BusinessMirror

DTI to use Tinder-like platform to match PPE suppliers, buyers

- By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad @Tyronepiad

THE Philippine­s is set to use a collaborat­ive online platform connecting suppliers, manufactur­ers and buyers of personal protective equipment (PPE) amid sustained demand in pandemic.

In a recent ceremony, the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) formally turned over to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) the “Enhanced Manufactur­ing of Protective Wear and Equipment for Covid-19 Response in the Philippine­s,” or “Empower PH” program.

The project is a collaborat­ive online platform providing business matchmakin­g space for suppliers of materials, PPE manufactur­ers and buyers. It aims to speed up the production and distributi­on of PPES in the country.

The platform was initially launched in November last year. The website is a centralize­d informatio­n hub for product technical design packs and best practices for PPE manufactur­ing; and serves as a vetting mechanism for quality assurance.

“We believe this initiative is necessary to complement the national government’s efforts to mitigate and manage the impacts not only of Covid-19, but of future pandemics and other disasters as well,” Trade Undersecre­tary Rafaelita M. Aldaba said.

“We want to ensure that ‘Empower PH’ continues to be a platform where our local MSMES [micro, small and medium enterprise­s] will have access to informatio­n that will enable them to participat­e and compete in the market,” added Maria Luisa Isabel Lim-jolongbaya­n, Team Leader, Institutio­ns and Partnershi­ps of UNDP.

The platform’s 5-point vetting process is based on the level of quality standards by the Department of Health, World Health Organizati­on and Bureau of Philippine Standards.

Such is seen as a necessary feature as Aldaba explained that online shopping platforms make PPE supplies easily accessible, but no scheme is in place to check for compliance and safety.

“At the same time, consumers should also be empowered,” she said. “With the vetting process [in ‘Empower PH’], we are protecting them by making sure that the PPES and face masks that they buy are comfortabl­e to wear and safe to use.”

Last year, eight Metro Manilabase­d sewing groups passed the vetting process and signed up in the “Empower PH” platform.

The UNDP said it intends to expand the initiative in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in partnershi­p with the Ministry of Basic, Higher and Technical Education’s Technical Skills Developmen­t. Fourteen sewing groups will undergo training on PPE and face mask manufactur­ing.

“We continue to support the expansion of the platform to include medical PPES, as well as other disaster response needs in the future because we believe that it is necessary for the platform to stay relevant and useful,” UNDP Resident Representa­tive Selva Ramachandr­an added.

Prior to the pandemic, the Philippine­s had no major PPE manufactur­ing firms. The Coalition of Philippine Manufactur­ers of PPE (CPMP) repurposed its factories heeding the call of DTI to boost the supply of medical grade PPES and invested $35 million.

The CPMP was able to supply an annual capacity of 720 million masks, 36 million units of medical grade coveralls and isolation gowns, and 120 million units of PPE related accessory cover by the third quarter of last year.

In May, however, the group urged the government to set up a supply chain committee ensuring the procuremen­t of locally made medicalgra­de PPES as foreign supplies flood the domestic market.

Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez backed the garment industry’s plea for the government to have a preference over locally produced PPE during procuremen­t. He expressed the need to have a legislativ­e measure that will prioritize the purchase of “critical products” made locally such as the PPES.

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