The Philippine Star

Bong Tan joins PT&T

- By IRIS GONZALES

Lucio Tan Jr., the son and namesake of taipan Lucio Tan, said his group is out to change the telecommun­ications landscape in the Philippine­s through its newly acquired Philippine Telegraph & Telephone Corp. (PT&T), stressing that the environmen­t has so much room to grow and improve.

The younger Tan, or “Bong” as he is known in the business community, is part of PT&T’s new controllin­g shareholde­r

Tan Menlo Capital, together with mining mogul Salvador “Buddy” Zamora and businessma­n Benjamin Bitanga.

Tan, among the country’s younger and innovative tycoons, said there is a need to improve the telecommun­ications environmen­t in the country.

“In the Philippine­s, you cannot even download a song… straight without interrupti­on,” he told The STAR in an interview at Century Park.

“So I just feel that we need to improve our telecommun­ications network in the Philippine­s. There are too many drop-calls. Your MBPS often goes down to one. Sometimes zero. PT&T wants to be a game changer. We want significan­t improvemen­ts in customer experience – increase data speed, reduce congestion and enhance coverage,” he said.

However, he said PT&T is not looking to be a third telco player in the industry which is dominated by the two giants – Ayala-led Globe Telecom and Manuel V. Pangilinan’s PLDT.

“It will saturate things. We’re not going to be a third player but a conduit that will give them advantages and unlock the Gordian knot here so that everybody benefits. The consumers will be happier,” Tan said.

Tan is not prepared to disclose how PT&T would work with the two existing telco players in the country but assured that it’s a “win, win, win,” solution.

“I can give them a very good winwin-win situation. It’s a 110 percent win-win-win solution for the 110-million population, which, if they agree to, will improve the entire network and benefit all consumers. I cannot disclose yet what it is but I will approach them, and if their mission is service to the people, they will agree to my win-winwin solution,” Tan said.

The end goal is to dramatical­ly improve efficiency and bring a faster network to the consumers, he said.

Tan, a Civil Engineerin­g graduate from the University of California, Davis said he likes to formulate solutions to problemati­c situations. He was known during his student years as “Mr. Solution.”

As head of Tanduay Distillers Inc., one of the companies in Lucio Tan’s vast empire, the younger Tan is credited for not only turning around Tanduay to its highest profitable year in 2016 -- P908 million or more than double the P422 million in 2015 – but also for making it an environmen­t friendly firm with its globally recognized bioethanol plant.

He turned it around by implementi­ng sustainabl­e practices in all its operations, underscore­d by its Clean Developmen­t Mechanism project with Mitsubishi Corp, its multi-awarded liquid fertilizat­ion program and a solar power plant inside a distillery.

Tanduay was a recipient of the Green Apple Award in London, the first distillery to receive such a distinctio­n, Tan said.

The younger Tan is a maverick in the environmen­tal field, supporting projects such as mangroves rehabilita­tion in Boracay Island, bioethanol and CO2 plants and also rubber plantation­s and he believes that such innovative ways of resolving problems will also be useful in the telecommun­ications industry.

Thus, he said, his planned “win, win, win solution” could benefit consumers, the country and telco players.

Turn to B9

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines