philippine Fisheries Development Authority, and the National Fisheries Research and Development Institute.

“Right now, our estimate is around P2 billion. If you combine all the budgets of these agencies, plus with some additional funding, I think that is enough to run a department,” Mr. Perez said.

Asked if the proposed fisheries department will create additional bureaucracy, Mr. Perez said the new department will only need around 500 new personnel.

“We believe that the benefit will outweigh the fear that there will be additional bureaucracy. You do not need to add a lot of new personnel. It only needs mass consolidation and additional employees in areas that are lacking manpower,” Mr. Perez said.

Mr. Perez proposed dedicated bureaus for fisheries production, protection and enforcement, postharvest and marketing, and international affairs.

According to Mr. Perez, various bills have been filed in the House of Representatives and the Senate for the creation of the Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, but these have not gained traction.

“While it is not going to be easy, we are optimistic that the bill for its creation will be passed before the end of President Duterte’s term,” Mr. Perez said.

BFAR is currently attached to the Department of Agriculture.

In the third quarter, the value of production of the fisheries sub-sector rose 1.9% year on year and accounted for 15.8% of total agricultural output, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Head of nuclear research agency calls for single regulator to oversee industry

NUCLEAR INDUSTRY regulation must be entrusted to a single agency if the Philippines is to be in line with international best practices, the head of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI) said Monday.

Dr. Carlo A. Arcilla, director of the PNRI, noted that nuclear activities are currently regulated by the Department of Science and Technology through its nuclear research institute and the Department of Health through its Food and Drug Administration.

He added that the PNRI also currently acts as a promotional body for the industry.

“So medyo magulo ng konti ‘yung (sa) regulation. So (we suggest) pag-iisahin iyan… if we follow other countries among our neighbors in the Asian, ASEAN region, ‘yung regulatory agency at tsaka ‘yung promotional agency are separated (Regulation is a bit unclear. We suggest a single regulator to be in line with ASEAN practice. We also need to separate the industry promotion functions),” he said during a virtual briefing.

He said the regulator’s independence is vital in order to minimize the risk of nuclear accidents.

“Nuclear regulation is unique because it deals with materials that have immense energy concentration in a small amount. A nuclear accident anywhere is considered a nuclear accident everywhere. One way you can prevent accidents is to have strong regulation that (is) independent,” Mr. Arcilla said, noting the risks posed by political interference in highly technical decisions by politicians or powerful interests.

Mr. Arcilla was discussing the proposed Comprehensive Nuclear Regulation Act, which has been approved at committee level at the House of Representatives.

The bill takes in his recommendations of a single independent regulator.

The PNRI is a member of the Nuclear Energy Program Inter-Agency Committee, which is tasked to conduct a study on the adoption of a national policy on a Nuclear Energy Program.

Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi has said that the committee will be submitting its recommendations to President Rodrigo R. Duterte by Dec. 15. — Angelica Y. Yang

DoLE worker-aid funds now mostly distributed to regional offices

SOME 93% of the funds designated for distribution as worker aid by the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) has been disbursed to DoLE regional offices, the Labor department said.

In a briefing Monday, Labor Undersecretary Renato L. Ebarle said most of the funds provided by the Bayanihan to Recover as One Law (Bayanihan II) have been disbursed to the regions offices. It expects complete payout of the aid by next week to all beneficiaries.

“We have downloaded 93% of the P16.4 billion for aid and it is with the regional offices,” he said.

The funds support the DoLE’s employment assistance programs such as the Abot Kamay ang Pagtulong (AKAP), the COVID-19 Adjustment Measures Program (CAMP), and the Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD).

He said P560 million for AKAP and almost P1 billion for CAMP have been disbursed to beneficiaries.

“We are confident we will disburse (P16.4 billion) amount by Dec. 18,” he said.

CAMP will provide one time cash assistance of up to P8,000 to employees from the formal sector affec ted by the COVID-19 crisis. TUPAD is a 15-day emergency employment program for informal workers which will be based on the minimum wage of the various regions.

