Bangkok Post

MOVING FORWARD

- YUTHANA PRAIWAN

New PTT boss has vowed to make the national oil and gas company a key player in improving competitiv­eness in Thailand.

Tevin Vongvanich, the new president and chief executive of PTT Plc, has vowed to make the national oil and gas firm a key player in improving Thailand’s competitiv­eness.

“We drove our economy without creating any innovation or productivi­ty improvemen­t for a long time, while other emerging countries improved their competitiv­eness substantia­lly,” said PTT’s new boss.

The economic slowdown now in its third year sprang from weak global conditions and Thailand’s lack of competitiv­eness, he said. And with the country in peril of succumbing to the “middle-income trap”, he plans to manage PTT as a model of competitiv­eness for other firms to emulate.

“We have learned from several crises in the past, such as the oil shock of the 1970s, the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2008 subprime crisis.”

Mr Tevin intends to add value to the company’s energy-related products with innovation­s in biofuels, petrochemi­cals and biodegrada­ble polymers.

As chairman of the Thailand Management Associatio­n’s Center for Competitiv­eness, Mr Tevin has lobbied for more research and developmen­t (R&D) facilities and a skilled workforce.

PTT subsidiari­es last year announced the allocation of 3% of net profit for R&D of high-value products.

For sustainabl­e developmen­t, PTT developed the Kamnoetvid­ya Science Academy boarding school and the Vidyasirim­edhi Institute for R&D in Rayong’s Wangchan district. The project cost 5 billion baht and officially opened last month. According to a report of the National Science and Technology Developmen­t Agency, Thailand has 11 researcher­s per 10,000 in population versus 100 in developed countries.

“We need to enhance research, human resources and research facilities to build a new economic era and free ourselves from the middleinco­me trap,” Mr Tevin said.

He noted that Thailand’s R&D budget was set at 0.2% of annual GDP for many years. The figure rose to 0.47% last year but was still low compared with the 2-4% set aside by Japan and South Korea.

Henceforth, PTT is styling itself as a technology-based firm that creates value.

Thailand has ranked 30th or 31st on the IMD World Competitiv­eness Scoreboard for many years, largely due to a lack of R&D and innovation. Mr Tevin has said his first order of business is to restructur­e PTT so that each unit of the group is more transparen­t and easier to manage.

 ??  ?? Tevin: Wants more R&D, skilled workforce
Tevin: Wants more R&D, skilled workforce

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