PHL GARMENT SECTOR
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n Monday, April 26, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 194
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 20 pages |
FACES $600M IN LOSSES THE Lapu-Lapu monument cuts a dramatic figure against the night sky as soldiers bear the flag at the Liberty Shrine in Mactan, Lapu-Lapu City. The fearless Filipino leader, who vanquished Ferdinand Magellan, will be the center of attention as the nation marks April 27 as a special day to mark the 500th anniversary or quincentennial of the Victory at Mactan by virtue of President Duterte’s Proclamation 1128. Simultaneous flag-raising rites are set throughout the country in public plazas, parks, edifices, and schools, according to the National Quincentennial Committee (NQC). Besides LapuLapu City, Manila will host military honors to Lapu-Lapu at the Sentinel of Freedom (Lapu-Lapu Monument) at the Rizal Park. IMAGE COURTESY OF NATIONAL QUINCENTENNIAL COMMITTEE
Senate seeks firm answers on brownout risks to jabs By Butch Fernandez @butchfBM
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By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad @Tyronepiad
HE Philippine garment exporters may have to drop as much as $600 million worth of orders if the strict lockdown protocols that force shipment delays continue to slow down business activities.
In an interview with the BusinessMirror, Foreign Buyers Association of the Philippines (Fobap) said that the garment industry may lose 30 percent to 40 percent of $1.5 billion—which is the lower end of 2021 target industry revenues—if more shipment delays persist. This translates to potential losses of $450 million to $600 mil-
lion, or roughly P22 billion to P29 billion, this year. “If you are talking like $1.5 billion worth of orders that we received already in place for 2021...you can say 30 percent to 40 percent [will be lost]...in case this lockdown will continue,” Fobap President Robert M. Young told this newspaper. Continued on A4
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.4020
U.S. QUESTIONS PHL USE OF SPS-IC IN AGRI IMPORTS By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas @jearcalas
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ASHINGTON has raised concerns over Manila’s use of sanitary and phytosanitary import clearances (SPS-ICs) to restrict the importation of certain agricultural products for reasons “unrelated protection of human, animal, or plant life or health.” The United States raised several questions regarding the Philippines’s non-issuance of SPS-ICs to “restrict” agricultural imports as a means to protect domestic industries in a recent World Trade Organization (WTO) Committee on Import Licensing meeting last week.
Agriculture Secretary William Dar held off comment for now until he sees the US document, while Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez saw nothing wrong with Manila’s use of SPS-IC as long as it is properly implemented. SPS-IC is a document issued by the Philippines for incoming imports certified to be free from pests or diseases that could harm the country’s agriculture sector and even human health. “The United States is concerned that the Philippines uses the SPSICs to restrict imports for reasons that appear unrelated to the protection of human, animal, or plant life or health,” the United States in its communication to the committee
meeting, a copy of which was obtained by the BusinessMirror. The United States noted that the Philippines made numerous notifications of legislation and regulations concerning import licensing last year. Citing the Philippines’s notifications, the US said Manila had explained that it uses SPS-ICs to “ensure that the products being imported meet the standards to protect human, animal life or health, guarantee that the products are safe for consumers and to prevent the spread of pests or diseases of animals” and are “not intended to restrict the quantity or value of imports.” Continued on A2
HE Senate Energy Committee is calling a hearing on Tuesday (April 27) to ascertain government’s preparedness to avert brownouts in late May and June, amid fears this could coincide with the arrival of several batches of Covid-19 vaccines that must be stored at precise temperatures. While the Department of Energy recently gave assurances there will be no “red alerts”—only yellow alerts—on power supply although this could be rendered thin by planned and unplanned outages, Senator Sherwin Gatchalian, committee chairman, said analysis that he read “this morning” (Sunday) indicated a “big possibility that we could have brownouts this coming May and early part of June.” Gatchalian said in a radio interview this could arise from the expected surge in demand in the summer, adding, “and it’s really so hot.” The senator added, partly in Filipino, that “my main worry and concern really is the vaccination program because I saw in the report of [vaccine czar] General [Carlito] Galvez that vaccines are arriving this coming week and the next batches are the ones that are quite sensitive,” or requiring ultra-low temperatures. Latest reports he read indicate the likelihood of outages happening in various parts of Luzon. “I saw two reasons for that: first, many power plants went down, and several were unable to return to full operations right away,” he said in a radio interview on Sunday. See “Senate,” A2
n JAPAN 0.4484 n UK 66.9932 n HK 6.2376 n CHINA 7.4566 n SINGAPORE 36.4226 n AUSTRALIA 37.3228 n EU 58.1695 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9076
Source: BSP (April 23, 2021)