AKAP provides P10,000 in cash assistance to overseas Filipino workers who were retrenched because of the pandemic. — Gillian M. Cortez

The latest on securing a tax residency certificate

International businesses are often faced with issues of being taxed twice on the same income. This occurs when the same income is taxed in two different countries. Under the tax rules, domestic corporations and individual resident citizens are subject to Philippine income tax on their worldwide income. For such taxpayers, being taxed twice can happen when their foreign-sourced income is taxed in the country where it is earned, and then taxed again in the Philippines.

To address this issue, Philippine tax rules allow foreign tax credits, while the Philippines has entered into tax treaty agreements with other countries. These tax treaties provide exemptions and/or preferential tax rates on foreign-sourced income earned by a tax resident. For a Philippine tax resident that is taxed worldwide, the relevant document is a tax residency certificate (TRC) to prove its residency.

As a refresher, a Philippine TRC is secured from the International Tax Affairs Division (ITAD) of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). Qualified applicants for the TRC are resident citizens and domestic corporations because only they are subject to tax on their worldwide income. It should be noted, however, that resident aliens and resident foreign corporations are considered “residents” for domestic tax purposes, but they are not qualified for a Philippine TRC, because for treaty purposes, they are only taxed on their income from Philippine sources.

Recently, the BIR issued Revenue Memorandum Order (RMO) No. 43-2020 to streamline the process of issuing TRCs. The RMO was issued in consonance with implementation of Ease of Doing Business and Efficient Government Service Delivery Act of 2018 for government agencies.

In RMO 43-2020, the documentary requirements were shortened to the following:

For individuals:

1. Duly accomplished BIR Form No. 0902;

2. Certified true copy of proofs of income;

3. Photocopy of the passport booklet or residency certificate issued by the Brgy. Chairman if the applicant never left the Philippines;

4. Annual income tax return for the year immediately preceding; and

5. Special Power of Attorney or authorization letter issued by the applicant if processed by an authorized representative.

For non-individuals:

1. Duly accomplished BIR Form No. 0902;

2. Proof of establishment in the Philippines such as articles of incorporation;

3. Certified true copy of proofs of income;

4. List of partners if the applicant is a general professional partnership;

5. Annual income tax return for the year immediately preceding; and

6. Special Power of Attorney or authorization letter issued by the applicant to its representative.

In the above list, instead of a letter-request application for a TRC, a new form, BIR Form No. 0902 will be accomplished by the taxpayer or an authorized representative.

The RMO also directs the BIR case officer to inform the applicant of any deficiency in the accompanying requirements within three working days either via registered mail or electronic mail.  Needless to say, the use of e-mail in government exchanges will be most helpful in expediting the coordination with taxpayers. Further, RMO 43-2020 appears to emphasize that all TRC applications be acted upon within 14 working days from the submission of complete documentary requirements.

On a cautious note, the RMO outlines the treatment of foreign tax credits when a qualified taxpayer fails to secure a Philippine TRC. Those who fail to secure a TRC may not be allowed to claim foreign tax credits in excess of the appropriate amount of tax that is supposed to be paid in the source state had the income recipient invoked the provision/s of the treaty and proved residency in the Philippines. The RMO states that the Philippines should not be made to suffer for the failure of its tax residents to claim treaty benefits.

In relation to the above, the BIR will only allow a qualified Philippine tax resident to claim a foreign tax credit equal to the amount of taxes that would have been imposed on an item of income by the foreign country pursuant to the relevant tax treaty provision.

Consequently, if by virtue of a tax treaty provision, the income is supposed to be exempt in the foreign country, but the Philippine tax resident is still actually subject to tax in that country (due to failure to secure and present a Philippine TRC), the Philippine tax resident will not be allowed to claim as a foreign tax credit such foreign tax, even if the foreign tax is actually paid.  Please take note of the illustrative example presented in RMO 43-2020.

With the issuance of RMO 43-2020, the process of securing a TRC now appears to be more efficient for both taxpayers and the government. It bears mentioning, however, that qualified taxpayers should secure a TRC to be entitled to tax treaty benefits.

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.

