BusinessMirror November 27, 2014

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he BusinessMirror was awarded the Asean Champion of Biodiversity for the Media Category in 2014 for being the “only newspaper in the Southeast Asia region with an environment section and a dedicated biodiversity page.” The award was given by the Asean Centre for Biodiversity (ACB) and the ACB-GIZ Biodiversity and Climate Change Project on Wednesday at a hotel in Mandaluyong City. The BusinessMirror was recognized for being a newspaper that “makes biodiversity a priority topic.” “Living up to its commitment of providing a ‘broader look at today’s business,’ the BusinessMirror is promoting biodiversity conservation through its day-today reportage and special reports, as well as its evaluation and presentation of stories across all sections,” the certificate of recognition said. The BusinessMirror comes out with an environment section, the Green Section, that has the Green, Biodiver-

sity and Science pages every Sunday. “It is the ‘only newspaper in the Southeast Asia which gives importance to environment and biodiversity,” Rolly Inciong, head of Communication and Public Affairs of ACB, said during the awarding ceremony. The other awardees were two Youth Sector champions. Adeline Tiffanie Suwana was awarded for having founded the Sahabat Alam (Friends of Nature), an environmental education and youth-empowerment program with 25,000 members. She is from Indonesia. Another Youth Sector champions are Gabriella and Giovanna Thorir for the Bekantan Twins Project that works to stop the loss of the endangered proboscis monkey. They are also from Indonesia. The first Asean Champions of Biodiversity award was held in 2011, where the BusinessMirror bagged third place in the Media Category. Lyn Resurreccion

The BusinessMirror was awarded the Asean Champion of Biodiversity 2014 in the Media Category by the Asean Centre for Biodiversity (ACB) and the ACB-GIZ Biodiversity and Climate Change Project on Wednesday at a hotel in Mandaluyong City. Receiving the award are T. Anthony C. Cabangon (third from left), BusinessMirror publisher; Max de Leon (second from left), BusinessMirror Special Projects editor; and Lyn Resurreccion (fourth from left), BusinessMirror Green Section editor. With them are (from left) Dr. Dicky Simorangkir, deputy director of GIZ; lawyer Roberto Oliva, executive director of ACB; Dr. Berthold Siebert, program director of ACB-GIZ Biodiversitty and Climate Change; and Meriden Maranan, officer in charge of Nature Recreation and Extension Division, Biodiversity Management Bureau of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources. Alysa Salen

BusinessMirror

three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

www.businessmirror.com.ph

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health&fitness

BOHOL REINVENTS ITSELF

Life

Your special presence

POCKET PLANNER PRAYER BOOK, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

MARTIN AMIS TAKES ON NAZI LOVE IN ‘ZONE OF INTEREST.’ REALLY. »D4

BusinessMirror

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

Thursday, November 27, 2014

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PAMILACAN Island of Baclayon

PANGLAO Bluewater Resort

OBSERVING loom weaving at the Bee Farm.

HINAGDANAN Cave in Dauis

THE Church of Saint Monica in Alburquerque

EXPERIENCING “The Rush” at the Chocolate Hills Adventure Park.

➊ ❺

Bohol reinvents itself

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B B L

T’S been a little over a year since the devastating 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck Bohol on October 15, 2013, destroying or damaging many of its iconic Spanish-era churches, as well as other infrastructure. However, slowly the province and its people are picking up the pieces and getting on with their lives. Joining a media familiarization tour with seven newsmen and bloggers, we explored Bohol’s now revived tourism potential, which includes alternative destinations such as the Chocolate Hills Adventure Park and the Bee Farm. Boholanos have also turned the tragic aftermath of the earthquake into tourist attractions (such as the tectonic uplift along the coasts). Upon landing at Tagbilaran Airport, we were soon on our way on our Countryside Tour. Our first stop was the Philippine Tarsier and Wildlife Sanctuary, where we saw, observed and photographed, up close and personal, three Philippine tarsiers, Bohol’s mascot, in their nature habitat. At the Visitor’s Center, we met up with the celebrated “Tarsier Man”, Carlito “Lito” Pizarras, a

