NEDA BOARD OKS P548-B PROJECTS By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario
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HE National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) Board approved P547.63 billion worth of projects, which will be funded through Official Development Assistance (ODA), in its first meeting for the year. In a statement, the Neda said the list of projects included the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) 4, Edsa Greenways project, and six new projects to be undertaken by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and Department of Transportation (DOTr). The six projects are the Maritime Safety Enhancement Program; the Bataan-Cavite Interlink Bridge (BCIB) Project; Cebu-Mactan Bridge (4th Bridge) and Coastal Road Construction Project;
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Davao City Coastal Bypass Road Project; Capas-Botolan Road Project; and the Panay-Guimaras-Negros (PGN) Island Bridges Project. “These projects are the building blocks of our people’s dreams and aspirations. As such, we intend to roll out as many as we can to ease congestion and spread growth throughout the country,” Socioeconomic Planning Secretar y Ernesto M. Pernia said. The P57.07-billion MRT 4 Project involves the construction of a 15.56- kilometer elevated monorail transit system from N. Domingo, Quezon City to Taytay Diversion Road-Manila East Road rotunda in Taytay, Rizal. The P8.51-billion Edsa Greenways Project involves the enhancement of pedestrian facilities around key rail sta-
tions along Edsa, particularly Balintawak, Guadalupe, Cubao, and Taft for the first phase of the project. Neda said it will provide safe, secure, efficient and environment-friendly mobility in public spaces available 24/7. Pernia said the Edsa Greenways project will be constructed in line with the National Transport Policy that gives priority to pedestrians and bikers. The national transport policy, Neda said, aims to provide a safe and direct access to priority destinations such as housing, education, health, and business centers, as well as public transport modes. The Neda said the P6.25-billion Maritime Safety Enhancement Program will be undertaken by the DOTr together with the Philippine Coast Guard. See “Neda,” A8
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Thursday, January 30, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 112
Lopez: Govt should earn more from NDC properties By Elijah Felice E. Rosales @alyasjah
HE government is consolidating its properties under the National Development Co. (NDC) to lease or qualify them in new contracts that will benefit mostly state coffers, according to Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez.
Lopez on Wednesday told reporters the government is retrieving its properties under the NDC to enter them in new leasing arrangements that will increase government collection. The NDC Board, as such, is creating a liquidation committee tasked to review the value of the properties, including
and especially the 120-hectare land in Batangas co-owned by Chevron Philippines. “We will create a committee there and the intention is for the government to consolidate and buy the shares of the partner Chevron,” Lopez said. Upon buyout and after review,
“There’s no issue with the investors. We are honoring the contract. We even allowed company corporate life to end and renegotiation on the balance. We are not unilaterally revising or changing our contracts [with the private sector].”—Lopez
Lopez said the government will most likely keep the properties under its sole ownership. The options being considered right now is to either put them up for lease or qualify them in a new joint venture—that’s if the government and Chevron do not end up in agreement on new terms. “If we want to package it as a joint venture in the future with a real-estate project, it will benefit the government much. We won’t
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HE Philippine Coffee Board Inc. (PCBI) on Wednesday said it will start planting barako coffee in other areas in Visayas and Mindanao to preserve the heirloom variety amid the threat of Taal Volcano to traditional growing areas in Cavite and Batangas. PCBI Director Guillermo M. Luz said some of the areas initially identified by his group as suitable for growing barako coffee include Bataan, Bohol and Basilan. These areas, he said, are 250 to 800 meters above sea level and have distinct dry and wet seasons. Luz said there is a need to e x pa nd ba ra ko cof fee fa r ms outside Calabarzon as the recent ashfall from Taal Volcano damaged 40 percent of coffee planted in Cavite and Batangas and is threatening to wipe out the barako variety. PCBI estimated that coffee farmers in Cavite and Batangas have lost at least P600 million in