 

Neptali G. Maroto is a tax associate of Tax Advisory & Compliance division of P&A Grant Thornton, the Philippine member firm of Grant Thornton International Ltd.

pagrantthornton@ph.gt.com

3 more vaccine manufacturers get ethics board nod for trials

ANOTHER three coronavirus vaccine developers have been approved by the ethics review board for clinical trial, the Department of Health (DoH) announced Monday.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, Chinese firm Clover Biopharmaceuticals, and AstraZeneca’s applications for clinical trial hurdled the ethics review board.

Applicants for clinical trial in the country must secure approval from the Science and Technology department’s Vaccine Expert Panel and the ethics review board before applying with the local Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

China’s Sinovac Biotech Ltd. and Clover had been approved earlier by the expert panel. Sinovac has yet to be approved by the ethics board.

Ms. Vergeire said the expert panel and the ethics board are conducting “parallel” studies of the applications while the FDA is gathering initial information about the five vaccines for its documentary evaluation.

Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology also applied for clinical trials.

Meanwhile, over three million vaccine doses have been purchased by the business community, with half going to the government and the rest for private sector workers and their families.

JG Summit Holdings President and Chief Executive Officer Lance Y. Gokongwei, in a Palace briefing on Monday, said P800 million will be spent by the private sector to buy the vaccines.

“As of this date, over three million doses worth over $16 million or P800 million will be the contribution of the whole private sector and at least half of this will go to the DoH,” he said in a mix of Filipino and English

The DoH will distribute the vaccines among priority recipients identified under the mass immunization program that is targeted to start as early as March next year.

In the same briefing, Palace Spokesperson Harry L. Roque detailed the initial priority list for the vaccines, which will cover 24,668,126 people.

Among the first beneficiaries are 1.7 million frontline workers, including government officials, 3.7 million indigent senior citizens, another 5.6 million seniors, 12.9 million indigent population, and 525,523 uniformed personnel.

The country had 441,399 confirmed coronavirus cases with 1,574 new as of Dec. 7, the DoH reported.

The death toll rose to 8,572 with 18 additional fatalities. Recoveries rose by 80 to 408,702.

Davao City reported the highest number of new cases at 187, followed by Rizal at 96, Pampanga at 80, Quezon City at 69, and Pasig City at 59.

There were 24,125 active cases, 84.6% of which were mild, 6.4% asymptomatic, 5.8% critical, 2.9% severe, and 0.32% moderate.

The DoH said nine duplicates were removed from the total case count, seven of which were recovered. Five recovered cases were reclassified as deaths. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Gillian M. Cortez

Justice Leonen faces impeachment case

AN IMPEACHMENT complaint has been filed against Supreme Court Associate Justice Mario Victor F. Leonen at the House of Representatives.

The complaint was filed by Edwin M. Cordevilla, secretary general of Filipino League of Advocates for Good Government, citing violation of the Constitution due to the number of pending cases assigned to the high court justice, and for failing to file his Statements of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN).

Mr. Cordevilla, assisted by lawyer Lorenzo G. Gadon, said based on a newspaper article published by the Manila Times, 37 of the pending cases were assigned to Mr. Leonen several years ago, violating the Constitution and internal rules of the court which directs all justices to resolve cases within 24 months.

“Respondent failed to consider the implications of these prolonged delays in the lives of the litigants,” the complaint read.

He also claimed that Mr. Leonen’s “incompetence and inefficiency” were shown in  the delayed resolution of 34 cases at the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, which he chairs.

Mr. Leonen also allegedly betrayed public trust for failing to file his SALN for 15 years when he was a professor at the University of the Philippines, citing also a newspaper column.

“Respondent, in failing to submit his SALNs for 15 years, is guilty of culpable violation of the Constitution and/or betrayal of public trust. He is unfit to be a member of the Judiciary and must accordingly be removed as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court,” the complaint read.

The complainant also said that Mr. Leonen, who was appointed by former President Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III, was partial with his decisions during the Aquino administration and is now “against the current administration.”

He noted Mr. Leonen’s dissent on several cases, including the burial of late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani, and the ousting of former chief justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno, among others.

Ms. Sereno was removed from her post through quo warranto in 2018 for failing to submit her SALNs.

Mr. Leonen, in a statement on Monday, said he is confident that the government “will do the right thing.”

“Given the urgent and pressing needs of our people during this time of crises, we are confident that our leaders will do the right things,” he said in a statement.

Ilocos Norte 2nd District Rep. Angelo M. Barba, who endorsed the impeachment complaint, said he did so because the complainant hails from his district and he “believes” in the allegations.

Mang Ed Cordevilla came to me, and as a constituent in my district, I entertained him. I read his complaint, I believed in it. That’s why I’m here as his congressman and I accompanied him,” Mr. Barba told reporters Monday.

Mr. Barba is a nephew of the late dictator and first cousin of former senator Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., who earlier filed a motion for inhibition against Mr. Leonen in his vice presidential electoral protest.

The inhibition petition has been junked by the Supreme Court.

House Minority Leader Joseph Stephen S. Paduano, who represents the Abang Lingkod party-list, assured that the minority bloc will perform its constitutionally-mandated duty in the impeachment process.

“In so doing, we will ensure that in the determination of sufficiency in form and substance, the Rules of Impeachment will be strictly followed to the letter,” he said. He also called on the House justice committee to “exercise prudence and fairness.”

House Minority Deputy Leader Rep. Carlos Isagani T. Zarate, on the other hand, said the impeachment is an “all out war against democracy.” — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

DoT, DoLE call on tourism workers to avail of financial aid

TOURISM workers affected by the closure or scaled-down operations of establishments can now avail of financial help through the expanded aid program under the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act, the Department of Tourism (DoT) announced Monday.

The DoT and the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) have issued a joint advisory that widens the coverage of the assistance package to include the following: beneficiaries of the Social Amelioration Program (SAP) and DoLE’s CAMP program; workers of establishments that implemented flexible or alternative work schemes; and secondary tourism enterprises with local government license.

“This initiative will widen the scope of recipients of this financial assistance program and accommodate those who have already availed of existing programs open to the tourism sector. Hopefully, the program’s take-up rate significantly improves to reach more members of the micro-, small- and medium-enterprises (MSMEs) and more importantly, those belonging to the informal sector,” Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said in a statement.

She also urged the establishment owners, associations, and local government units (LGUs) to assist the workers with the documentary requirements for availing the financial aid.

“We continue to assist our LGUs in slowly opening their tourism destinations in order to restore businesses, livelihood and jobs.  Meanwhile, we hope that this program, along with other COVID-related schemes of assistance, will be warmly welcomed by our workers to tide them over this Christmas,” Ms. Puyat said. — MSJ

Nationwide round-up (12/07/20)

7,000 armed communists, 187 Abu Sayyaf dealt with this year

AROUND 7,000 members of the New People’s Army (NPA), the armed wing of the communist movement, were “neutralized” since the start of the year, a military official reported on Monday. “Since January this year, we have neutralized 7,000 NPA,” said Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief of Staff Gilbert I. Gapay in Filipino during a Palace briefing. Of the total, he said 6,000 surrendered while 1,991 died during encounters with the military. Another 250 were apprehended while over 1,5000 arms used by the NPA were seized. Mr. Gapay also reported that 187 members of the kidnap-for-ransom group Abu Sayyaf, which has pledged allegiance to the extremist Islamic State, have also been dealt with. — Gillian M. Cortez

P10,000 emergency cash aid to typhoon victims proposed

A RESOLUTION proposing an emergency cash aid program for families affected by recent typhoons has been filed at the House of Representatives. In the still unnumbered resolution, Gabriela Party-list Rep. Arlene D. Brosas said the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD)  can utilize the unreleased funds intended for the Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situations (AICS) program to provide cash aid worth P10,000 each for families in typhoon-stricken areas. Ms. Brosas said DSWD still has undisbursed funds worth more than P83 billion for this year, citing the Senate deliberations for the 2021 budget. Of the P83 billion, around P13.7 billion “are supposedly for AICS program,” she said. Ms. Brosas said standby calamity funds and quick response funds would be inadequate to respond to the urgent needs of Filipinos struggling in the wake of the series of destructive typhoons and “amid the realignments made to finance the coronavirus pandemic response.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Regional Updates (12/07/20)

