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Saturday, November 2, 2019 Vol. 15 No. 23
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A DAMN TOUGH BALANCING ACT
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By Jonathan L. Mayuga
AMNED if you do, damned if you don’t. This is the dilemma faced by the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage Project (MWSS) in dealing with the chronic water supply shortage affecting the National Capital Region (NCR).
Despite the strong opposition, the Duterte administration is bent on implementing what it deems a decisive solution: the P12.2-billion New Centennial Water Source— Kaliwa Dam Project in Rizal and Quezon. It will, for one, end the reliance on just one fragile water source for millions in the NCR, the Angat dam. The ECC for the Kaliwa project was recently granted by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), with Secretary Roy A. Cimatu promis-
ing to place the project under strict monitoring to ensure compliance of environmental safeguards.
Environmentally critical
A WATER reservoir is an environmentally critical project and the project site, which is in the heart of the Sierra Madre Mountain Range—an environmentally critical area—requires environmental permits, including an environmental compliance certificate, or ECC. The issuance of the ECC came days after private water conces-
BERNARD TESTA
Regulators are facing the classic large dam dilemma with the proposed Kaliwa dam project, seen vital to easing chronic water shortages for millions in Metro Manila, but opposed by indigenous peoples and some environmentalists for disruptions to communities and to nature. Is it worth the risks?
sionaires Maynilad and Manila Water announced water service interruptions due to the drop in the water level of Angat and Ipo dams. In March this year, water consumers in the East Zone had experienced one of the worst water supply shortage episodes and for which the Ayala-led Manila Water, for causing inconvenience to millions of its customers, was slapped with a P1.15-million penalty by the MWSS. On October 24, the MWSS posted on its website a public ad-
visory that rotational water interruption will be implemented anew by the private water contractors Maynilad and Manila Water, triggering howls of protest and causing much anxiety among water consumers who are growing tired of waterless days despite the privatization of water service in 1997.
Last straw
THE issuance of an ECC by the DENR is the only remaining precondition to the loan effectiveness Continued on a2
A secretive family landing a $4-B haul has everyone guessing By Ruben Munsterman and Ben Stupples
O
lion ($12.5 billion). The family is worth about $11.2 billion based on the most recent filings for two holding companies it controls, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, though individual members may privately own other assets.
Bloomberg News
NE of the world’s richest and most discreet families must decide what to do with a massive pile of cash. thropists, the Amsterdam-based analyst said. The Van der Vorms have been in this position before. They made their fortune building Holland America Line, a transatlantic shipping firm sold in the 1980s to Carnival Plc. for about $600 million. The family put the money to work within the investment firm, which bears the initials of Holland America Line. Hal has since returned almost 2,000 percent and today spans timber, aviation and maritime holdings with assets of more than €11.3 bil-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 51.0330
VAN DER VORM VASTGOED
The Van der Vorms, little known outside the Netherlands despite holdings that span the globe, will get as much as $4 billion this year from the sale of an eyewear retailer to Ray-Ban maker EssilorLuxottica SA. The money will go into the publicly traded Hal Trust, which the family controls. “I’m very curious what Hal will do with the billions,” ABN Amro Bank NV’s Thijs Berkelder said. “Nobody from outside knows.” The family could return cash to shareholders, invest it or even close the fund and become full-time philan-
Bearer shares
DESPITE being publicly traded, Hal’s inner workings are shrouded in secrecy. The firm’s stock includes bearer shares, enabling owners to conceal their identities. Family members and other Hal Trust executives are referred to in filings by their initials only and eschew publicity. When a senior employee, Jaap van Wiechen, was invited to receive an award in Amsterdam four years ago, he turned down the honor and didn’t attend the event. “They always decline to answer even the most trivial questions and simply direct you to their website,” said KBC Securities analyst Continued on a2
n JAPAN 0.4689 n UK 65.8581 n HK 6.5094 n CHINA 7.2325 n SINGAPORE 37.4802 n AUSTRALIA 35.2230 n EU 56.9120 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6081
Source: BSP (October 31, 2019 )