PRESIDENT Bongbong Marcos Jr secured nearly $8.5 billion worth of investment pledges from his state visit to Indonesia, according to Press Secretary Trixie Angeles.
She said some $8.484 billion worth of memorandum of understanding and
letters of intent were signed at the Jakarta Business Roundtable Meeting and among
them is US$822 million in investments in textiles, garments, renewable energy,
satellite gateway, wire global technology, and agrifood.
Angeles said the President’s trip also yielded US$7 billion in
infrastructure for unsolicited private-public partnerships such as a C-5
four-level elevated expressway; and a US$662-million trade value for the supply
of coal and fertilizer was also signed.
She said these deals will generate at least 7,000 new jobs.
Marcos told reporters in Jakarta that business leaders from a wide range
of sectors were very enthusiastic about doing business in the
Philippines. He said Indonesian business people have not been able to come
to the Philippines due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
“So sabi ko nagbago na ‘yan. So come to the Philippines. So they all
committed naman to… Many of them are already actually involved in the
Philippines. So sabi nila palalakihin nila ‘yung kanilang involvement. Gusto
nila mag-expand,” he said.
Singapore
Marcos then flew to Singapore for another state visit and met with President Halimah Yacob and Prime
Minister Lee Hsien Loong at the Presidential Palace.
After the bilateral meetings, Marcos
and Lee witnessed the signing of several memoranda of understanding aimed at
enhancing cooperation between the two countries in various areas. Among those
inked were the memorandum of understanding between the Department of
Information and Communications Technology and the Ministry of Communications
and Information of Singapore in the field of digital cooperation.
Marcos was able to convinced
Singapore-based businessmen to invest in the Philippines with a total of US$
6.54 billion worth of foreign direct investments. He encouraged businesses to
seize the opportunities in the country and invited strategic investors from the
international community to take part in the Philippines’ economic resurgence,
which is grounded on a favorable investment policy environment, sound
macro-economic fundamentals, and a strong and decisive economic team.
“We are presently on a steady
path to a strong recovery from the pandemic and a robust economic expansion. In
the next few years, our economy is expected to outperform our regional peers.
My administration is committed to establishing an even more competitive
business climate conducive to high-value investments,” he told foreign business
leaders.
Topping the list of Singaporean
investments to the Philippines is electronic tricycles valued at US$5 billion.
This investment in the transportation sector is seen to lessen air pollution
emitted by an estimated 3.5 million tricycles nationwide.
The next top Singaporean
investment is in renewable energy, specifically the new technology of floating
solar valued at US$1.2 billion. And the setting up of in-country Data Center
valued at US$200million. This is expected to employ Filipinos especially in the
IT (Information Technology) and creative industry.
Singaporean businessmen also
expressed interest on the so-called “Blue Economy” where they are expected to
invest from US$10 million to US$100 million in areas such as marine renewable
energy, water production, desalination, electric boats as well as aquaculture.
Also inked was the Joint
Communiqué between the Department of Migrant Workers and the Ministry of Health
of Singapore on the recruitment of Filipino healthcare workers.
There was also an exchange of
four memoranda of understanding which include the Memorandum of Understanding
on Cooperation in Personal Data Protection between the National Privacy
Commission of the Philippines and the Personal Data Protection Commission of
Singapore, and the memorandum of understanding between the Bases Conversion and
Development Authority and Enterprise Singapore, which seeks to enhance
collaboration on business opportunities on the development of New Clark City.
A memorandum of understanding
between the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System and the Public
Utilities Board of Singapore on water collaboration was also signed. There were
also arrangements between the Singapore Armed Forces and Armed Forces of the
Philippines concerning the assignment of a team to the Regional
Counterterrorism Information Facility in Singapore.
Angeles said Singapore Dendrobium
orchid species was also named Marcos and First Lady Louise Marcos, signifying
the strong diplomatic relations between the Philippines and Singapore. The new
orchid variety was named Dendrobium Ferdinand Louise Marcos, after Marcos and
the first lady arrived at the Singapore Botanic Garden.
The Philippine leader and the
first lady also had a brief tour of the garden.
Whang Lay Keng, the curator of
the Singapore Botanic Garden, said the orchid naming shows the close diplomatic
ties between the two countries, adding that the garden will continue to grow
and propagate the variety.
Dendrobium Ferdinand Louise
Marcos is a robust and free-flowering orchid hybrid.
The botanic facility named orchid
varieties after Filipino leaders and VIPs in the past, among them was former
first lady Imelda Romualdez Marcos, the President’s mother. The late President
Corazon Aquino and former President Rodrigo Duterte were also given similar
recognition. (OPS, The Mindanao Examiner)
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