Palace rebuffs claims Los Baños mayor’s killing related to narcolist

MALACAÑANG Palace on Monday assured that justice will be served in the murder of Los Baños Mayor Cesar P. Perez despite his alleged links to the drug trade as tagged by President Rodrigo R. Duterte. “That is the responsibility of the state and… the President will make sure of that because the President is the executioner of laws, the implementer of laws,” Palace Spokesperson Harry L. Roque said in Filipino during a briefing. Mr. Roque also denied the mayor’s killing was connected to the President’s narcolist, adding that authorities are already conducting a thorough investigation to determine the motive. Mr. Perez, who was shot on Saturday within the Los Baños municipal hall complex, had denied involvement in drug-related activities. — Gillian M. Cortez

Baguio ironing out better system for night market; Drone light show set for Dec. 25, 31

BAGUIO PIO

THE Baguio night market will be reopening soon with improved crowd control measures and more spacious layout for stalls, the city government said on Monday. The market was opened Dec. 1 and Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong ordered it stopped the next day following reports of violations of health protocols, especially distancing. “We did not consider other factors like the spillover of the crowd who attended the Christmas program and proceeded to the night market and the excitement of the locals to go out of their homes from months of being told to stay home,” Market Superintendent Fernando Ragma, Jr. said in a statement. The mayor formed a team composed of local officials, including Mr. Ragma, and the police to evaluate the market setup and introduce improvements. “We must strike a balance between reopening the economy and safeguarding the health and safety of the people. This is our new normal direction,” the mayor said. Mr. Ragma said they will announce the reopening date as soon as all the planned changes have been finalized. Meanwhile, residents and visitors will be treated to a drone light show on Christmas day and New Year’s eve instead of the traditional fireworks display. Supervising City Tourism Operations Officer Aloysius C. Mapalo, in a separate statement on Monday, said there will be some 5,000 drones emitting different colors, shapes and formations for the show. He said the show can be live-streamed through social media platforms. “(T)he drone light show is a donation from a close friend of Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong who does not want to be identified with this newest attraction,” Mr. Mapalo said. — MSJ

Forging collaborative pathways for a decarbonized and regenerative future — 2

(Second 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” award on Nov. 23.

But the year 2020 has been a bizarre year for all of us. These last few months made what was unthinkable, tangible and real. We now live in a world that’s not merely complicated but tightly interrelated and complex. To use the words of the mathematician/meteorologist Edward Lorenz in the 1960s who asks, “Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas?” The COVID-19 pandemic has driven this into our psyches mercilessly. It also exposed us to the raw power of exponential progression. A phrase used by Hemingway’s character Mike Campbell in his novel The Sun Also Rises, when asked how he went bankrupt replied: “two ways, gradually, then suddenly.” “Gradually, then suddenly” now applies to so many aspects of our lives: how we go to sleep, how the gradual onset of heart disease leads to a heart attack, how technology disrupts, how bankruptcies unfold, how pandemics spread, and pretty soon how climate change will affect us all, where we’re fast approaching the “suddenly” phase if we aren’t in it already. How will FPH (First Philippine Holdings) and the Lopez Group move forward in this unsettling new world?

I’ve felt for some years now that the unprecedented times we’re living in have been begging for a new narrative and a new paradigm for how we live, work, do business, and even how we measure success and progress.

Today our way of life has set us on a trajectory of 3 to 4 degrees C of warming by 2100. This current path will clearly be catastrophic and turn the Earth into an unlivable and socially disrupted planet way before then and surely within the lifetimes of our children. Whenever I see the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC) timelines needed to keep global average temperature rise to 1.5 degrees C, when plotted on a chart it reveals a curve still just within reach, but, with each year of inaction, gets precipitously steeper and tougher to meet. These next 10 years (the decade of the 2020s) will determine whether we are able to halt the climate crisis in time, or watch it run away from us irreversibly.

