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Vivant to study other water sources amid Cebu supply gap

VIVANT.COM.PH

VIVANT WATER, a subsidiary of energy and water conglomerate Vivant Corp., plans to explore other potential sources of potable water aside from desalination to support Metro Cebu’s growing water supply needs.

“Actually, that is one of our goals for next year, where we want to identify other sources also of water that is not desalination for Metro Cebu,” Vivant Water President and Chief Operating Officer Jess Anthony N. Garcia told BusinessWorld last week.

Mr. Garcia said the company will conduct further feasibility studies and engage engineering consultants to determine whether other sources, such as rivers, can be developed.

He earlier said Metro Cebu faces a supply gap, with demand reaching about 500 to 600 million liters per day (MLD) while supply ranges from 100 to 250 MLD.

To help address the shortage, Vivant Water is developing a P2-billion desalination plant in Cordova, Cebu, designed to produce up to 20 MLD of potable water in its first phase — enough to meet the average daily consumption of around 20,000 households.

A desalination plant removes salt and other impurities from seawater to produce freshwater suitable for drinking and household use.

Mr. Garcia said the facility is expected to begin commercial operations by the fourth quarter this year, with potential expansion to up to 50 MLD.

Isla Mactan-Cordova Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of Vivant Hydrocore Holdings, Inc. operating under the Vivant Water brand, oversees the project. Vivant Hydrocore is wholly owned by Vivant Infracore Holdings, Inc., the holding company for Vivant’s water-related investments.

In June, Vivant announced plans to invest about P10 billion over the next five years to expand its water infrastructure portfolio.

Vivant has investments in electric power generation and distribution, as well as the retail electricity market. It has also diversified into the water sector, with projects in bulk water supply, wastewater treatment, and water distribution. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Filipinos Tune Out Traditional Media as Digital Platforms Surge

Television was the most accessed mass media platform among individuals aged 10 to 64 years, according to the fourth report on the 2024 Functional Literacy, Education, and Mass Media Survey (FLEMMS) by the Philippine Statistics Authority. The report details the mass media exposure of the population. The exposure rate for television was 82.34%, lower than the 96.04% recorded in 2019. Following television, internet for social media was the second-most accessed platform, followed by video streaming. Among reading platforms, online and digital newspapers led with 52.14%. exposure rate.

Filipinos Tune Out Traditional Media as Digital Platforms Surge

Private credit pivots from ‘risky’ West to emerging markets

Traders are seen in front of a screen with trading figures in red at Thailand Stock Exchange building in Bangkok, Thailand, March 13, 2020. — REUTERS

LONDON/NEW YORK — An intricate series of pipes off Angola’s Atlantic coast snakes toward a new fuel refinery that signals the country’s push for energy independence — and its use of private creditors, instead of banks, to fund a big-ticket project.

“We’re not the lender of last resort,” said Felipe Berliner, co-founder of emerging markets (EM) asset manager Gemcorp, which provided the bulk of funding for the refinery, using private capital. “Sometimes we are the only lender.”

Private credit for emerging markets — driven by investors’ hunt for yields and saturation in developed Western markets — could grow exponentially, veteran investors told Reuters, providing tens of billions in funding as bilateral lending and foreign aid shrink.

“This is a paradigm shift,” said Pramol Dhawan, head of emerging markets portfolio management at PIMCO. “The need to globally reallocate is not a hedge — it’s a secular thesis.”

PIMCO has committed around $30 billion across 140 emerging market deals in five years, and expects to boost annual lending by 30% this year to $10 billion. Other investors are targeting similar increases.

RAPID GROWTH, BUT YIELDS SQUEEZED
Private credit skyrocketed over the past 20 years, with global assets under management rising to over $1.2 trillion from $200 million in the early 2000s, according to the Bank for International Settlements.

The funding filled a gap for companies, mainly in the US, as banks limited lending due to regulations and capital requirements.

Today, emerging markets get less than 10% of that cash.

