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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

The Great Pump Heist: Why Your Fuel Tank is a One-Way Street for Profit


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The liquid sloshing into your tank right now isn’t "new." It wasn’t refined this morning, and it didn't just arrive on a tanker from the Middle East. That gas was bought weeks ago, locked into a price point far lower than the digits currently spinning on the pump’s display. The oil companies have already paid for it. Yet, you are paying for it as if they bought it at peak market rates this afternoon.


Welcome to the world of Replacement Cost Accounting—the industry’s favorite shield, and the consumer’s greatest invisible tax.


The "Replacement" Illusion

In any standard business, the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) is based on actual cost. If you buy a loaf of bread for 40 pesos and sell it for 50, you’ve made your margin. But Philippine oil companies operate on a different plane of logic. They don’t charge you based on what they spent; they charge you based on what it might cost them to buy that same liter of gas tomorrow.


By using the Mean of Platts Singapore (MOPS) benchmark—the spot oil market that dictates prices every Tuesday—companies justify today’s price hikes by pointing at global volatility. They claim they must collect the "replacement cost" now to afford the next shipment. It sounds like prudent bookkeeping—until you look at the predatory timing:


High Inventory, Low Price: Naturally, companies stock up when global prices are low.


The Surge: When prices spike, they have a massive volume of "cheap" oil sitting in tanks.


The Windfall: By applying replacement cost accounting during a surge, they reap massive profits on inventory they already own at a fraction of the cost.


Rockets and Feathers: The Asymmetry of Greed

The "Replacement Cost" system would be fair if it swung both ways. It doesn't. Instead, we are trapped in a phenomenon known as "Rockets and Feathers."


The Rocket: When global tensions flare in the Middle East and crude prices spike, the reaction at the local pump is instantaneous. Every Tuesday, as the MOPS benchmark shifts, the industry moves with Olympic speed to capture the upside. Last night, as prices shot up, thousands of Filipinos lined up at stations to beat the hike—a clear sign of a public under siege.


The Feather: When global prices fall, the logic shifts. Suddenly, "inventory cycles" and "logistics lags" become the excuse. Consumers don't rush to fill up before a price drop; they wait. But the oil companies ensure they have low inventory when prices hit the floor, minimizing their "losses" while maximizing their gains on the way up.


Deregulation as a Weapon

We were told that the Downstream Oil Deregulation Act would foster a battlefield of competition. Instead, it has created an oligopoly where we are nothing more than "price takers." These brokers and major players control everything from the market exchanges to the landed cost of refined petroleum.


This isn't a free market working as intended; it is a system weaponized to ensure that no matter which way the global wind blows, the house always wins. Basic needs—especially those that drive the entire economy like fuel—should be regulated with the same strictness as basic commodities.


Powerless in the Face of Incompetence

The reality is grim: a combination of government incompetency and a lack of strict monitoring has left the Filipino people at the mercy of global wars and corporate boardrooms. Without strong-willed leaders who refuse to be bought, the "replacement cost" remains a one-way street.


Every time you watch those numbers climb, remember: you aren't just paying for fuel. You are paying for the industry’s "what-ifs," subsidized by the gas they bought at yesterday's prices. It is a masterclass in risk-shifting, where the companies take the profit and the public takes the hit. 

Civil Society Presses FDA to Assure Consumers that Play and Craft Sand Products Sold Locally are Asbestos-Free



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(Over 50 health and environmental rights advocates push for testing, certification, and labeling of asbestos-free sand toys)



9 March 2026, Quezon City. In anticipation of World Consumer Rights Day (WCRD) on March 15, themed “Safe Products, Confident Consumers,” over 50 health and environmental rights advocates sent an urgent appeal to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to take timely and decisive regulatory action to ensure that all play and craft sand products available in the Philippine market are demonstrably free from asbestos, a known carcinogen with no known safe level of exposure.


The appeal for “mandatory testing, certification and labeling of asbestos-free play and craft sand products,” initiated by the toxics watchdog group EcoWaste Coalition, was triggered by recent recalls in Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, following tests confirming asbestos contamination of such products, "even when marketed as safe for children.”



“These incidents underscore a critical regulatory gap: products of a similar type and supply chains may already be present in the Philippine market without routine verification of asbestos safety,” they said.



The World Health Organization (WHO) classifies asbestos as one of the 10 chemicals or groups of chemicals of major public health concern. In children, the risks are compounded by developmental vulnerability and frequent hand-to-mouth behaviors, increasing the likelihood of ingestion or inhalation.

All forms of asbestos are already prohibited in toys and other products under the DENR Administrative Order No. 2000-02, or the Chemical Control Order for Asbestos, yet without systematic testing and certification requirements, this prohibition cannot be reliably enforced in practice, the signatories noted.

“The Philippines has already established a strong policy position against asbestos in consumer products. At this critical juncture, decisive regulatory enforcement and transparency measures are needed to translate policy into effective protection, especially for children and other at-risk members of society,” the letter said.