former tarsier hunter turned conservationist who is now the field supervisor of the sanctuary. From the sanctuary, we made our next stop at the newly restored Church of Saint Monica in Alburquerque (nicknamed by the Boholanos as “Albur”). Here, we were awed by its painted ceiling which was done by Ray Francia from April 12 to August 3, 1932, and recently restored by Manila-born but Spain-based artist Guy Custodio. The church’s massive pillars are actually large tree trunks. It was now past noontime, so we proceeded to the Loboc Tourism Complex (across which is the seriously damaged Church of Saint Peter the Apostle), where we were to have lunch on board a double-hulled, flowerbedecked floating restaurant as we cruised along the Loboc River. While we dined, boodle-style, on Boholano cuisine, we were serenaded by a bossa-nova singer. Our boat also made stopover at a riverside pavilion where traditional folk dances, such as the kuradang and tinikling were performed for our viewing pleasure. The highlight of our Bohol Countryside Tour was the four-hectare Chocolate Hills Adventure

Park, where a number of us tried the famous, exciting and very unique bike zip line, dubbed as “The Rush.” The park also features a restaurant, hiking trails and tree-top adventures. Our home for the three days and two nights we stayed in Bohol was the extremely quiet and refreshing Class “AAA” Panglao Bluewater Resort. Here, we stayed in some of the 54 elegantly appointed, spacious, very Zen and modern airconditioned guestrooms. The resort also has a restaurant (Aplaya), two swimming pools, a wellmaintained Zen garden, a cliff with a view of the sea, bar (Baroto Poolside Bar), watersports center (Aquamania), boutique, facilities for disabled guests, gift shop, meeting facilities and children’s playground. The morning of the next day, we went on an island-hopping tour to Pamilacan Island where we had a merienda of kamote (sweet potatoes cooked three different ways) and corn coffee, went on a snorkeling tour and visited its Spanish-era watchtower. In the afternoon we visited the small Hinagdanan Cave in Dauis, with its picturesque, underground spring-fed swimming pool, and watched the sun set at

the Punta Cruz Watchtower in Maribojoc. At the latter, we saw where the sea-bed was lifted more than a meter due to tectonic uplift. As a result, the coastline receded some 50 meters to 100 meters. In the evening, we shopped for seafood at the Manga Public Market (which was prepared and cooked for us and partaken of at Lic Lic Fastfood & Sutukil) in Tagbilaran City. Prior to dinner, we observed fireflies lighting up the trees along the Abatan River in Cortes. On our third and last day, we had a healthy lunch at the Bee Farm in Dauis. Here, we tasted malunggay ice cream, observed loom weaving and organic farming techniques, and bought their signature food products for pasalubong. This was followed by a visit to the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Baclayon whose facade was seriously damaged during the earthquake. Here, we toured its museum which displays an ivory statue of the crucified Christ, relics of Saint Ignatius Loyola, a statue of the Blessed Virgin (said to have been presented by Queen Catherine of Aragon), vestments, books, and church music. Prior to being dropped off at the airport, we again shopped for souvenirs at Aproniana Gift Shop, also in Baclayon. ■

»

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‘Expect fuel costs to go up’

health& fitness celebrates third anniversary

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PETILLA SAYS s.c. order on TRANSFER OF OIL DEPOT TO CAUSE ‘LOGISTICS NIGHTMARE’

INSIDE

EAR Lord, we thank You for Your special presence as we were reading Your Word and pondering on it in our heart. We thank You for the opportunity to know Your Word, do service to You and learn Your ways better. Strengthen our will that we may put into practice what You have revealed to us through the Sacred Scriptures. Amen.

A broader look at today’s business

life

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By Lenie Lectura

CARRASCAL BAGS AWARD FOR BEST MINING PROGRAM

he Supreme Court’s (SC) directive to the country’s big three oil firms to vacate the Pandacan oil depot in Manila could cause fuel prices to go up due to the ensuing “logistics nightmare,” the Department of Energy (DOE) said on Wednesday.