We are not off to a good start. This year we saw record high temperatures in both the Antarctic and the Arctic, which both hold not only huge stores of ice but also tremendous amounts of methane in their permafrost layers. (For perspective: the Greenland ice sheet in the Arctic has 7.3 meters worth of sea level rise in them; Antarctica, the world’s ice locker, has 58 meters worth of potential sea level rise built in.) Methane, as you may know, is 80 times more potent than CO2 as a greenhouse gas over a 20-year period. If the big melt of permafrost results in these stores of methane being vented into the atmosphere, we would have unleashed a powerful feedback loop that’s equivalent to the emissions of another China today. The difference will be that no amount of climate negotiations can hold that back anymore. (If you don’t mind a sleepless and terrifying night, look up the National Geographic cover story for September 2019 which articulates in full color what’s happening up there in the Arctic.)

In October 2018, the UN IPCC was clamoring for us to cut CO2 emissions in half by 2030, and take it all the way down to Net Zero by 2050 if we want to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees C by 2100. That’s roughly a 6-7% annual reduction in carbon emissions till 2050. Just for perspective, this year travel and transport reductions and the economic slowdown from COVID-19 is expected to reduce carbon emissions by 7-8%. In other words, we need a COVID-scale crisis every year till 2050 just to keep the planet livable!

Today at just 1 degree C of warming, we can see the geologic-scale changes happening to our planet’s environment everywhere. I’m sure you remember the Australian and California wildfires, and the drought that reduced the mighty Victoria Falls and Zambezi River to a mere trickle last year.

Then just earlier this month, millions of Filipinos were sequentially pummeled and thrashed by Rolly, the world’s most powerful typhoon this year, and Ulysses, one that surpassed Typhoon Ondoy’s wrath in 2009. The destructive power of these formerly 100-year events has no doubt been intensified by the accelerating climate crisis, and they now hit us with greater frequency and regularity. The news images that swept our screens these last few weeks painfully called up two thoughts that are always simmering at the top of my mind. The first was what I heard Al Gore say in 2016 here in Manila where he warned that, “all our infrastructure was built for a world that’s now changed”. The second was a quote from Thomas Friedman of the New York Times who alerts us that, “with climate change there will be no such thing as herd immunity, just a relentless pounding of the herd.” How long can even the strongest, most resilient communities withstand this relentless and repeated pounding year after year if they can lose everything they have at least 20 times a year? Is this the kind of world that closes or widens the gaps between rich and poor? Do we sit around and wait for prayerful resilience of the vulnerable to turn into anger, then solidify into hate?

Our way of life and patterns of production and mass consumption now use 1.75 Earths annually. That’s 75% more than the Earth can replenish each year. US lifestyles account for five Earths yearly, which many others on the planet aspire to attain. All the main life support systems of our planet, from our oceans, forests, air, soils, biodiversity, and freshwater resources are all in decline. Plastics can be found everywhere from the bottom of the Marianas trench to the top of the Himalayas. Our own Pasig River is the 8th most plastic polluting river in the world. All other rivers on that top 10 list are thousands of kilometers long. Our Pasig river measures only 27 km.

Capitalism has brought tremendous and amazing progress, creativity, and innovation. But as it’s currently practiced, it has also left too many behind. Even as we breach much of our planet’s safe environmental limits, billions of people still do not have decent access to energy, clean drinking water, toilets, food, healthcare, education, housing, income and work, political voice, social and gender equity, or even peace and justice. Our economics 101 classes taught us the rainbow-shaped Simon Kuznets curve (done in the 1930s) which infers that inequality rises but eventually falls as the economy grows. There was even an environmental version of that curve by economists Grossman and Kreuger in the 1990s which promised the same relationship with environmental degradation and that eventually, pollution all got cleaned up as countries got richer. Theories like these shaped our worldviews and policies over many decades but we now know they have scant basis for being true. Economics in my time was taught with the inference that GDP can and should grow forever. The environment was belittlingly treated as just an “externality” that had no limits. We were trained like pilots who were taught to fly but never how to land. So, ironically, despite finally earning academic honors in my college economics courses at the University of Pennsylvania, I feel now like I have to unlearn a lot of it.

The populism that’s sweeping the world is a symptom of the growing disenchantment with business, politics, and life as usual. In today’s world, it’s a disenchantment that’s moving at exponential warp speed through the power of social media, weaponized or otherwise. The natural, social, and political forces being unleashed in the coming decade will likely make it the most challenging and most disruptive business has ever seen. The COVID-19 pandemic is just a mere “fire-drill” for what’s coming and demonstrates the scale at which things need to change. We are living in a time that calls for great paradigm shifts, and businesses that seek to thrive in this era must be able to reimagine and redesign themselves for this new world.