But the US and Europe are saturated; competition has driven down margins, and bets are riskier. Experts from JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon to the International Monetary Fund warn private credit looks shaky; the collapse of US firms Tricolor and First Brands underscored the risks.

Emerging markets, investors say, have bankable projects so keen for cash that you can pick and choose.

“Emerging market companies have been forced to be more fundamentally conservative,” said Matt Christ, portfolio manager at London-based global investment manager Ninety One. Developed markets are “priced for perfection,” while emerging markets offer more upside.

He said EM yields are 150-300 basis points higher than their developed market peers — and risk is often lower than ratings suggest.

Mr. Christ, whose private credit portfolio is around $8 billion globally, sees scope to expand to $15 billion. EM firms, he said, are used to volatility and political instability — unlike most Western firms.

“Developed market companies are going into an era they’ve never experienced before, but emerging market companies have been doing this for a long time,” he said.

Gustavo Ferraro, head of capital solutions at emerging markets-focused fund manager Gramercy, also said EM risk profiles and returns have surpassed those in developed markets.

“The US market isn’t the benchmark anymore,” he said. “Our (investors) want yield and uncorrelated exposure.”

Gramercy has doubled its private credit investment in five years to $4.8 billion, focusing on Latin America, Turkey and parts of Africa.

Ninety One said that in Turkey, where authorities are limiting bank lending to cool inflation, private credit is filling a gap.

FROM SOVEREIGNS TO SAUDI COMPANIES
Most EM private credit is asset-backed — giving investors anything from company shares to control over the project itself.

The structure favors infrastructure, but funding has gone to sovereign budgets and Turkish cities’ transport networks.

Angola’s new refinery, mostly funded by Gemcorp with state oil company Sonangol also providing funds, will ultimately run at 60,000 barrels per day and make sub-Saharan Africa’s No. 2 oil producer less reliant on costly fuel imports. The plant’s first phase, which cost $475 million, is due to start operation by the end of the year.

Gemcorp has also funded a wind farm in Lake Turkana in Kenya, a water sanitation project in Angola and power transmission between Angola and Namibia.

A Gemcorp survey showed 67% of EM private credit went to large or medium corporates, and 22% to sovereign or quasi-sovereign projects.

Gemcorp is launching a $1-billion fund targeting mid-market Saudi companies.

“They are underfunded, they don’t have access to the flexible capital they need to maintain growth from the government’s fiscal push,” Mr. Berliner said.

The firm also funds Central American commodity exports to the US, West African fuel prepayment deals and gold producers.

Mr. Berliner and others say private credit is flexible, fast and offers customized repayment terms — from upfront fees to extended maturities or EBITDA warrants (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) — making it ideal for upstarts and lower-rated sovereigns.

“We’re not replacing banks anymore. We’re building something that didn’t exist,” Mr. Ferraro said. “This is bespoke financing for bespoke problems. That’s what EM has in abundance.”

Privately, some bond investors worry private credit — nimbler and less onerous than bonded debt — could eat into their business. Others fear bigger problems if borrowers hit trouble.

“If something goes wrong, like a big restructure, how does private credit deal with that? We don’t really know,” said Daniel Cash, associate professor of law at the UK’s Aston University, adding that the “much more opaque” lending could also create issues. — Reuters

Arts & Culture (10/08/25)


Lyra Garcellano exhibit at Spare Bedroom

THE art space Spare Bedroom, spearheaded by curator Alice Sarmiento, is designed for public programs that revolve around past and existing works of Filipino contemporary artists. This month, on display are offshoots of Lyra Garcellano’s text-based works from the last 20 years. The exhibition aims to capture her negotiations of the Philippine contemporary art landscape through comics, correspondence, and various other works on paper. Titled Stakeholding: Chapter 1, developed with the Mekong Cultural Hub and the Puon Institute and part of the Benilde Open grants program, it turns Ms. Garcellano’s position in the cultural sector into a game, so that players may understand what is at stake for those who occupy specific roles in culture and the arts. Stakeholding runs until Oct. 12 at the Spare Bedroom, 2/F Chapterhouse, 32 Madasalin St., Brdg. Sikatuna, Quezon City.


