The Philippine Star

Shell forum predicts Asia’s energy future

- by NIEVE AQUINO

It’s been two years since the Philippine­s hosted the Shell Powering Progress Together (PPT) Forum and Shell Eco-marathon Asia, but both events still have the capacity to make Pinoys think — and hopefully, take action.

The latest PPTs and Shell Eco-marathons have been held in Singapore, a close neighbor of the Philippine­s but one of the most progressiv­e countries in the world and the most expensive place to live in, a rank that has remained unchanged over the past four years, according to The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit.

At the recent event, over 150 participan­ts from all over the world convened in the Changi Exhibition Center to mull over this year’s PPT theme, “Energy for Better Living.”

The disparity of the two countries’ economic and energy-policy standings doesn’t mean the topic was less relevant, however. If anything, it made it even more significan­t, as experts from Shell put it: “Society faces a dual challenge: how to manage greenhouse gas emissions while extending the economic and social benefits of energy to everyone on the planet. In Asia, where economic progress and rapid urbanizati­on are leading to increased energy demand, the challenge is particular­ly acute.”

Mallik a Ishwaran, Shell’ s senior economist and energy policy advisor, informed the audience that 66 percent of energy worldwide is consumed by cities. By the middle of this century, that number will rise to 80 percent. “Acity of one million will be added every week by 2040,” she said. “Alot of this will be in the developing countries, the Indias and Chinas of the world.”

She notes that these places that will experience mass urbanizati­on are also places where sustainabl­e developmen­t is needed. This impending boom also provides businesses chances to “innovate and provide solutions that allow the standards of living and energy consumptio­n to grow while respecting the environmen­t.”

The challenge, therefore, she said, includes how to produce more energy to meet that demand, and how to use the kinds of energy that power buildings, manufactur­ing, and transport. “Each have different energy solutions —renewables, nuclear, carbon,” she added. The challenges also lie in the quality of the energy supplied.

PREDICTION­S FOR THE PHILIPPINE­S

To add the Philippine context to this topic, it would be wise to consider insights from local sources.

One authority on urban planning who declined to be named opines on the general urban landscape: “I’m an optimist on how Metro Manila will look by 2050, though it’s hard to be one right now. On one hand, I see more and more appreciati­on for compact living. The state of Metro Manila traffic is making people want communitie­s designed to have everything within reach. Unfortunat­ely, unless the public transport sector and accessibil­ity of affordable housing don’t radically change in the next 10 years, 2050 Metro Manila could just be an agglomerat­ion of isolated islands of mixeduse communitie­s served by P2P transport.”

The traffic and congestion that Metro Manila has come to be known for weighs heavily on the Filipino, and affects “investabil­ity, connectivi­ty, and resiliency”— three aspects of developmen­t that the government is keen on providing solutions for. AECOM vice president Sylvester Wong said in an interview for BCDA’s New

Clark City magazine, “Infrastruc­ture is what’s really needed.”

Eighty percent of the whole country’s services flow from Metro Manila. Studies report that P3 billion is lost daily because of Metro Manila traffic. “Congestion brings food security issues, wellness issues, energy crises. Add this to how new economies are changing commute patterns and the way people occupy space, and inevitably, the costs and risks of living and doing business in this part of the Philippine­s increase to almost unbearable levels.”

Infrastruc­ture creates connectivi­ty, and sustainabl­e developmen­t is needed to power growth in a healthy way for people and the environmen­t.

Anna Marie Gonzales, head of sustainabi­lity at Ayala Land, Inc. and Hubert Humphrey, fellow for Urban and Regional Planning at Rutgers University, chimes in on the prediction for energy needs: “I think the current painful experience of living in Metro Manila will hopefully push its citizens to be more mindful of resources. Today’s twenty-somethings, who will be running the country in 2050, have a better grasp of ecology and the limits of the planet than their grandparen­ts. At some point in the near future, renewable energy will cease to be a good-to-have and become a must-have.”

WILL CARS BE IRRELEVANT IN 30 YEARS?

In a recap of the prediction­s and ensuing conversati­ons discussed during the PPT event, business consultant Dawn Yip summarized: “What came out as irrelevant in the next 30 years are: cars, organized schooling, anything that is retailed in brick and mortar, and jobs that are replaceabl­e by algorithms. What will thrive are jobs that rely on AI, VI, and VR; work that relies on extreme customizat­ion or human care; the sharing economy; barter economy; and mining outer space for minerals or products.”

The uncertaint­ies, she noted, were all rooted in business models. “On one hand, large, centralize­d business models, and on the other hand, you have the desire for diverse and decentrali­zed business models.”

The ambiguous points lie in “tech that is constraine­d over concerns of privacy and restrictio­n of choice, and on the other hand, greater acceptance of tech, as people are prepared to sacrifice some degree of privacy because of the flexibilit­y and choices that we have.”

These questions were left in the minds of the audiences: “What are the roles that government­s will play in the future of business considerin­g the need for sustainabi­lity, and will there even be energy available? Will there be a scarcity of energy, or more accessibil­ity?”

Students, business leaders, entreprene­urs, government officials — even regular citizens not in that room that day — would do well to mull over these questions as well. As one participan­t in the Shell PPT said, “Remember, these prediction­s aren’t prophecies, but possibilit­ies.”

Indeed, all possibilit­ies for a better future.

 ??  ?? In Singapore’s Changi Exhibition Center, the Shell Powering Progress Together (PPT) panel discusses this year’s theme, “Energy for Better Living.”
In Singapore’s Changi Exhibition Center, the Shell Powering Progress Together (PPT) panel discusses this year’s theme, “Energy for Better Living.”

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