HAINAN, China–President Rodrigo Duterte arrived at the Qionghai Boao Airport on Monday, April 9, aboard a chartered Philippine Airlines flight.

The President’s plane touched down at the Qionghai Boao Airport at 5:55 pm.

Upon arrival at the airport, the President was welcomed by Philippine Ambassador to China Jose Santiago Sta. Romana, Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Zhao Jianhua and Boao local officials.

Among those accompanying the President were Special Assistant to the President Christopher “Bong” Go, Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio, Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano, NEDA Director General Ernesto Pernia, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, Communications Secretary Martin Andanar, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi, and DOST Secretary Fortunato dela Peña, among others.

The President then proceeded to the Golden Coast Hotel at 6:36 pm. He was received by Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Manuel Teehankee and officials and staff of the Philippine Embassy in China.

Shortly upon his arrival, President Duterte received former President Gloria Macapagal – Arroyo in a courtesy call.

The former President said she will be watching President Duterte when he conducts his speech at the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA).

Former President Arroyo, on the other hand, is attending the BFA at the invitation of the Boao Secretariat.

among those present during the courtesy call were Special Assistant to the President Christopher “Bong” Go, and Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio.

In a media interview earlier in the day, Philippine Ambassador to China Jose Santiago Sta. Romana said former President Arroyo might take the position of former President Ramos at the BFA Board.

“I think she is running for a Board seat and she could take the position of former President Ramos. So we’ll still have a Philippine representation in the Boao Secretariat, in the Boao Board if these things materialize,” Sta. Romana had said.

President Duterte is here in China for his attendance to the Boao Forum for Asia, a non-profit organization hosting high-level fora for heads of states, government ministers, business leaders and academic experts to address major challenges confronting the region and the world.

BFA is committed to facilitating economic integration and common development in the Asia-Pacific Region.

Conceptualized in 1998 by former President Fidel Ramos, former Japanese Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa and former Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke, the forum was launched on February 27, 2001 with 26 participating countries. It has since grown to 29 participating countries

PTV NEWS - AB

MANILA — The Department of Science and Technology (DOST) will put up different kinds of innovation centers in the country, DOST Secretary Fortunato Dela Peña told the Philippine News Agency (PNA) on Tuesday.

Dela Peña is part of President Rodrigo Duterte’s delegation to the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference in China on April 8-11.

The DOST chief plans to put up innovation centers for forest products, metal, and fabricated products, as well as a multiproduct innovation center.

Currently, the DOST has 13 food innovation centers (FICs) across the country, and some more will be added, according to Dela Peña.

“They (FICs) have been contributing immensely to the development of new processed food products by MSMEs (micro, small, medium enterprises). We are replicating that in other product sectors,” he said.

The department also has an indigenous yarn innovation center in its Philippine Textile Research Institute (PTRI) located in Bicutan.

Dela Peña mentioned that the DOST had set up the Electronic Products Development Center (EPDC) in DOST Bicutan.

“This will serve our electronics products enterprises, SMEs, and startups. Initially, we only have one EPDC. But if we have resources, we can probably have additional in Visayas and Mindanao,” he told PNA.

The EPDC will operate this year.

Dela Peña said the DOST had partnered with Electronics Industries Association of the Philippines (EIAPI) for the operational management of the EPDC, adding that the agency wants to be more innovative in running this type of innovation facility.

Meanwhile, at least three product innovation centers for processed forest products like bamboo is also among the DOST’s plans.

“We also plan to have a multiproduct innovation center at the Industrial Technology Development Institute (ITDI), where products for flavors, fragrances, and healthcare will be developed,” said Dela Peña.

The ITDI, a DOST-attached agency, has its office in Bicutan.

Another DOST-attached office, the Metals Industry Research and Development Center (MIRDC), is eyed to be an innovation center for metal and fabricated products, according to Dela Peña.

He said most of these centers would be operational by 2019.

JO ANN SABLAD

THE Provincial Cooperative Office (PCO) of Misamis Oriental, together with the Cooperative Development Authority, will be holding a multi-stakeholders forum for small and micro cooperatives in the province on May 10. Around 75 to 100 small and micro cooperatives in Misamis Oriental, including a single cooperative in Bukidnon, will be participating in the multi-stakeholders forum held in the Provincial Training Center, Provincial Capitol Compound. According to Elizalda Palanan, the PCO focal person, the forum is organized to update the cooperatives within the province about the various projects of the different agencies which can assist in the development of the cooperatives. "Kani ato syang gihimo aron mahatagan og kahigayonan ang atong mga small and micro cooperatives nga kahibalo sila unsa'y mga programa sa nagkadaiyang ahensya, especially sa kining mga ayudang pinansyal sa atoang mga cooperatives (We are holding this forum to provide our small and micro cooperatives opportunities through the programs of different agencies, especially in terms of financial assistance)," Palanan said. She added that the event is also to show that the Provincial Government does not only help large cooperatives but also the small and micro coops.

Aside from the coops, several government agencies and non-government organizations will also be attending the forum such as the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, Department of Trade and Industry, Department of Agriculture, Department of Science and Technology, Department of Labor and Employment, Masicap MSME Development Foundation Inc., and Philippine Coconut Authority. Kamelo Javier Akiatan of the PCO, meanwhile, said the event would give opportunities to the members of the different cooperatives to bond together and share their experiences, joys and frustrations in running their businesses. "Cooperatives then will have a new set of perspective and strive to work harder for the development of their cooperative. This will be a great impact to the cooperatives economically as they would see other opportunities to improve their products marketability and enhance their products in both substance, quality and packaging," Akiatan said, adding that it will also increase linkages for future market and increase income with the sale of their products.

Sharie Al-Faiha A. Lubang

The research team with DOST-PCAARRD representatives and technical evaluators during the Inception Meeting on Coconut Genomics Phase 2 held at the Council’s Headquarters. In the photo (foreground, from the left) are UP Diliman Professor Dr. Ma. Anita M. Bautista; UP Los Baños (UPLB) Professor Dr. Antonio C. Laurena; PCAARRD-Crops Research Division Director Dr. Jocelyn E. Eusebio; PCAARRD-Crops Research Division Assistant Director Dr. Edna A. Anit; UPLB Professor Emeritus Dr. Dolores A. Ramirez; Biotech Coalition President and CEO Dr. Benigno D. Peczon. Standing behind are other PCAARRD representatives and research program team from UPD and UPLB, with Ramon L. Rivera, Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) Deputy Administrator for Research Development and Extension (top center) (Image credit: Crops Research Division)

Two spin-off projects on coconut genetic and varietal improvement are expected to boost the country’s coconut industry. 

The two projects kicked off following the success of the Industry Strategic S&T Program (ISP) for Coconut, particularly the use of genomics, genetics, and molecular marker assisted breeding for a competitive and sustainable Philippine Coconut Industry. 

The two projects will be implemented by the National Institute for Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (NIMDB), University of the Philippines Diliman (UPD), and Institute of Plant Breeding, UP Los Baños (IPB-UPLB). 

The Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST-PCAARRD), which prioritizes coconut among other   commodities, funds the projects. 

The first project, “Curation, validation and utilization of coconut transcriptome sequences for gene-based marker development” aims to generate accurate and consistent transcriptomes of seven Philippine coconut varieties and use their sequences for the development of gene-based markers. 

The gene-based markers will be used for coconut genetic and varietal improvement. Coconut breeders are expected to benefit in utilizing these markers to target desired traits such as high nut yield and high coco water quality, among many other characteristics. 

With 20 years of continued research and development, the project hopes that breeders could introduce a range of new coconut varieties to farmers. 

The second project focuses on evaluating a coconut gene expression and its effect on oil biosynthesis. Like the first project, it also pursues higher coconut productivity by validating the expression of a coconut gene in an experimental model system.

The generation of gene-based markers with target traits is expected to boost the competitive edge of the local supply in the international market. This will ultimately help the industry, especially the local farmers, in achieving a more sustainable source of livelihood. 

These two projects were reviewed in an inception meeting held recently at the Council’s headquarters. In attendance were Dr. Dolores A. Ramirez, national scientist, and Dr. Benigno D. Peczon, who both served as technical evaluators as well as Crops Research Division (CRD) staff members led by its Assistant Director Dr. Edna A. Anit.