Dean Amado Valdez releases legal fiction novel

AT THE HEART of They Will Be in Heaven Before the Devil Knows, a new novel by Dean Amado D. Valdez, is the law portrayed as both a profession and a battlefield. It follows Filipino lawyers who must fight against corruption and abuse of power in the very institutions meant to uphold justice, opening with an attack targeting the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Mr. Valdez, a former dean of the University of the East College of Law, drew from realities faced by lawyers and ordinary citizens alike. They Will Be in Heaven Before the Devil Knows is now available through www.cebookshop.com.


Silverlens presents Marina Cruz exhibit

SILVERLENS Gallery is featuring Fractured Fabric, a solo exhibition by Marina Cruz, where she delves into abstraction while exploring themes of family and heritage. Her new works span photorealistic paintings of garments and abstract mixed media works. It aims to celebrate the scars of the fabric — their holes, frays, and blotches — and showcase their beauty. The exhibit runs until Nov. 8 at Silverlens, 2263 Chino Roces Ave., Makati City.


MSO performs Philippine, Italian chamber music

THE Philippine Italian Association (PIA), in collaboration with the Manila Symphony Orchestra (MSO), is presenting the Filipino-Italian Chamber Music Concert on Oct. 16. The event will feature works by Nicanor Abelardo, Antonio Molina, Antonino Buenaventura, Antonio Vivaldi, Tomaso Albinoni, and Gioachino Rossini. At the helm of the performance is violinist Alessio Benvenuti, concertmaster of the MSO. Joining him on stage are Alfonso Encina on violin, Sara Gonzales on viola, Arnold Josue on cello, Lawrence Palad on bass, and Mariel Ilusorio on piano. The concert shall start at 7 p.m. Tickets, priced at P1,500 with 20% discount for senior citizens and PWDs, can be purchased from Jan Dacera at 0995-430-5118 or through the e-mail philitalassociation@gmail.com. The concert will be held at the Asia Pacific College Auditorium, 3 Humabon Place, Magallanes, Makati City.


Elisa Tan talk, exhibit this October

ARTIST Elisa Tan will hold an exhibition and a talk this month. Titled Elisa Tan: Container of Distance, the show brings the works of the late Filipino-Chinese conceptual artist to Space63 Comuna in Makati City. It is part of MCAD Commons, an exhibition project which offers the programming of the Museum of Contemporary Art and Design (MCAD) of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde to a larger audience. The talks, led by scholar-curator Dr. Maria Cristina Juan and professorial lecturer Dr. Flaudette May Datuin, will expound on the late artist’s works and creative process. It will be held on Oct. 11 at 3 p.m. The exhibit is free and available for public viewing until Nov. 16 at Space63, Comuna, 238 Pablo Ocampo Sr. Ext., Makati City.


Cultural events mark Spanish National Day

THE Embassy of Spain in Manila, through its Cultural and Education Office and the Instituto Cervantes, is holding a month-long celebration of Spanish National Day. The series of cultural events, which are open to the public, range from movies, exhibits, and talks. Among these are talks by Spain’s pre-eminent expert on the Philippines, Lola Elizalde. She offers three conferences: “Permeable Borders: Interactions between Population Groups in 19th Century Philippines” (Oct. 14, Casa Azul in Intramuros); “Modernizing an Old Empire: Controversies over the Introduction of a Reformist Policy in 19th Century Philippines” (Oct. 15, Centro de Turismo Intramuros); and “Leisurely Legacies: Social Histories of Recreation in the Spanish Philippines” (Oct. 16, UP Diliman). Several exhibits are part of the celebration, notably Mezcla: Interwoven Cultures and the Mantón de Manila at the Ayala Museum, that will run from Oct. 10 until Feb. 22, 2026. Currently ongoing are Four Centuries of Spanish Engineering Overseas, a permanent exposition displayed at the Centro de Turismo in Intramuros; while the Ateneo Art Gallery hosts A Synergy of Ventures. The Post War Art Scene in commemoration of Fernando Zobel’s centennial birth until February. A conference led by top Spanish industrial designer Héctor Serrano entitled “The Journey in Between” will be held at DLSU-St. Benilde (Oct. 14), UP Diliman (Oct. 15) and the University of Santo Tomás (Oct. 16). The public may also catch him at the Manila FAME on Oct. 17 and at the closing of the Manila Design Week on Oct. 18. Finally there is the Spanish film festival Pelikula/Pelicula, which showcases movies made not only in Spain but also in Latin America from Oct. 10 to 16. This year the film fest will include short feature films created by young Filipino filmmakers, one in Chabacano. This year 20 films from Spain, Latin America, and the Philippines will be shown at the Ayala Triangle Gardens and Power Plant Mall in Makati.