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arrascal Nickel Corp. (CNC) once again bagged the coveted Best Mining Forest Program Award for Metallic Category for the year 2014. The award was given during the 61st Annual National Mine Safety and Environment Conference testimonial dinner on November 14 at Cap-John Hay Trade and Cultural Center at Camp John Hay in Baguio City. The company garnered a sky-high 95.70-percent rating, topping other veteran mines, such as Taganito Mining Corp., Carmen Copper Corp. and Philsaga Mining Corp. which were also in the top tier of the competition. CNC won the award for two consecutive years now, since it first entered the competition in 2013. CNC’s mine site is at the municipality of Carrascal, Surigao del Sur province. Since the start of its commercial operations in 2009, CNC experienced rapid growth through the commendable vision, teamwork and collaboration of its management and technical teams.

Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho L. Petilla made this pronouncement when asked about the possible repercussions of the closure of the Pandacan oil depot. “[Fuel] is going to be more expensive. Distribution cost will go up. How expensive? I don’t know,” Petilla said. “But it’s also a free market. It’s their prerogative [if they will increase prices]. They may maintain prices to be competitive, or they may increase it to survive, but it’s an open competition,” he added. Fuel prices have drastically gone down over the past weeks. An increase in prices on account of the High Tribunal’s order is not on the horizon, because it would take effect six months after the oil firms’ submission of an updated comprehensive plan and relocation schedule. Also, the oil firms could still file for a motion for reconsideration, which could push back their six-month timetable. Petilla said he is more apprehensive about the need to deliver aviation fuel, considering a truck ban is in place. The truck ban in Manila has caused monstrous traffic and delays in the delivery of commodities.

Louie R. Sarmiento (left), president of the Philippine Mine Safety and Environment Association, hands over the trophy to Antonio L. Co (center), president of the mining firm Carrascal Nickel Corp. (CNC), with William A. Kewan, resident manager of CNC.

See “Fuel costs,” A2

record goals! RECORD Sports GOALS!

Calax rebidding U.S. ECONOMY POSTS EVEN OFWs shielding real-estate to take place not STRONGER GROWTH IN Q3 sector from another bubble later than April T

BusinessMirror

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| Thursday, November 27, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

The previous record of 71 had been set by former Real Madrid and Schalke striker Raul over the course of 142 matches. Raul’s record fell when Messi struck his first in the 38th minute to give Barcelona a 2-0 lead after Luis Suarez had opened the scoring. It was Messi’s 91st match in Europe’s top club competition.

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ICOSIA, Cyprus—Barcelona’s Lionel Messi scored a hat trick to shatter the Champions League goal scoring record by taking his tally in the competition to 74 in a 4-0 win over APOEL on Tuesday. The previous record of 71 had been set by former Real Madrid and Schalke striker Raul over the course of 142 matches. Raul’s record fell when Messi struck his first in the 38th minute to give Barcelona a 2-0 lead after Luis Suarez had opened the scoring. It was Messi’s 91st match in Europe’s top club competition. Barcelona’s Brazilian midfielder Rafihna unleashed a powerful shot from some 20 yards out. Despite being closely marked, Messi was able to get a foot to the ball and redirect it past the helpless APOEL goalkeeper Urko Pardo. Messi’s teammates swarmed around him to congratulate the Argentina star on his achievement. He struck again in the 58th when a defense-splitting pass from Dani Alves put him through and Messi’s chip past Pardo bounced into the net off the post. Messi rounded off the scoring in the 87th minute of the Group F match, completing his 28th Barcelona hat trick and his fifth in the Champions League. Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo, who has scored 70 goals in the Champions League from its group stages onward, gets his chance to catch up with Messi’s record when the defending champions face Basel away on Wednesday. Messi’s latest feat came three days after he became the Spanish league’s all-time scorer by netting a hat trick to give him 253 goals in the domestic competition, two more than former Athletic Bilbao great Telmo Zarra scored from 1940-55. Messi was also the unanimous choice as leading player in the Associated Press Global Football 10 poll on Tuesday after his recordbreaking weekend. Messi received the maximum 180 points from the media voters for becoming the Spanish league’s all-time leading scorer with a hat trick as Barcelona thrashed Sevilla, 5-1. His treble took him to 253 career league goals, surpassing Telmo Zarra’s record of 251 set from 1940-1955. “Messi scored a hat trick against a very respectable side and broke a historic record,” voter Ubiratan Leal of trivela.com in Brazil said. “The Argentine is so good that this kind of achievement is losing its impact. All this seems so natural and predictable. But it is not, and I have to remind myself of that every Barcelona match.” Barcelona was also the top team and Neymar, who scored Barcelona’s second goal, is seventh in the player poll.

