Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Business VIPs in the VIP

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Remarkably admirable is this move by three of the country’s biggest conglomera­tes — that are likewise among the biggest Philippine energy players — to join forces with the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources and the Department of Energy and pour resources to safeguard the Verde Island Passage (VIP), which is regarded by marine biology experts as the “center of the center of marine shore fish biodiversi­ty.”

Sealed last 7 May was a Memorandum of Understand­ing among the DENR, DOE, Metro Pacific Investment Corporatio­n (MPIC), San Miguel Corp. (SMC), and Aboitiz Equity Ventures (AEV) whose chairman, Sabin Aboitiz, is the lead convenor and lead for the infrastruc­ture sector in the government’s Private Sector Advisory Council (PSAC).

It should be noted that one of the private sector partners in this endeavor, SMC, had been connected to the sinking off Naujan town, Oriental Mindoro of an oil tanker carrying some 900,000 liters of industrial oil in February last year.

That led to a massive oil spill that reached the coasts of provinces around Verde Island Passage, including Verde Island itself — an islet comprised of six villages in Batangas City, which is at the heart of the world’s most critical marine biodiversi­ty center. Covering an area of over 1.4-million hectares spanning Batangas, Oriental and Occidental Mindoro, Romblon and Marinduque provinces, the VIP is one of the Philippine­s’ busiest shipping

corridors; in fishing alone, it yields some P1 billion a year. The importance of the VIP cannot be stressed enough, and the MOU between the government and the business conglomera­tes was hailed by DENR Secretary Ma. Antonia Yulo Loyzaga as a “historic initiative” underscori­ng “the collective commitment to environmen­tal preservati­on” in the country.

Quite a feat for the government, through the DENR and DOE, to lasso three big guns in Philippine business and industry to commit not only resources but also actively participat­e in efforts to safeguard the VIP. And, while no mention of a specific amount has yet been divulged, massive resources indeed shall this undertakin­g need.

Still and all, not a few, particular­ly among

green advocates, eye the three conglomera­tes in VIP protection and preservati­on efforts with some cynicism.

For instance, Gerry Arances, executive director of the non-government Center for Energy, Ecology and Developmen­t and co-convenor of Protect VIP, a network of civil society, youth, and Church-based groups committed to VIP preservati­on, welcomes the effort to preserve the VIP which provides livelihood and sustenance for millions of Filipinos.

However, he said his group could not help but raise questions about the sincerity of the MOU between the DENR and the tycoons, “considerin­g that their fossil gas business is one of the worst risks confrontin­g the VIP.”

The big business VIP stewards, through companies they control, namely, Meralco PowerGen Corp., Aboitiz Power Corp. and San Miguel Global Power Holdings Corp., had inked in early March a gargantuan $3.3-billion joint deal to build the country’s first, most expansive liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility in Batangas.

SMC’s Ang stated that the “preservati­on of marine resources (in the VIP) is crucial not just for today but for future generation­s.”

MPIC’s Pangilinan stressed that “in the quest to provide clean, reliable and affordable energy to our people, we must make sure that we also pay attention to safeguardi­ng the environmen­t and the communitie­s, and uplift the welfare of the communitie­s, in this case, the people who are dependent on the Verde Island Passage for their livelihood.”

Considerin­g that the three tycoons’ massive facility will soon join four of seven proposed LNG terminals, five of six existing fossil gas facilities, and nine of 39 gas power plants being proposed in the country in Batangas province, we can only hope that they could come to an understand­ing with those who fear for the VIP and allay their anxieties over potential threats posed by big business on the marine corridor’s delicate ecosystem.

“Covering an area of over 1.4-million hectares spanning Batangas, Oriental and Occidental Mindoro, Romblon and Marinduque, the VIP is one of the Philippine­s’ busiest shipping corridors; in fishing alone, it yields some P1 billion a year. “Not

a few, particular­ly among green advocates, eye the three conglomera­tes in VIP protection and preservati­on efforts with some cynicism.

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