Maria Eloisa I. Calderon

JOSE Ildefonso U. Rubrico reached for a small box on his desk and opened it to reveal what looked like a miniature model of a car chassis — bare with red, yellow and blue electrical wires sticking out of its belly.

The thing had a pair of eyes and wheel for its legs.

It’s a robot and Mr. Rubrico, an AI (artificial intelligence) scientist previously based in the University of Tokyo, designed it.

“When a child hugs a robot to say goodbye, like it was alive, squeezing it tight — as if it were a real pet — wires and all, you know you’ve done your part,” Mr. Rubrico said during a Feb. 3 interview in his laboratory at the University of the Philippines (UP) in Diliman.

His was a narrative of a Filipino scientist who delivered a lecture before grade school students in the outskirts of Quezon City as part of his new job under the “Balik Scientist” program.

That program by the Philippine government is ambitious, if viewed as equivalent to a repatriation of Filipino scientists who left the country to become immigrants elsewhere and who are sorely needed by an economy that has been reporting stellar performance quarter after quarter but lacking the manufacturing and heavy industries that grease its regional peers China, Thailand and Singapore.

Last month, a bicameral committee of Congress appeared to be a monolith of pro-scientists so that a proposal to turn the Marcos era-authored “Balik Scientist” program into a law that grants more incentives to this cohort of geniuses was nodded through without much drama.

“It [deliberation] was very cordial, nothing very controversial,” Senator Paolo Benigno “Bam” Aquino IV, chairman of the Senate Committee on Science and Technology who made the passage of the bill a keystone of his career, told BusinessWorld.

“Finally, we can institutionalize the program already. By April or May this should be effective already,” he said, referring to the ratification into law that concludes with the President’s signature.

Counted among the incentives are a daily subsistence allowance of $150, economy airfare tickets, duty-free importation of professional instruments and donations, and a research subsidy of up to P2 million for projects under the Department of Science and Technology (DoST).

That kind of package the Philippines offers could mean the Filipino scientist from Silicon Valley, for instance, ideally has made a name for himself enough to forget about the pay cut and return home.

“The requirements for Balik Scientists are kinda steep. Di siya madali maging Balik Scientist (It’s not easy to become a Balik Scientist),” DoST Undersecretary for Research and Development Rowena Cristina L. Guevara said in a February interview in her office at the agency’s headquarters in Bicutan.

Ang tawag namin sa Balik Scientist, Balik Puso (We call them the scientists returning with their heart). They come not because of the payment but because they would like to contribute… So the money, none of them ever brought that up.”

Mr. Rubrico, a doctoral degree holder in engineering from the University of Tokyo who had been toying with robotics for the past 21 years, is one of them.

“We are targeting specific Balik Scientists like Joe Rubrico. He is an expert on AI and we are embarking on a big AI program,” the DoST official pointed out.

Data from the DoST showed the four-decades old program attracted 204 experts between 2007 and 2017, or an average of 20 scientists per year, with a ratio of two males for every female.

More than two-thirds of them, or 143, were from North America, while the rest were accounted for by scientists from Asia (26), Europe (18), Australia (16), and Africa (one).

From 1975 to 2006, the program recorded 307 “engagements” or the number of times a scientist — which could be a repeater — was enlisted.

They specialize in various engineering, chemistry, physics, architecture and medical fields, with recent recruits being petroleum geologists, nuclear chemical and uranium analysts, oceanographic engineers, climate change and earth and space scientists, HIV researchers and robotics engineers.

ADDRESSING RESTRICTIONS
The “Balik Scientist” can be a foreigner.

The bicameral committee-approved “Balik Scientist” measure — yet to be signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte into law — defines the “Balik Scientist” as “a science & technology expert or professional, as certified by the DoST, who is a Filipino citizen or a foreigner of Filipino descent, accorded with benefits and incentives under this Act to undertake science and technology activities along his or her field of expertise…”

With that wording, clearances were squared away: They do not need to get a license from the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC), the agency that says who should practice what profession.

