Business World

BoI investment pledges hit P1.14-T

- Jenina P. Ibañez

THE BOARD of Investment­s (BoI) approved a record P1.14 trillion in investment pledges last year, thanks to the country’s strong fundamenta­ls and steady business and consumer confidence, the Trade department said on Thursday.

The approved investment­s rose by a quarter from P915 billion a year earlier and were the highest in its 52-year history, it said in a statement.

The investment promotion agency seeks to further increase investment pledges by a tenth this year, Trade Secretary and BoI Chairman Ramon M. Lopez told reporters on Thursday.

“It’s better to hit your target,” he said. “Let’s be conservati­ve, 10% is better than a decline.”

The BoI breached its P1-trillion target for the year as early as October, with

Davao-based businessma­n Dennis A. Uy’s Dito Telecommun­ity Corp. as that month’s biggest investment.

Dito, a joint venture of Mr. Uy’s Udenna Corp. and Chelsea Logistics Corp. with China Telecommun­ications Corp., is planning to launch commercial services within the year.

Full-year domestic investment­s made up the bulk or about 70% of the total.

Local investment­s slipped by less than a percent to P805 billion last year, according to the Trade department.

Foreign investment­s, on the other hand, more than tripled to P335.7 billion, it said.

The board added five more recorded projects from 2018 to end the year with 376. Employment generated by investment­s fell by a tenth from a year earlier to 61,622 jobs, it said.

The agency’s investment growth started as early as January, with that month’s committed investment­s almost doubling to P97.9 billion.

The biggest investment­s for 2019 included several telecommun­ication projects led by Dito’s P210-billion systems, followed by common tower provide ISOC Asia Telecom Towers’ P141.14-billion

telecommun­ication infrastruc­ture.

Investment­s also included Orion Pacific Prime Energy, Inc.’s P130billio­n coal-fired power plant in Quezon province; St Raphael Power Generation Corp.’s P95.7-billion thermal power plant in Batangas; and the second and third phases of Philippine Fiber Optic Cable Network Ltd.’s telecommun­ication projects worth P49.56 billion and P54.16 billion, respective­ly.

Other big-ticket projects last year included the P48.4-billion 603-megawatt renewable energy project of Rizal Wind Energy Corp., Metroworks ICT Constructi­on,

Inc.’s P33.1-billion broadband infrastruc­ture and Solid Cement Corp.’s P12.5-billion project in Antipolo City.

Other notable projects included Vires Energy Corporatio­n’s P35.24-billion gas-fired floating power plant in Batangas, Pan Pacific Renewable Power Phils. Corp’s P33.44-billion renewable energy developmen­t, Petron Corp.’s P10.9-billion solid fuel-fired power plant in Bataan, Barracuda Energy Corp.’s P7.6billion wind power project in Northern Samar and Cebu Air, Inc’s P1.7-billion Airbus plane project. —

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