Filipinos in South Korea

₱2 Billion Project NOAH Philippines – World’s Most Advance Technology

A screenshot demonstrating how Project Noah works in real-time, indicating weather forecasts and water levels at river basins across the Philippine islands

The Philippines is no stranger to disasters. Floods, earthquakes, volcanoes and typhoons frequently ravage the archipelago, making it one of the most disaster-prone countries in the work.

But now a new plan aptly dubbed Project NOAH – National Operational Assessment of Hazards – intends to give Filipinos a better chance of overcoming these calamities by providing real-time access to weather information and updating maps, some of which date back to the 1960s.

Spearheaded by the Philippine Department of Science and Technology, the 2 billion pesos, or $48 million US Dollar , project was launched in July 2012. Automated rain gauges first were installed in river basis around the country, allowing scientists and other experts to track rainfall and river water levels in real time. This month, the project will roll out LIDAR, or Light Detection and Ranging, technology which allows for high-resolution 3D mapping of the country's topography – something which scientists say will help the Philippines' better prepare for potential disasters. The entire country is expected to be digitally mapped within two years, according to scientists running the project.

"Using the best technology available is the only way to minimize casualties," said Mahar Lagmay, executive director of Project Noah and a scientist at the University of the Philippines in Manila. "We need to develop a culture of preparedness and safety.

He also added that the project will likely draw on newly-developed "super wifi" technology to get around some necessary infrastructural upgrades still lacking in the Philippines.

Just weeks after Project Noah was launched by the country's president Benigno Aquino III, the system was quickly tested when monsoon winds and rain dumped unusually heavy rainfall on critical cities in the Philippines, including Manila. The torrential rains caused the most severe floods seen since Tropical Storm Ketsana in 2009 which left the capital submerged for days.

Initial assessments of the August floods showed that better tracking and disaster response times helped to limit the death toll to just over 100 people, compared to over 700 during 2009's floods. A report from the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID, said local governments were "managing the situations well", and that that follow-up relief operation was put into action quickly. According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the population displaced by the floods reduced by 10% in a week – a far better record than during Typhoon Ketsana, whose impact lasted months though similar levels of rainfall were recorded, according to Project Noah's tracking maps.

Mr. Lagmay added that the improved maps could also serve another practical purpose – as a tool for urban planning and development, crucial for private sector investors that are starting to bet big on increased domestic spending in the country including in malls and on real estate. The project has some private sector partners – including San Miguel Corp SMC.PH's Petron oil refinery, Philippine telcos Smart Communications Inc TEL.PH, SUN Cellular and Globe Communications though none of them have pledged funding as yet. Smart Communications, for example, has been working to set up free call stations at disaster evacuation centers with charging facilities and internet provisions and opens SMS channels to receive donations during crisis situations.

It is becoming increasingly important for Asian countries to adopt modern disaster relief strategies in the decades to come, experts say. According to a report from the Asian Development Bank, a projected 410 million urban Asians are at risk of coastal flooding in the next decade, with another 350 million at risk of inland flooding – similar to that experienced by Bangkok last year, and Manila this August.

Observers note that social media is an important component in Project Noah's success. Comscore ranks the country the world's biggest market for Facebook FB, with more than 90% of its online population using the social networking tool, with an overall internet penetration rate of about 33% of its 100 million people. Representatives from Global Systems Mobile, the system on which many cellular phone networks function, are examining the Philippines to see how mobile phones can help bolster early warning networks elsewhere.

Twitter provided some of the fastest alerts about a 7.6 magnitude earthquake off the eastern coast of the Philippines last month. And analysts say social media will become even more useful as radio stations and other broadcast media increasingly rely on the Internet for information.

The Wall Street Journal 

Official: Name Internationalizing “West Philippines Sea” to replaced “South China Sea”

A year and five months after the fact, President Benigno Aquino signed an order renaming South China Sea waters within the country's exclusive economic zone (EEZ) West Philippine Sea.

On September 5, the President signed Administrative Order No. 29, "Naming the West Philippine Sea of the Republic of the Philippines, and for other purposes."

"These areas include the Luzon Sea as well as the waters around, within and adjacent to the Kalayaan Island Group and Bajo de Masinloc, also known as Scarborough Shoal," Mr. Aquino says in the order made public only Wednesday (September 12, 2012).

In interview at Camp Crame, President Aquino said he was still looking forward to a meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao, whom he missed seeing at the 20th Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders' summit in Vladivostok, Russia, on Sunday.

"I am still hoping that we can have a dialogue where we can have a heart-to-heart talk and [real] sharing of all of our thoughts in total honesty and openness. So that seems to be the way forward to settle all of these things," Mr. Aquino said, referring to the Philippines' territorial dispute with China in the West Philippine Sea.