PPO concert features cellist Tomasz Strahl

THE NEXT CONCERT of the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra (PPO) will feature cellist Tomasz Strahl as the guest. It will also see the world premiere of Jeffrey Ching’s Creation Fugue and Arctic Chase, along with Schumann’s Cello Concerto in A minor, and Lutosławski’s Concerto for Orchestra. Under the baton of Grzegorz Nowak, the concert will take place on Oct. 17, 7:30 p.m. at the Metropolitan Theater in Manila. Tickets are available via TicketWorld.


Japan Foundation Manila tells stories about Gaza

THE Japan Foundation, Manila (JFM) will present a program IKUSAMONOGATARI II: Stories of Battle in Gaza on Oct. 20, 21, 23 and 25 in Manila, Davao, and Cagayan de Oro. JFM will present a unique chronicle of the conflict in Gaza as told through traditional Japanese music and storytelling. The performance aims to explore the shared human experiences of grief, hope, and impermanence across cultures and generations. Register via this link: https://bit.ly/storiesofbattle.

Reasonable criteria for deductibility

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Freepik

Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 81-2025 was issued to reiterate guidelines on the deductibility of expenses under the Tax Code, and lists the following criteria: it must be ordinary and necessary; paid or incurred within the taxable year; paid or incurred in carrying on or which are directly attributable to, the development, management, operation and/or conduct of the trade, business, or exercise of a profession; and, supported by invoices, records, or other pertinent papers.

A circular is an administrative issuance. It is not a law and is not binding precedent. In fact, the Tax Code does not strictly limit the definition of the words “ordinary” and “necessary.” A circumspect approach should be observed in understanding RMC 81-2025. While the guidelines refer to decisions of the Supreme Court, it must be considered that judicial precedents only apply to situations of substantially the same factual background.

RMC 81-2025 states that an “ordinary expense” is one that is normal, usual, and customary in the type of business conducted by the taxpayer. It provides that the following are not ordinary expenses, and makes reference to decisions of the Supreme Court:

1. Inordinately large expenses. The circular refers to a 2003 Supreme Court Decision (G.R. No. 143672, April 24, 2003) where the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) disallowed 50% of the media advertising expense of a manufacturing company, describing it as a “gargantuan expense for the advertisement of a singular product.” The BIR rejected the company’s assertion that the amount was justified given the economic situation during the time of the EDSA People Power Revolution. The Supreme Court affirmed the disallowance finding that the amount was almost half of the corporation’s total claimed marketing expenses, and almost double the amount of its general and administrative expenses.

2. Expenses that do not meet the “reasonableness in amount test.” The circular makes reference to a 1963 Supreme Court En Banc Decision (G.R. No. L-15290, May 31, 1963) where the BIR disallowed 50% of the promotion expenses claimed by a hotel owner. The Supreme Court En Banc held that the disallowance was fair considering there was no proof of connection to the business, or reasonableness of the amount, and since a dollar allocation form disclosed that the funds were actually used by the hotel owner’s wife for combined “medical and business reasons.”

3. Extraordinary and unusual amounts that have no relation to the measure of actual services. The circular makes reference to a 1982 Supreme Court Case (G.R. No. L-29790, Feb. 25, 1982) involving an “Officer’s Remuneration” in the sale of the company’s property. The Supreme Court observed that the company had no basis to grant the bonus considering the officer did not perform any service, and evidence showed that the sale was already effected by a broker who received commission.