Paul Pogba was second to Messi after the midfielder scored twice as Serie A leader Juventus won 3-0 at Lazio, with Messi’s fellow Argentina international Carlos Tevez scoring the third. “Juventus made a statement in beating Lazio in the Italian capital this weekend, demonstrating the gap still existent between the Old Lady and the league’s emerging, better sides,” Sam Tighe of the Bleacher Report said. “Paul Pogba grabbed a brace as he continues his development into the best central midfielder in the world.” Cristiano Ronaldo was third after his two goals in Real Madrid’s 4-0 thrashing of Eibar took his league goal tally to 20 in only 11 games. Bundesliga leader Bayern Munich polled second in the team list with one more point than Juventus after thrashing Hoffenheim 4-0 to move seven points clear at the top. Arjen Robben and Mario Goetze both scored and were the pick of the players for the German side in fourth and 10th places respectively. Chelsea has extended its advantage to six points at the top of the Premier League and striker Diego Costa, who opened the scoring in its 2-0 win over West Brom, is fifth in the player poll. Wayne Rooney is a position further back after scoring the winner in Manchester United’s 2-1 victory at Arsenal on Saturday. Panelist Julian Bennetts believes the result could be the catalyst for Louis van Gaal’s side to produce the regular winning form that United is renowned for. “This could be a weekend that kickstarts the Louis van Gaal reign at Manchester United,” Bennetts said. “[It was] a vital win at Arsenal and a game that vindicated the Dutchman’s change in tactics ahead of the weekend.” Van Gaal and United had goalkeeper David de Gea to thank for the game being scoreless at halftime, and the Spain goalkeeper denied Arsenal further with his side leading 1-0. He enters the poll in eighth place this week. Elsewhere, Marseille ranks seventh after two late goals secured a 3-1 victory over Bordeaux to maintain its position at the of the French league with a point more than defending champion Paris Saint-Germain. Crystal Palace enters the top 10 teams in ninth this week after coming from behind to record an emphatic 3-1 win against Liverpool on Sunday. Cruzeiro is 10th after winning a second consecutive Brazilian league title. AP

By Butch Fernandez & Lorenz S. Marasigan

» lIonel MessI sets european record with 74 goals.

FIFA FAces ‘yeArs’ to rebuIld reputAtIon

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ELFAST, Northern Ireland— International Football Federation SecretaryGeneral Jerome Valcke acknowledged on Tuesday that it will take “years to rebuild our reputation” following the World Cup bidding-corruption investigation. But Valcke insisted that Sony and Emirates airline are not ending their Fifa sponsorships to protest against allegations of bribery and favor-seeking that have engulfed world football in the four years since Russia was awarded the 2018 World Cup and Qatar was voted the 2022 hosts. Emirates has already announced it is not renewing its sponsorship and Valcke said he “would be surprised” if Sony extended its deal, which expires at the end of this year. “Both Sony and Emirates have nothing to do with the situation we are facing these last days,” Valcke

said, referring to the fallout from the bidding corruption report compiled by prosecutor Michael Garcia. “I know that football is still a very strong product and I am not really concerned with Fifa’s finances for the future.” But, speaking in Belfast after a meeting of the International Football Association Board, Valcke acknowledged the immediate future is not bright for Fifa’s global standing while insisting “we are doing a great job.” “The image of Fifa is something I agree, over the last two weeks I would not say reached the bottom, but has reached a level which is definitely a level which we will not go lower than,” Valcke said. “Things are happening, things have happened, but we are still doing a lot of good things. We have to rebuild this image day after day. It’s easy to destroy the reputation. It takes one second. It takes years to rebuild our reputation, but