The Aquino administration began calling the South China Sea West Philippine Sea in March last year  (2011) after Chinese patrol ships harassed a Philippine scientific vessel and fired across the bows of Philippine fishing boats in waters within the country's claim in the Spratly chain.

In Wednesday's interview President Aquino clarified that AO 29 covered only "portions of the South China Sea."

Those waters encompass the Philippines' 370-kilometer EEZ, Mr. Aquino said.

Scarborough Shoal, also known as Panatag Shoal, is within the country's EEZ, he said.

"I just want to be precise … I'm sure that Panatag Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc is within our EEZ and also they have been [part of the country] historical[ly]," Mr. Aquino said.

 "Does it help our cause? It is important to clarify which portions we claim as ours versus the entirety of the South China Sea," Mr. Aquino said, explaining to reporters the need to officially rename the area because some countries call it by other names.

"We call it West Philippine Sea. There is a portion of it they call East Sea. Each one calls it by another name. Let's make clear what areas we claim as ours," he said.

To justify the official renaming of waters to the west of Palawan and Zambales provinces, the order points out that Presidential Decree No. 1599 (issued in 1978) established the Philippine EEZ.

In 2009, Congress enacted Republic Act No. 9522, the Baselines Law, which defined and described the baselines of the Philippine archipelago.

 

Sovereign rights

According to the AO 29, the Philippines exercises "sovereign rights under the principles of international law, including the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos), to explore and exploit, conserve and manage the natural resources, whether living or nonliving, both renewable and nonrenewable, of the seabed, including the subsoil and the adjacent waters, and to conduct other activities for the economic exploitation and exploration of its maritime domain, such as the production of energy from the water, currents and winds."

It says the Philippines exercises "sovereign jurisdiction" over its EEZ with regard to the establishment and use of artificial islands, installations and structures; marine scientific research; protection and preservation of the marine environment; and other rights and duties provided for in Unclos.

The order explains that in the exercise of sovereign jurisdiction, "the Philippines has the inherent power and right to designate its maritime areas with appropriate nomenclature for purposes of the national mapping system."

The shift to West Philippine Sea, the order says, is without prejudice to the determination of the maritime domain of territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty and jurisdiction.

Name:  Internationalizing West Philippines Sea to replaced South China Sea

The order directs the National Mapping and Resource Information Authority (Namria) to produce and publish charts and maps of the Philippines showing the West Philippine Sea.

It says the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), in consultation with Namria and other appropriate governmental agencies, will deposit, at the appropriate time, a copy of the order enclosing the official map showing the West Philippine Sea with the Secretary General of the United Nations and notify accordingly relevant international organizations, such as the International Hydrographic Organization and the United Nations Conference on the Standardization of Geographical Names.

The order directs all governmental agencies to use the name West Philippine Sea in all communications, messages and public documents, to popularize the use of the name, both domestically and internationally.

They are also directed to use the official Philippine maps produced and published by Namria showing the West Philippine Sea.

Inquirer 

Philippines – Korea Inked ₱3 Billion Puerto Princesa Airport Modernization

World 7 Wonders of Nature - Puerto Princesa world's longest navigable Underground river.

The gateway to one of the Philippines' trendiest destinations will soon get a makeover.

The declaration of Palawan's Underground River as one of the "7 New Wonders of the World" has drawn record numbers of tourists to the nation's westernmost province.

But their introduction to the province is a congested backwater airport.

This may soon fade as a bygone era, with a recently signed agreement between Seoul and Manila.

South Korea agreed to support the development and rehabilitation of Puerto Princesa Airport by providing a $71.6-million US Dollar loan 2,968,894,000.00 Billion pesos as official development assistance or ODA.

Philippines and South Korea signed last month the loan agreement covering the financial side of giving the Puerto Princesa Airport a makeover – officially called the Puerto Princesa Airport Development Project of the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC).

The Department of Finance on Wednesday said that Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima signed the agreement on August 23 on behalf of the Philippine government. Export-Import Bank of Korea (KEXIM) chairman and President Yong Hwan Kim signed on behalf of the Republic of Korea.

The money would finance the construction of a new passenger terminal with facilities and a new access road.

Part of the money will also help improve the runway and finance navigational aids to cover the increasing number of domestic and international flights to and from Puerto Princesa.

Once complete, the project is expected to revitalize the transport and trade linkages within the Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines-East ASEAN Growth Area or BIMP-EAGA, Purisima said.

The $71.6-million US Dollar loan (2,968,894,000.00 Billion pesos) is the second deal KEXIM and the Philippine government signed this year.

A $207.88-million loan agreement for the Jalaur River Multipurpose Project Phase II of the National Irrigation Administration was clinched last month between KEXIM and the Philippine government.

GMA News 

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