In this kind of a world, corporate sustainability that seeks to simply “tick the box” or do less harm is no longer good enough. Sustaining our trajectory today will result in disasters that are not only greater in scale, but also more unjust towards those without the capacity to cope with the devastating changes that are already here, and continue to escalate.

Businesses need to align themselves, their resources, and their capabilities towards a mission that seeks to elevate everything they touch — their customers, employees, suppliers, contractors, the environment, communities, and, of course, their investors. CSR or philanthropy may ease our consciences but the sad fact is they may never scale up enough to heal our hurting world in time. There is an urgency for all of us to go beyond incremental sustainability and transform into regenerative forces that align our profit engines with the need for a better, more just world and a safer planet. Collectively, we have the creativity and innovative energy needed to solve the world’s greatest problems. Unlocking these will be the foundation to some of the greatest business opportunities in the coming century. (Paul Polman, former chairman of Unilever, refers to the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals as simply the world’s greatest business plan.)

Moving closer to home, this year we crystallized our Mission at FPH and our group of companies and that is: “To forge collaborative pathways for a decarbonized and regenerative future.” It’s a deliberately high bar and we’re nothing short of humbled by it. Let me share a few points about this short phrase. First, the mission was deliberated on and hotly debated internally for months and finally solidified our role in the transition to a decarbonized energy system. But it goes beyond energy and anticipates dealing with the many adaptive challenges needed to redesign how we live, work, and do business in a changed world.

Secondly, we didn’t feel it was appropriate anymore to use the word “sustainable” in a world that’s so badly in need of healing and renewal. So we took on the challenge of using the word “regenerative” instead, with all the responsibility it carries. We are not a full-on regenerative company today; no one is yet. But we chose it deliberately to signal to our people that they have a license to adopt this new mindset as our inherent way of doing business and that it’s OK for them to “bring their values to work” every day. Being regenerative doesn’t scale if it only comes from the top; it has to permeate the organization and how it does business day to day.

And thirdly, the word we used very deliberately was “collaborative” as we believe we cannot do this alone. We (that includes our PR and CSR professionals) all have to stop seeing this as a competitive beauty contest. I keep stressing to our people that if we find ourselves ahead and alone at the finish line, we will have failed in our mission. This is a massive undertaking and we know we cannot possibly succeed if we go the journey alone.

Honestly, these thoughts make me feel small and humbled. Because everything we’ve been doing so far just feels like a tiny first step on a dangerous thousand mile journey. We’re all imperfect beings, with imperfect abilities, in an imperfect, maybe broken world, but it should never mean losing the courage to make things better. As the songwriter and poet Leonard Cohen wrote:

Ring the bells that still can ring, Forget your perfect offering

There is a crack in everything, That’s how the light gets in

— “Anthem”

Let me close my remarks by saying that paradigm shifts of this scale and magnitude can never be easy, especially in the stage before there’s any momentum. But I take comfort in the transformation of a common caterpillar into something so functionally different and radically beautiful as a butterfly. Every caterpillar harbors dormant imaginal cells; each waiting with the potential to transform into something else. As cells morph, the immune system of the caterpillar attacks them as if they’re outsiders or enemies. But as the transformation persists and the number of imaginal cells multiply beyond a critical tipping point, the body stops fighting them, changes over and begins the process of nourishing those same cells instead. An unformed, embryonic wing may start out with just 50 cells but grow to as much as 50,000 when fully formed. The anguished and labored metamorphosis of a butterfly that can take to the sky in flight, only begins the moment it’s willing to give up being a caterpillar.

Once again let me thank the Management Association of the Philippines for honoring our journey with this award. It’s finally made sense of the times when we felt like the faint voice in the wilderness and our view of the world may not have been mainstream. Thankfully, the winds are changing profoundly now. But no matter where each of us are in this continuum of belief today, I feel with a mix of certainty and hope that we will all be helping each other along this same road very soon. We look forward to building those collaborative pathways with as many kindred spirits as we can.

 

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

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