BusinessMirror March 31, 2020

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NGCP to donate ₧1B to anti-Covid drive T

HE National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) will donate P1 billion to support the country’s medical staff. In a letter sent to President Duterte, NGCP president Anthony Almeda said the board of directors, particularly major stockholders Henry Sy Jr., Robert Coyiuto Jr., and the State Grid of China Corporation (SGCC), has decided to donate P1,000,000,000 “to aid our medical frontliners to support the President’s efforts to combat the outbreak of Covid-19 in the Philippines.” Of the amount, P500 million

A FOOD business in Parañaque City offers frontliners some treats as long as they show them their identification card. NONIE REYES

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By Lenie Lectura

will be donated in the form of goods and medical equipment and the remaining half in cash, for allocation to other Covid-19 response purposes. “NGCP will be coordinating with your team on the turnover of our donation. We will also continue to look for opportunities to support the government in battling this pandemic,” said Almeda. The NGCP is conducting regular sanitation of all workplaces, temperature checks prior to entry in its offices, and providing alcohol/hand sanitizers in all facilities’ points of entry. “Sanitation of frequently touched surfaces like doorknobs,

elevator buttons and light switches will be done every hour, while surfaces like walls, doors, floors and ceilings will be sanitized after office hours. All work tools, including keyboards and telephones, meeting rooms, hallways and pantries, will be cleaned and sanitized after office hours,” it said. To mitigate further the impact of the disease on project deadlines and its overall effect on power transmission operations, the NGCP cited a contingency plan that includes the use of existing NGCP equipment in stock and resort to other suppliers not affected by Covid-19. NGCP is also evaluating the implementation of the following

additional measures: maintenance rescheduling, except for Grid Operating and Maintenance Program (GOMP); isolation of entrance to control centers, substations and backup control centers; and provision of transportation, board and lodging for dispatchers and substation engineers. Meantime, the grid operator is implementing these measures: cancellation of official travels to affected countries and non-essential large events, protocol on employees returning from abroad, stricter procedure on entry of guests, and introduction of alternative approach to meetings such as video conferencing, Skype/MS Teams call.

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STOP BLOCKING FOOD TRADE–GROUP TO LGUs www.businessmirror.com.ph

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Tuesday, March 31, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 173

P25.00 nationwide | 3 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

ROPES, trays and curbs make for social-distancing implements as residents from Las Piñas City, Marikina City and Cainta, respectively, maintain social distancing during the Luzon-wide quarantine. NONIE REYES, BERNARD TESTA

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By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas

HE Philippine Chamber of Agriculture and Food Inc. (PCAFI) on Monday sounded the alarm that the country could face a food shortage in the second half—and during Christmas—if local government units (LGUs) continue to hamper food production. PCAFI President Danilo V. Fausto said the food value chain “should be left unhampered” during the implementation of the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine (ECQ), which ends mid-April. Fausto, owner of DVF Dairy Farm, said LGUs are giving it a hard time to ensure a smooth flow of food trade. “Some local government units are defiant to the executive orders and laws that were promulgated to ensure safety and availability of food for their constituents,” he said. “LGUs should be forced, with the help of the police and the military, to let go of their excess food produced in their area in order to ensure their availability to other parts of the country,” he added. Fausto explained that if the delivery and availability of farm production inputs like chicks, piglets, fertilizers, among others, are delayed, then the country may face a shortfall in food supply. “Production inputs like chicks, piglets, fingerlings, seeds, feeds, fertilizer and irrigation should be made available and [their] delivery

FAUSTO: “If markets and income will not be assured, farmers will stop producing for the next cropping season.”

to the farmer producers assured this coming production and planting season,” he said.

No planting, production

“FAILURE to do this, there will be no new planting and production for the next season and [such] will result in shortage of food for the next semester and Christmas season,” he added. PCAFI also urged the LGUs to not block the entry of laborers and workers in farms, food manufacturing plants and other food-related businesses to ensure continuous production of food products. “Production and agribusiness should be protected and supported and their operations encouraged to normalize and allow the free flow of goods and services to feed the people,” it said.

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.9050

“Value chain requires the needed manpower in the supermarkets like drivers and helpers, merchandisers. They should not be blocked at the checkpoints. Factories producing the packaging materials should be allowed to operate,” it added. The government, Fausto added, should help farmers find a ready market for their current harvest to prevent them from incurring losses, which could discourage them from planting anew. “If markets and income will not be assured, farmers will stop producing for the next cropping season [both for rice, vegetables, meat, poultry and fish],” he said. In line with this, PCAFI proposed that the government set up “emerging” trading centers down to the barangay level to ensure a steady supply of food during the ECQ. “Emergency trading centers in barangays and subdivisions nearest to consumers will give people access to the food they need while the enhanced community quarantine is in effect. Mobile and rolling stores should be immediately dispatched,” he said. “Marketing, distribution and delivery efforts should be augmented with the help of government, the LGUs, and even by the military to ensure that food reaches the consumers and market of the farmers’ produced is assured,” he added. PCAFI also urged the government, particularly LGUs, to not forget necessary protocols and guidelines in controlling animal diseases, such as African Swine Fever and bird flu, to ensure that there are no further disruptions in the food supply chain. “Complications on quarantine protocol: ASF for swine, Avian Flu for poultry and Fall army worm for corn, could be left unattended due to the pandemic on Covid-19,” Fausto said.

TREASURY REJECTS ALL T-BILL TENDERS, 3RD TIME IN MARCH

HEALTH workers at Barangay Balas in Talisay, Batangas, walk the stretch of a traffic-less national highway to monitor patients under investigation and under monitoring. According to them, no case of Covid-19 has yet been reported in this town/barangay, and this is why they imposed a total lockdown to prevent people from nearby areas in Batangas and Laguna from coming in. ROY DOMINGO

By Bernadette D. Nicolas

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HE Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) has not yet snapped its streak of fully rejecting bids for all tenors of debt papers since the enhanced community quarantine was declared in the entire Luzon due to the pandemic on March 16. For the third time this month, the BTr on Monday once again rejected all tenders for Treasury bills (T-bills) since bid rates went “over the roof.” Average bids for 91-day,

182-day and 364-day T-bills were capped at 4.517 percent, 4.259 percent and 4.402 percent, respectively. These were higher compared with the previous auction and the prevailing market rates. The auction was also undersubscribed, with total bids only reaching P17.2 billion out of P20 billion offering. This, even though the Treasury already shifted the amounts per tenor and allotted more for shorter-term debt instruments. The 91-day T-bills

amounted to P10 billion while the 182-day and 364-day T-bills were assigned P5 billion each. National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said she “heard banks are giving out ultra-high deposit rates.” Despite this, De Leon expressed optimism that their decision to auction off P15 billion worth of 35-day T-bills on Tuesday (March 31), will finally attract more investors since “there is still opportunity cost for holding to cash.” Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4726 n UK 63.3665 n HK 6.5672 n CHINA 7.1728 n SINGAPORE 35.6577 n AUSTRALIA 31.2964 n EU 56.6216 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5530

Source: BSP (March 30, 2020)


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