In short, if the idea was merely to prosecute and neutralize the tormentors of President Arroyo and those allegedly plotting a coup detat, there was no need for Proclamation 1017.
We already have the laws to cover such criminal behavior. If the administration has the goods on the plotters, as Malacanang claims it has, it could have gone ahead and filed the proper charges without having to invoke an emergency.
The governments legal hand did not become any stronger with Proclamation 1017, because the self-serving document did not add to the awesome powers of the President and Commander-in-Chief.
The proclamation may just prove to be self-fulfilling. It may create the wished-for emergency and heighten the uncertainty in the air, further feeding the emergency signaled by the issuance of the proclamation.
Choose the right answer:
1. A paranoid President Arroyo just overreacted to the destabilization.
2. The administration was laying the basis or testing the waters for a more sinister scenario in its calibrated response to threat.
3. It was scaring targeted sectors into behaving.
4. All of the above.
5. None of the above. There is another reason (Please mention).
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We are operating on wireless mode, but the connection has been erratic. Therefore, I have no consistent link with the wide wide world outside and, with the absence of radio and TV in my office, I have no way of monitoring todays (yesterdays) events.
Sometimes isolation from the media may be good for the soul, at least affording us some moments of peace and quiet. But this is more of a case of ignorance being bliss, which is not at all comforting in my line of work.
Anyway, may I digress a bit and look over some of my other pending materials.
The brand name of the product is NEWater, which has reportedly contributed to 1 percent of Singapores potable water requirements.
The quality of the reclaimed water exceeds the standards set by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and the World Health Organization (WHO), and is in fact, cleaner than the other sources of Singapores water.
Just like Singapores reclaimed water, the secret is in the technology. Air pollutants like sulfur oxide (Sox), nitrous oxide (Nox) and particulates coming out of the stack can now be significantly reduced through precision furnace combustion design, selective catalyst reduction, installation of electro static precipitator which collect dust, low Nox burner and flue-gas desulphurisation which removes sulphur, the cause of acid rain.
The experts tell us of advanced technologies, such as Circulating Fluidized Bed (CFB) boilers that can burn any type of coal and still come up with low emission levels.
"Clean coal technology" describes a new generation of energy processes that sharply reduce air emissions and other pollutants compared to older coal-burning systems.
In the Nan Ya complex, which is located in the Tao Yuan district of Taipei, the 2 units, 57 megawatts each, of Jin-Shin power plant provides steady power and steam to two companies that manufacture dust-sensitive products.
The power complex operates just 500 meters from a 5-level shopping mall, and within a mixed industrial, commercial and residential community.
If coal is really pollutive and continuously emitting foul dust into the air, how can households and dust-sensitive industries live right beside it? But they do.
The industries there are Nan Ya Technology Corp. producing DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory) chips and Nan Ya Printed Circuit Board Corp., which is second in the world in its line of products.
Excess electricity is sold to the state-owned electric company at a cost of around NT$1.55, or around P2.46 per kilowatt-hour. Compare this to the current rate of our National Power Corp., which is about P4.53 per kw-hour in Luzon.
How will Napocor explain this substantial disparity? Puede naman palang mag-generate ng mas murang electricity, so why are we paying for indecently expensive power?
Btw, the Formosa Plastics Group is a Taiwanese conglomerate of diverse interests, including power generation, biotechnology, petrochemical processing, and production of electronics components. Its is the largest private enterprise in Taiwan with over 82,000 employees and investments in the United States, China and Indonesia.
Integration of different manufacturing processes is seen also in the Groups sprawling 2,096-hectare Mai-Liao Industrial Park. The US$19.2-billion project has the No .6 Naptha Cracking Project as its flagship The complex sitting on reclaimed land is a virtual city with its own postal system.
Its coal-fired power plants generate electricity and steam used by oil refineries, naptha cracking plants, machinery and boiler shop, wafer fabrication shop and a plasma display manufacturing plant within the complex.
It also has a 24-meter deep port, making it Taiwans deepest port and first privately funded industrial port. A visitor cannot help marvelling at the pipes criss-crossing one plant to another, transporting steam, water, fuel and raw materials, making hauling cost efficient and cheap.
Formosa Plastics executives told us that in the Mai-liao project, 20 percent of total investment, or about US$3.82 billion, was spent on pollution prevention.
In my mind, that debunks the comment I often hear in Manila that polllution management makes power generation very expensive.
The NOx and SOx emission rates of its coal-fired plants are way below the Taiwan government standard of 250 and 300 ppm respectively. For comparison, the Philippine Clean Air Act Standard for these two pollutants are 700 for SOx and 1,000 for NOx.