RMC 81-2025 also states that a “necessary expense” as one that is appropriate and helpful to the development of the taxpayer’s business, and implies that the expense should be directly connected and proximately resulting from carrying on the business and must contribute to the generation of income or profit or minimizing a loss. RMC 81-2025 adds that “expenditures not directly related to the earnings of the business within the Philippines such as costs incurred for the remittance of funds to an overseas head office, are not deductible” and makes reference to a 1989 Supreme Court Case (G.R. Nos. L-28508-9, July 7, 1989) which involved the disallowance of “margin fees” claimed as expenses that were paid by a local company to Central Bank of the Philippines to remit profit to its New York Head Office. The local company raised that these are necessary and ordinary expenditure for the conduct of its corporate affairs. The Supreme Court rejected the local company’s argument for its failure to show how the remittance to the head office of part of its profit was in furtherance of its own trade or business.

The circular further states that “mere allegations of the taxpayer that an item of expense is ordinary and necessary,” does not justify its deduction as business expense. This sentence is lifted from a 1981 Supreme Court Decision involving a mining company (G.R. No. L-26911, Jan. 27, 1981) which referred to a 1967 Supreme Court En Banc Decision (G.R. No. L-22492, Sept. 5, 1967) where “Miscellaneous expenses” and “Officer’s traveling expenses” were disallowed by the BIR because they could not be satisfactorily explained nor supported by papers. The Supreme Court En Banc sustained the deduction. The Court considered the testimony of the company’s accountant that actual expenses were credited to the account of the president incurred in the interest of the corporation during his trip to Manila, and that the vouchers and receipts were burned during the Basilan Fire on March 30, 1962. The Supreme Court En Banc also found that the obligation of the company to keep the vouchers and receipts under the Tax Code had already lapsed by the time of the tax investigation.

Indeed, while the Tax Code does not define the words “ordinary” and “necessary,” Section 34(A) uniformly qualifies it with the words “reasonable allowance.” As there is no hard and fast rule in determining “reasonable,” case law reveals that other factors, such as: the nature, type, and size of business in which the taxpayer is engaged, the volume and amount of its net earnings, the nature of the expenditure itself, the intention of the taxpayer, the political and economic conditions of existing time, adequate evidence presented to substantiate the necessity of the expense, and defenses attendant to the taxpayer during the investigation, should be considered. It is the interplay of these, among other factors and properly weighed, that will yield a reasonable evaluation.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author. This article is for general information and educational purposes, and not offered as, and does not constitute, legal advice or legal opinion.

 

Jacqueline Ann A. Tan is the monitor of the Tax Department and a partner in the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices.

IBM subsidiary urges Philippine manufacturers to boost digital investments for AI integration

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

By Beatriz Marie D. Cruz, Reporter

SMALL and mid-sized manufacturers in the Philippines need to step up investments in digital infrastructure to better harness artificial intelligence (AI) and turn vast data collections into actionable insights, according to IBM Manufacturing Solutions.

“The top challenge manufacturers face right now is really data,” Ong Tun Kim, general manager at the IBM Corp. unit, said in a video interview. “They collect tons and tons of data either through their machines or operations relating to supply chain. But what truly happens is that over 90% of that data goes unused.”

“It’s not because they don’t want to use it; it’s because they lack the right tools and infrastructure to turn this data into insights,” he added.

IBM’s commissioned study showed that while Asia-Pacific organizations consider themselves “data-driven” or “AI-first,” only 11% have reached higher levels of maturity in their digital transformation.

Ms. Ong said many manufacturers still operate in silos, preventing seamless data flow across departments.

“When you don’t have visibility, it makes it tough for companies to respond quickly when there are supply chain disruptions or to make fast decisions without access to real-time data,” she said.

The study also found that about 67% of Asia-Pacific organizations still pursue AI adoption through isolated, department-level projects, while 73% lack mechanisms for cross-team knowledge sharing. This fragmented approach, IBM said, limits collaboration and slows innovation.

