Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Philippines reaps $15M for investment in coco trade



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NEW YORK—President Benigno Aquino III on Monday received an unexpected $15-million investment pledge in the Philippine coconut industry in the next four years following meetings with business groups, officials said.
A stream of American executives called on Mr. Aquino in his hotel, expressing enthusiasm in his efforts to create a new business environment and offering to expand investments in the country, according to Communications Secretary Ricky Carandang.
Among the callers were representatives of the US giant Pepsi Corporation, the US beverage company Vita Coco and its local affiliate Fiesta Coco Equity, and outsourcing firms Convergys and EXL Services.
Carandang said that the President was in “good spirits” after the beverage company executives told him about the huge global market for coconut water and its touted medicinal values for the health-conscious consumers.
“These companies want to source the demand for coconut water from the Philippines. So this is a big opportunity for our coconut industry and for our farmers,” Carandang said.
PepsiCo did not say how much it plans to invest in the country but it was serious in its plan to expand its coconut harvesting operations, he said.
Coconut rebirth
Vita and Fiesta officials told Mr. Aquino they planned to invest $15 million over the next four years not only to harvest coconut water but also in planting more coconut trees, Carandang said.
“There’s a lot of room to bring rebirth to the industry in general,” Vita CEO Michael Kirben told reporters later.
“We expressed a lot of interest in the planting of coconut trees to revive the coconut industry because we noticed that a lot of the trees are senile,” said  Fiesta president Romeo Chan.
Jeffrey Fox, president and CEO of Convergys Corp., said that he confirmed to Mr. Aquino his company’s “long-term commitment to invest in the Philippines.”
Bill Bloom, executive vice president of EXL Services, whose clients include Global 1000 companies, said his firm had chosen the Philippines as one of its “model centers.”
“That would include work that is typically provided to physicians, nurses or lawyers or accountants and we’re building models such that we can offer those services to our clients here in the US from our centers in the Philippines,” Bloom said.
Credit upgrade
Carandang also said the economic team was seeking a meeting with the credit rating agencies to “make a case that our fiscal management right now probably deserves a second look as far as ratings are concerned.”
Some of the economic managers will stay behind after the President departs on Wednesday to work for a review of the country’s sovereign credit rating that was believed to be underrated by two to three notches, he said.
In a speech before the US Chamber of Commerce, US-Asean Business Council and Philippine-American Chambers of Commerce at the Peninsula hotel, Mr. Aquino said there was “much reason to be optimistic” about the country’s future.
“Government’s fiscal management has improved to the point where we have been able to increase spending in vital social services and national defense without raising taxes this year,” he said.
Prudent spending and vigilance against corruption have resulted in savings which have been channeled toeducation, health and poverty alleviation, the President said.
4 ratings upgrade
This prudent spending has prompted government critics to “accuse us of not spending the public funds enough,” Mr. Aquino said, referring to fears that this policy could result in the government failing to meet its growth target this year.
“We are now seeing the results of a government working doubly hard, not just to improve the overall business environment but more importantly to advance the lives of its people,” the President said.
He said that since he took office, the country had gotten four positive rating actions in over a little more than a year, a big difference from the one upgrade and six downgrades during the almost 10 years of the previous Arroyo presidency.
The Philippines was ranked 75th in the World Economic Forum’s 2011-2012 Competitiveness report which Mr. Aquino said was “a full ten notches above our ranking in the previous report.”
He said that his administration is committed to level the playing field as it rebuilds its institutions, “especially those crucial to my pledge of curbing corruption.”
On Wednesday, Mr. Aquino is scheduled to address the joint meeting of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Washington, where he will outline his administration’s development agenda. With a report from Michelle V. Remo

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Government to study Samar sardines




THE government will undertake a three-year study on sardines in Samar area after noting that Samar seas have been drawing sardines catchers as a result of planned annual fishing moratorium in Sulu Sea.
In a copy of a management plan obtained by Leyte Samar Daily Express, the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) said the project will need P1.47 million from 2012 to 2014.
"Sardines resource is abundant in Northern Samar and Samar. We need to design sustainable capture fisheries development strategies in the implementation of appropriate management plan. This can be done through collection of fisheries data in the area," said BFAR Regional Director Juan Albaladejo.
Initial reports reaching the BFAR regional office revealed that during harvest season, up to 3,000 fishing boats from different parts of the country operate in the area.
Sardines catching have been concentrated in San Bernardino Strait, which separates Samar from Luzon.
The fisheries bureau is also coordinating with their counterparts in Bicol region in undertaking a study.
"That's the new area for sardines. Harvest season in the area is longer. It starts on July and ends on October. We want to protect this area for sustainable fishing," Albaladejo said.
The BFAR is also lobbying to put up ice plant in San Vicente, Northern Samar for local small-scale sardine catchers to address high volume of spoilage.
"We have been observing that more catchers have been coming to San Bernardino Strait in the past five years. Regulations imposed in Sulu Sea have prompted processors to find alternative areas," Albaladejo said.
BFAR earlier announced the implementation of an annual 90-day fishing ban in the Sulu Sea to recover from overfishing. The regional office in Tacloban City noted that fishing fleets in the region have surpassed the optimum catch rate for sardines, threatening fish stocks in that sea.
The study in Samar sea will include conduct of onboard fishing observation on major fishing gears to determine seasonality, maturity stages, length frequency; data gathering on municipal and commercial capture fisheries and other fishery related industries such as marketing of fish, processing, estimate population of fishers, fish workers, processors, and operators.
The government will determine the actual number of fishing boats operating within Samar and Northern Samar for both municipal and commercial sectors.
They will also identify the types of fishing gears operating in the area; classify the composition, distribution, and abundance of major species caught within the specified areas; and integrate results of assessment to the Sardine Management Plan. (Leyte Samar Daily Express)