three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. Media Award 2008
BusinessMirror
www.businessmirror.com.ph
A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18,June 201422, Vol.2015 10 No. 40 Monday, Vol. 10 No. 256
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MERALCO HOPING NO UNSCHEDULED PLANT SHUTDOWNS WILL OCCUR
Luzon on the brink of blackouts anew T By Lenie Lectura
he Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) is crossing its fingers that there will be no unscheduled shutdown of power plants where it sources electricity, as this could result in blackouts given the prevailing thin power reserves. Meralco said it is now preparing for the months ahead, when more power plants are scheduled for maintenance shutdown. Based on the list provided by Me-
ralco, a number of major power plants where Meralco sources its requirements will go offline until October this year. The list is trimmed down come
November and December. “These are the maintenance schedule of the power plants that we have contracts with. We hope that there will be no unscheduled shutdown of power plants coinciding with the list of scheduled maintenance,” Meralco Utility Economics Head Lawrence Fernandez said. Unit 1 of the Sual power station, which is a 1,200-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Pangasinan, will be shut down from August 8 to September 6. The capacity of each of the two Sual units is 600 MW. A day after September 6, Sual 2 will also undergo maintenance shutdown until November 5.
P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 36 pages | 7 days a week
PAL, Cebu Pacific dispute additional Australia seats By Lorenz S. Marasigan
T
he two largest carriers in the Philippines are battling it out for the additional flight frequencies to Australia, with the Philippine Airlines (PAL) seeking to corner almost all of the new entitlements to expand its growing longhaul operations in the Land Down Under. Documents from the local regulator
showed that the legacy carrier wants to secure an allocation of about 3,115 weekly seats from Manila to Australia. Broken down, the request involves the allocation of 2,319 weekly seats this coming winter and another 796 weekly seats for the summer of 2016. Cebu Pacific, meanwhile, sought for 1,722 weekly seats on top of its current allocation. Continued on A2
Continued on A12
special report
Another administration, another failure for economic Cha-cha‘choreographers’ By Catherine N. Pillas & Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz
W
First of three parts
ith the Asean integration drawing near, the Philippines appears to have already folded its hand early in the game, after it failed to remove foreign-ownership restrictions in the Constitution at a time when dis-
mantling barriers to foreign investment is as paramount as ever. House Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. decided not to put his bill—Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 1—to a vote before Congress went to adjournment sine die. RBH 1 was meant to be the first step to liberalize the stringent economic provisions of the Constitution limit-
PESO exchange rates n US 45.0170
ing foreign participation in particular business sectors. The lawmaker, who has been pushing for the measure for several Congress now, reasoned that he did not have the necessary numbers for the measure to hurdle the third and final reading, and, as such, did not push the House to vote. The proposed resolution would Continued on A2
n japan 0.3662 n UK 71.5140 n HK 5.8070 n CHINA 7.2520 n singapore 33.7459 n australia 35.2853 n EU 51.1888 n SAUDI arabia 12.0049 Source: BSP (19 June 2015)