With these points in mind, the concerned groups and individuals appealed to the FDA to implement the following steps:



A. Mandatory third-party laboratory certification confirming that all play and craft sand products are asbestos-free before market authorization;



B. Clear, visible, and standardized “asbestos-free” labeling on all product packaging to support informed consumer choice;



C. Strengthened post-market surveillance and enforcement, including targeted sampling of products sold through physical stores, e-commerce platforms, and social media channels.



In light of the recent international recalls and the potential for similar products to circulate locally, and in pursuit of the objectives of the Global Framework on Chemicals - For a Planet Free of Harm from Chemicals and Waste, they further urged the FDA to undertake immediate risk mitigation actions, including:

A. Conduct immediate verification to determine if products recalled abroad are locally sold and the swift recall of the same;



B. Prompt market sampling and laboratory testing of currently available products, including products sold without authorization; and



C. Order a precautionary, time-bound restriction on the sale of play and craft sand products pending submission of verified laboratory results by Market Authorization Holders.



These actions are consistent with the precautionary principle and reflect the State’s duty to proactively prevent harm, particularly when children’s health is at stake, and exposure risks are avoidable, the groups and individuals said.



“We stand ready to support the FDA in advancing this initiative, including through stakeholder engagement and public awareness efforts. We respectfully seek your urgent consideration of the above recommendations to ensure that no child in the Philippines is exposed to preventable risks from contaminated play products,” the civil society letter to the FDA concluded.

Groups and individuals from the academic, environmental, health, science and technology, labor, and waste sectors, including the Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health - Center for Research and Innovation (ACRI), Action for Nurturing Children and Environment (ANCE), Arugaan, Green Convergence for Safe Food, Healthy Environment and Sustainable Economy, Greepeace, Interfacing Development Interventions for Sustainability (IDIS), Living Laudato Si Movement, Mother Earth Foundation (MEF), and the Philippine Earth Justice Center (PEJC), signed the appeal sent to the FDA on March 9, 2026.




In particular, organizations working on asbestos issues extended their support, including the Associated Labor Unions – Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP); Institute for Occupational Health and Safety Development (IOHSAD); Asbestos Diseases Society of Australia (ADSA); Toxics Free Australia (TFA); Consumer Protection Organization (LPKSM) Yasa Nata Budi, Local Initiative for OSH Network (LION) and Nexus 3 Foundation, Indonesia; Consumers’ Association of Penang (CAP), Malaysia; Center for Public Health and Environmental Development (CEPHED), Nepal; Consumer NZ, New Zealand; and the Airtight on Asbestos, UK.

DepEd, DBM establish Teacher Education Excellence Centers nationwide to modernize educator training


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MAKATI CITY, 9 March 2026 — Strengthening the foundation of the country’s education system, the Department of Education (DepEd) and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) officially signed a landmark agreement on Monday to establish Teacher Education Excellence Centers (TEEC) nationwide.



The TEEC is envisioned as a national research center, innovation hub, and laboratory for teacher education.



It aims to bridge the gap between theory and classroom reality by producing evidence-based training models, modernizing curricula, and integrating advanced technology into educator preparation.



Education Secretary and Teacher Education Council (TEC) Chairperson Sonny Angara signed the DBM-TEC Joint Memorandum Circular (JMC) No. 1, Series of 2026 with Acting DBM Secretary Rolando Toledo, formalizing the fiscal support to the initiative.



Secretary Angara emphasized that while infrastructure is vital, the quality of instruction remains the heart of DepEd’s mission.







"The establishment of Teacher Education Excellence Centers represents a strategic reform that will strengthen and elevate our teaching workforce across the country," Angara said.



"Ito ay patunay ng ating sama-samang pagkilos upang iangat ang kalidad ng edukasyon sa bansa. Sa pangunguna ni President Bongbong Marcos, patuloy nating isusulong ang mga repormang magtitiyak ng mas matibay na pundasyon para sa kinabukasan ng ating mga mag-aaral,” he added.



The TEEC will support a wide range of stakeholders, including pre-service and in-service teachers, teacher educators, school leaders, and specialized groups such as child development workers, pre-service student tutors, TVET trainers, multigrade teachers, and deans of colleges of education.



To ensure nationwide reach, the TEC signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with each of the six Teacher Education Institutions (TEIs) that will serve as the program’s inaugural implementers.



These are the Philippine Normal University-Manila (National Capital Region); University of the Philippines-Los Baños (South Luzon); University of San Carlos (Visayas); Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology (Northern Mindanao); Caraga State University (Eastern Mindanao); and Cotabato State University (BARMM).



The TEEC will function as the research arm of the TEC, tasked with developing programs that are not only high-quality but also contextualized to the unique needs of Filipino classrooms.

The establishment of the TEEC operationalizes the mandates of Republic Act No. 11713 or the Excellence in Teacher Education Act, which aims to elevate teacher education in the country.
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