that’s what we will do.” Sepp Blatter, the magnet for much of the criticism directed at Fifa, is seeking a fifth four-year term as president in May. Much of that criticism— particularly from Fifa’s own executive members—has centered on Blatter keeping Garcia’s full 430-page report into impropriety during World Cup bidding confidential. Blatter received a further demand for Garcia’s investigation to be released from the British government on Tuesday. Sajid Javid—the culture, media and sport secretary— wrote to Blatter, saying Fifa should be operating “with the highest ethical standards” and be able to find a way of publishing the report without contravening confidentiality assurances. “Without the disclosure of the full report, Fifa risks not just further damage to its own credibility, but now significant damage to the reputation of football as a whole,” Javid wrote. Valcke, Fifa’s top administrator, said the report must stay secret to “mainly to protect 75 persons who

have made a deposition and were given confidentiality” including himself. The sense of disarray at Fifa heightened when Garcia objected to ethics judge Joachim Eckert’s interpretation of his investigative work, appealing to Fifa citing “numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations” of his work. “It’s said it’s a bit Fifa versus Fifa,” Valcke said. “It’s sad for Fifa definitely, and it’s sad for our reputation and for the image. It’s sad for commercial partners, it’s sad for all the people who are supporting football.” The Garcia-Eckert clash has led to Domenico Scala, the head of Fifa’s auditing committee, being allowed to review the full investigation findings. “I hope deeply the decision would be that this bidding process on ‘18 and ‘22 is closed,” Valcke said, hopeful Russia and Qatar will retain their hosting rights. But Switzerland’s attorney general is looking into possible law-breaking by unnamed individuals highlighted in Garcia’s investigation. AP

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World cHess cHAMp

norway’s Magnus carlsen lifts his trophy after beating India’s Vishwanathan Anand in the Fide World chess championship in sochi, russia, on tuesday. carlsen retained the title after defeating Anand, a former world champion, 6.5-4.5. AP

sports

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he fresh tender for the P35.42-billion Cavite-Laguna Expressway (Calax) deal will be staged not later than the first half of 2015, a Palace spokesman said on Wednesday. Palace Spokesman Edwin S. Lacierda said the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) aims to put the contract on the auction block by April 2015, almost a year after the initial bidding was staged. See “Calax,” A2

PESO exchange rates n US 44.9600

he United States economy grew even faster in the third quarter than initially thought, posting the strongest six months of growth in more than a decade and pulling further ahead of other big economies of the world. The gross domestic product (GDP), the country’s total output of goods and services, expanded at a healthy 3.9-percent annual rate in the July-to-September period, the Commerce Department reported on Tuesday. That’s a notable jump from its first estimate of 3.5 percent. The revision was propelled higher by more robust consumer and business spending. Together with a 4.6-percent surge in the spring, the country has recorded its biggest back-to-back quarterly performance since 2003. See “U.S. economy,” A8

By Manuel T. Cayon

Mindanao Bureau Chief

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AVAO CITY—Around 3 percent, or P27 billion, of the estimated P980 billion in remittances sent home by overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to their families last year were spent in real-estate purchases, a real-estate company operating a popular online search portal for available Philippine real-estate properties said. Arthur M. Gonzales, vice president for Mindanao of FilipinoHomes.com, a Web-linked real-

estate company, said that OFWs funneled this much money last year to the renting and buying of houses and lots, commercial properties and other real-estate investments in the Philippines. He said the amount represented a sizable portion of the total $22.8 billion (P980 billion) in cash remittances sent home by more or less 10 million OFWs last year. “This year we expect OFWs to spend as much as P40 billion on acquiring properties,” he said. Overseas Filipino spending has See “OFws,” A8

n japan 0.3812 n UK 70.6232 n HK 5.7974 n CHINA 7.3266 n singapore 34.5793 n australia 38.3422 n EU 56.0831 n SAUDI arabia 11.9833 Source: BSP (26 November 2014)


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