Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Green metal is gold of the future

During his conference call with US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo before the ministeria­l meeting of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity held last week

- BY RAFFY AYENG @tribunephl_raf

With the shift to clean energy gaining traction, green metals are getting the spotlight. These green metals, including copper, lithium, tin, and zinc, are gaining more attention, and rightfully so.

Green metals have a long-term tailwind forecast, critical in producing clean energy, like batteries and solar panels.

“In addition, these green metals can be used for downstream industries such as E.V. battery manufactur­ing, wiring harness production, hyper-scale data centers, and renewable energy projects,” Trade Secretary Alfredo Pascual told US businessme­n.

During his conference call with US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo before the ministeria­l meeting of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity held last week, Pascual also pitched investment­s that would increase the country’s participat­ion in value chains of high-value critical products.

He also acknowledg­ed the efforts of the US, thru Secretary Raimondo, to facilitate recent US Trade and Developmen­t Agency grants, which he noted can be replicated and expanded through the IPEF.

It can be recalled that during the visit of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to the country last August, he announced a grant for a feasibilit­y study on the Philippine­s’ first offshore wind farm and cited this as indicative of US’ vision for the IPEF.

Apart from this, another grant that will soon be announced involves processing nickel ore through a partnershi­p with an American company that owns patents in the manufactur­e of batteries.

The US firm supplies US military and critical industries, including hyper-scale data centers, renewable energy projects, and long-haul trucking companies.

Upskilling support

Meanwhile, Secretary Pascual welcomed Raimondo’s IPEF upskilling initiative in which 14 of the largest US digital companies, such as Apple, American Towers and Amazon, will provide digital skills training to seven million women and girls in less-developed IPEF parties, including the Philippine­s.

The Philippine­s also expressed interest in mechanisms that lessen informatio­n asymmetrie­s by promoting commercial­ly oriented knowledge-sharing platforms to develop MSME-inclined ecosystems using the carbon credit market and green financing instrument­s. The country likewise supports “green lanes” and other investment facilitati­on vehicles for existing and future grants dedicated to establishi­ng cross-border private joint venture partnershi­ps in the region.

“I laud Secretary Raimondo and (US Trade Representa­tive) Ambassador Katherine Tai’s effective and innovative design of the Los Angeles IPEF Ministeria­l Meeting. The program allowed parties to have a meaningful exchange of ideas toward delivering an IPEF that will not only be a framework for defining regional trade and investment relations, but equally important, will be an effective platform for undertakin­g innovative modes of regional industrial collaborat­ion,” Secretary Pascual said.

At the meeting, the ministers resolved to establish a “Benefits Workstream” in each IPEF Pillars of Trade, Supply Chains, Clean Economy and Fair Economy.

They provided broad guidance on the negotiatin­g objectives of partner countries in achieving an inclusive and high-standard economic regional framework. In recognizin­g different levels of developmen­t and individual financial capabiliti­es, IPEF is committed to ensuring mutually beneficial outcomes and boosting trade and investment opportunit­ies for people and markets within the region.

Thus, partner countries: under the Trade Pillar, commit to shared objectives on labor, environmen­t, digital economy, agricultur­e, transparen­cy and good regulatory practices, competitio­n policy, trade facilitati­on, inclusivit­y, and technical assistance and economic cooperatio­n.

Under the Supply Chains Pillar, countries underscore the commitment toward resilient, robust, diverse, and well-integrated supply chains through measures that build on principles of cooperatio­n, crisis response, and mitigation of disruption­s and vulnerabil­ities.

For the part of the Clean Economy Pillar, nations seek to accelerate efforts addressing collective energy and infrastruc­ture needs in the region, including through initiative­s that support greenhouse gas emissions mitigation, enhanced energy security, and climate resilience and adaptation.

While in terms of the Fair Economy Pillar, partner countries envision commitment­s that effectivel­y implement and accelerate progress on tax initiative­s and anti-corruption measures, guided by applicable internatio­nal standards and convention­s and supported by enhanced cooperatio­n such as capacity building and innovative implementa­tion approaches.

Thus, partner countries: under the Trade Pillar, commit to shared objectives on labor, environmen­t, digital economy, agricultur­e, transparen­cy and good regulatory practices.

Such assistance may be in the form of grants, subsidies, or procuremen­t opportunit­ies that support or complement industry developmen­t initiative­s of developing partner countries in the IPEF. By pursuing and utilizing mechanisms such as these, partners are further incentiviz­ed to work collective­ly to build and sustain robust investment environmen­ts that contribute to increased economic opportunit­ies and competitiv­eness in the Indo-Pacific.

Apart from India and the U.S., IPEF partners include Australia, Brunei, Fiji, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Together with other IPEF partners, the Philippine­s endorsed the ministeria­l statements on Trade, Supply Chains, Clean Economy, and Fair Economy upon the conclusion of the first official in-person Ministeria­l Meeting on 10 September 2022.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE DTI ?? TRADE Secretary Alfredo Pascual (center) graces the ASEAN Economic Ministers Business Advisory Council Consultati­on on Thursday, saying he welcomes the efforts of the private sector in supporting economic growth and developmen­t in the region. Such efforts include the private sector’s role in supporting the region’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change, as well as the call for investment­s in renewable energy.
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE DTI TRADE Secretary Alfredo Pascual (center) graces the ASEAN Economic Ministers Business Advisory Council Consultati­on on Thursday, saying he welcomes the efforts of the private sector in supporting economic growth and developmen­t in the region. Such efforts include the private sector’s role in supporting the region’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change, as well as the call for investment­s in renewable energy.

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