Ms. Ong added that addressing the skill gap in the manufacturing workforce is critical as industries worldwide accelerate their shift to AI-enabled operations.

“With the right support, Philippine manufacturers can definitely lead the wave of smart manufacturing,” she said.

AI adoption in manufacturing could help improve operational efficiency, predictive maintenance, and supply chain management but the shift requires integrated data systems and employee reskilling.

The warning comes as the country’s factory activity continues to show signs of strain. The S&P Global Philippines Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 49.9 in September, marking a contraction in the sector amid weaker output and new orders.

A PMI reading below 50 signals a deterioration in operating conditions.

Lorenzo Shipping seeks SEC nod for capital stock hike

LORENZOSHIPPING.COM

LORENZO SHIPPING CORP. is seeking the approval of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to increase its authorized capital stock following the subscription of National Marine Corp. (NMC).

The transaction is in line with NMC’s subscription to the company’s capital increase, which remains subject to SEC approval.

In May, Lorenzo Shipping’s board of directors approved the increase in authorized capital stock to P2 billion, divided into two billion common shares with a par value of P1 each, from P991.18 million, divided into 991.18 million common shares at the same par value.

The company said that P252.20 million, divided into 252.20 million common shares at P1 each, has so far been subscribed.

“Issuance of shares to NMC shall be made upon approval by the SEC of the increase of authorized capital stock… The application for increase in capital stock was filed with the SEC last 29 September 2025,” it said.

The company said that the subscription amount paid by NMC will be used to settle existing liabilities and for other general corporate purposes, while the balance will fund major vessel repairs, spare parts, shipyards, port operators, and trucking service providers.

For the second quarter, Lorenzo Shipping widened its net loss to P151.79 million from P77.57 million a year earlier on lower revenues.

Gross revenue for the April-to-June period fell by 42.1% to P381.81 million from P659.93 million previously.

Lorenzo Shipping is engaged in containerized cargo transport. It maintains a fleet of five container ships, while its sister company, National Marine Container Lines, Inc., owns four more vessels servicing 10 major ports nationwide. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

How PSEi member stocks performed — October 7, 2025

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, October 7, 2025.


Stocks rise on slower-than-expected inflation

BW FILE PHOTO

PHILIPPINE SHARES rebounded on Tuesday as data showed slower-than-expected inflation in September and as investors went bargain hunting.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) jumped by 1.39% or 83.51 points to close at 6,083.83, while the broader all shares index rose by 0.8% or 29.27 points to end at 3,673.22.

“The PSEi rose today as the market reacted positively to the latest inflation rate, which came in lower than expected. This figure helped restore confidence among market participants, boosting sentiment and encouraging renewed buying interest across key sectors,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a Viber message.

“The local market bounced back this Thursday following its drop near the 6,000 support as investors hunted for bargains,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Research Manager Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said in a Viber message. “The favorable inflation figure supports the country’s consumer outlook and raises the possibility of further easing by the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas).”

Headline inflation picked up to 1.7% in September from 1.5% in August, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported on Tuesday.

This was the fastest pace in six months or since the 1.8% print in March, but was within the BSP’s 1.5-2.3% forecast for the month and below the 1.9% median estimate in a BusinessWorld poll of 12 analysts.

For the first nine months, the consumer price index (CPI) averaged 1.7%, matching the BSP’s forecast for the year and still below its 2-4% annual target.

The Monetary Board will hold its penultimate policy meeting for the year on Thursday (Oct. 9), with analysts divided on their rate call. Ten of the 16 analysts in a BusinessWorld poll expect the central bank to pause anew after it delivered three straight cuts, while the remaining six said a fourth consecutive 25-basis-point (bp) reduction could happen this week to help support domestic demand and boost the economy.

The central bank has lowered benchmark borrowing costs by a total of 150 bps since it kicked off its easing cycle in August 2024, with the policy rate now at 5%.