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revenues and this could even go up to P1.2 billion as 40 percent of their annual output of 5,000 metric tons in green coffee beans (MT-GCB) were damaged by Taal Volcano. “We are looking at areas in Visayas and Mindanao, areas outside Calabarzon. We are taking a long-term approach to protect the barako variety,” Luz said in a press briefing in Makati City. “Barako variety has been closely associated with the Philippines and we do want to protect that trademark,” he added. PCBI said Basilan is one of the identified alternative areas for barako coffee since the province has idle lands, especially coconut farms that have been devastated by cocolisap. Luz said PCBI plans to reserve roughly a third of the remaining 60 percent coffee output in affected areas as seeds for the expansion program. The remaining volume will be bought by PCBI’s company, Kape Isla, as a way of helping affected farmers. See “Coffee,” A2
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PESO SEEN WEAKENING DUE TO CORONAVIRUS
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HE Philippines may have been spared from the 2019 novel coronavirus (n-CoV) for now, but the economy will feel the effect of the virus that is currently causing a health scare in Asia, and even in some Western countries. In a recent commentary, ING Bank Manila economist Nicholas Mapa said the virus may dent dollar inflows into the Philippines as tourist arrivals will likely take a hit. The constraint in dollar inflows, in turn, may weaken the peso against the dollar. “The recent fallout from the 2019 n-CoV virus may be difficult to ascertain but one area that might take a hit will be tourism,” Mapa said. Around 21 percent of tourist arrivals are from mainland China, second only to tourist arrivals from South Korea. Tourist arrivals mean an influx of foreign currency which will boost domestic consumption as restaurants, retail and hotels will see an increase in sales, according to the economist. With the threat of contagion of
the 2019-nCoV, travel to and from China has been curtailed. “With no end in sight just yet for the virus, we can expect a hit on the tourism sector in the near term as the Philippines may see a drop in its second-most important market,” Mapa said. Lower tourist arrivals as a result of the virus scare, according to the economist, will likely limit a steady and burgeoning source of foreign exchange. “We may have to expect a smaller inflow of these ‘travel exports’ in 2020 with yet another reason for depreciation for the peso,” said Mapa. As of this writing, there are no confirmed cases of the virus in the Philippines yet. On Wednesday, the local currency ended the day’s trade at 50.83 to a dollar, slightly weakening from the 50.75 to a dollar the previous day. However, the peso is stronger compared to last year’s level. In January 2019, the peso averaged 52.468 to a dollar, data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas showed.
See “Lopez,” A2
Taal damage prompts coffee growers to test barako plants in VisMin By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas
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A coffee farmer in Amadeo, Cavite, tries to salvage the remaining harvestable berries from his plants after Taal Volcano’s eruption. On January 29, the Philippine Coffee Board Inc. said Taal Volcano’s activities, particularly the ashfall, threaten the barako coffee variety in Cavite and Batangas into extinction. NONIE REYES
LGUs told to access soft loans for projects
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BTr eyes another RTB issue in H1 By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM
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HE Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said they may offer another tranche of retail Treasury bonds (RTBs) within the
second half of the year. This, after a strong demand from investors was seen from BTr’s award of P134 billion of three-year RTBs during the ratesetting auction of the P30-billion initial offering on Tuesday.
National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon told reporters that the reception for first RTB issuance for the year is “going strong.” “Given the reception for the first RTB for the year, I think we See “BTr,” A2
HE Department of Finance (DOF) on Wednesday urged local gover nment units (LGUs) to access concessional financing of up to 100 percent of the proposed project cost to further spur infrastructure and other development projects in their areas. In a statement, DOF said there are currently three state-backed credit facilities that LGUs could tap for loans. Two are offered by Land Bank of the Philippines and Development Bank of the Philippines, and the third by the Municipal Development Fund Office (MDFO). “The DOF stands ready to assist our LGUs in efficiently and effectively implementing their priority development projects that are crucial to the fulfillment of President Rodrigo Duterte’s primary goal of providing a safe, decent, and comfortable life for every law-abiding Filipino,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said in a letter to Continued on A2
n US 50.8180 n japan 0.4656 n UK 66.2108 n HK 6.5358 n CHINA 7.3558 n singapore 37.4322 n australia 34.3631 n EU 56.0218 n SAUDI arabia 13.5460 Source: BSP (29 January 2020 )