The practice of professions in the fields of engineering, medicine and sciences in the Philippines has been, in the past, limited to Filipino nationals, as dictated by the Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL) that is set through a Malacañang-issued Executive Order usually every two years.

The last time an FINL — the 10th in a series — was issued was on May 29, 2015 when then President Benigno S.C. Aquino III dropped engineering, medicine, chemistry, geology and architecture from the roster, effectively allowing foreigners to practice them here.

That was three years ago so that a new negative list is long overdue.

“The FINL is much broader and we are liberalizing quite a bit of it,” Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said in a telephone interview.

“We also want to liberalize those who require licensure examinations. In a way that’s related, it is supportive of the liberalization of the FINL,” he said, referring to the proposed “Balik Scientist Act” which is one of the priority legislations of the Duterte government.

“The revised FINL, which is going to be the 11th, is up for NEDA board approval.”

The enactment of the “Balik Scientist Act” and the release of an updated FINL will be a dovetailing of two key measures that open up the Philippine economy to more scientists — foreigners included.

But to make them stay in the country for good, there are loose ends that need to be properly tied up.

Scientists under the program have terms of engagement running from 15 days to three years, at best.

Filipinos who opted to become an American, Australian or of any citizenship other than being a Filipino – not dual citizens — can’t be granted permanent jobs here.

“It [Balik Scientist Act] will not address the concern that they will be working here permanently,” Senator Aquino said.

“But this addresses the concern of enticing individuals of Filipino descent to come back and share their expertise with the rest of the country.”

As it is now, the dealings between the Philippine government and the returning scientist under the “Balik Scientist Act” appear to be contractual in nature.

But these scientists generally come more from the academe too — than from industries — and have PhD, something that Philippine universities could benefit from if tapped with farsighted policies.

Several quarters from foreign business chambers have long been seeking changes to the FINL and its backbone, the Philippine Constitution — which among others imposes a 40% foreign ownership limit in educational institutions – saying relaxed rules could give the country a Harvard-like university of sorts.

For now, returning scientists like Mr. Rubrico would have to look beyond the “Balik Scientist” program if they opt for a permanent job here and retire in their homeland. He’s certain to get a university post, but foreign scientists who hope to get a fair shake from Philippine universities won’t feel as secure.

“There is such a thing called ‘Balik PhD’ but only in UP, if you really want to go back to teaching. They are encouraging PhDs to come back to the country and teach,” Mr. Rubrico said.

Kelangang Pilipino ka (You have to be a Filipino)… siguro that’s the point na pinapapili ka kung anong gusto mo talaga (perhaps that’s the point when you are asked to choose between keeping your foreign citizenship or renouncing it).”

The “Balik Scientist Act” grants as a privilege the “exemption from renouncing their oath of allegiance to the country where they took the oath,” but there’s a caveat that reads “unless the balik scientist after the service decides to repatriate and retain the government position, as applicable.”

Asked whether he could sponsor a separate bill giving foreigners or former Filipino citizens more flexibility in terms of tenure, lawmaker Mr. Aquino replied: “We already allowed the dual citizenship so I’ll have to see why they wouldn’t want to go for a dual citizenship, but we can take a look at those provisions because if I’m not mistaken those provisions are rather old already.”

Those betting on a massive repatriation of scientists — to, as the new law worded it, “accelerate the development of new or strategically important technologies that are vital to our national development and progress” — would have to temper expectations.

The “Balik Scientist Act” alone, while a good step, won’t be enough to bring them all home.

DoST’s Ms. Guevara summed up the challenge: “One time we went to Japan — there were 50 scientists there and engineers.”

Sabi ko, if may 50 na audience, may isang babalik, puede na. (I told myself: From an audience of 50, if there’s one who’d come back, that would be good enough for me.)”

Featured Links

PNHRS

http://www.healthresearch.ph

PCHRD

http://www.pchrd.dost.gov.ph

eHealth

http://www.ehealth.ph

Ethics

http://ethics.healthresearch.ph

ASEAN-NDI

http://www.asean-ndi.org

Login Form

Events Calendar

January 2025
S M T W T F S
29 30 31 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1