All sectoral indices closed in the green on Tuesday. Financials jumped by 2.22% or 45.48 points to 2,087.52; property surged by 1.49% or 33.75 points to 2,295.62; industrials rose by 1.13% or 100.50 points to 8,969.07; holding firms increased by 0.83% or 40.50 points to 4,908.72; mining and oil climbed by 0.47% or 64.35 points to 13,669.64; and services went up by 0.42% or 9.63 points to 2,262.11.

Value turnover declined to P10.35 billion on Tuesday with 2.37 billion shares traded from the P12.12 billion with 2.07 billion stocks that changed hands on Monday.

Advancers outnumbered decliners, 97 to 92, while 60 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling went down to P218.1 million on Tuesday from P341 million on Monday. — A.G.C. Magno

Gas turbine backlog expected to delay PHL LNG expansion

The ISH floating storage unit berths at the AG&P’s Philippines LNG terminal in Batangas. — COMPANY HANDOUT

THE ORDER backlog among major suppliers of gas turbines is expected to hamper Philippine plans to transition its energy industry to liquefied natural gas (LNG), the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) said.

“For emerging Asian economies like Vietnam and the Philippines, where (the transition to gas is) already behind schedule and struggling to compete economically with coal and renewables, global turbine shortages present yet another obstacle to deployment,” according to a report written by Sam Reynolds, lead LNG/Gas researcher for IEEFA Asia.

Major gas turbine manufacturers — GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries — face “extensive backlogs” and delivery timelines of up to eight years, due to increased demand in the US and Middle East, IEEFA said.

The report found that 80 gigawatts (GW) worth of orders were placed in 2024, far exceeding the combined capacity of about 30 GW for the three largest original equipment manufacturers.

“As a result of higher gas turbine demand in wealthier regions, turbine prices are rising, and price-sensitive economies once again find themselves unable to access key gas and LNG supplies,” IEEFA said.

The Philippine Energy Plan set a goal of 2.4 GW worth of additional gas-fired capacity by 2028. About 10.7 GW of planned gas capacity is at various stages of development.

The IEEFA said that proposed greenfield LNG-fired power projects mostly remain in early development stages and are unlikely to have procured gas turbines.

“With long delivery timelines and higher costs, LNG power plants have become even less competitive with cheaper, domestically sourced renewable energy and storage. Every year of delay for LNG-fired power plants means that less LNG will be needed in the long run.” — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Crop insurance coverage targeted for expansion to 4.2 million farmers in 2026

THE Department of Agriculture said it requested P8 billion in funding to expand the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp.’s coverage to 4.2 million farmers from the current 2.3 million.

In a statement, Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr., also cited the need to raise the coverage per hectare to P60,000 from P20,000 to better reflect actual production costs, which he estimated at P60,000.

Mr. Laurel said climate change and low prices are threatening rice yields and livelihoods.

“When typhoons, droughts, or pest outbreaks hit, insured farmers can recover faster and get back to planting. Without it, many are left in debt or forced to abandon farming altogether,” Mr. Laurel added. — Andre Christopher H. Alampay

Jan. rice import window plan under DEPDev review

REUTERS

THE Department of Economy, Planning, and Development (DEPDev) said it is reviewing a proposal to allow rice imports for one month in January and to reimpose the import freeze between February and April next year, Malacañang said on Tuesday.

“We have spoken with Economy Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan, and right now this matter is being studied and evaluated,” Palace Press Officer Clarissa A. Castro said at a briefing.

“There will likely be a recommendation by next week — let’s see if the DEPDev has one by then,” she added.

On Monday, Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. said President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has “more or less” approved a plan to allow about 300,000 metric tons of rice imports in January.

Mr. Marcos earlier ordered a 60-day suspension of rice imports beginning Sept. 1 as a form of price relief to farmers during the harvest.

The suspension, which was initially set to conclude on Nov. 2, covers only regular milled and well-milled rice.

The Philippines imported around 4.7 million metric tons (MMT) of rice last year. The US Department of Agriculture projected in August that Philippine rice imports this year will total 4.9 MMT. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

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