Sunday, May 5, 2024

Subic Freeport gains P1.22 billion in fresh investments last year

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Subic Bay Freeport—Even with the Covid-19 pandemic raging and the economic slowdown in 2020, new investments and expansion projects continued to pour into the Subic Bay Freeport Zone, netting a total of P1.38 billion in project commitments last year.

According to Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) Chairman and Administrator Wilma T. Eisma, 63 new projects were put up here by business locators, mostly in the fields of construction, health and wellness, logistics, and information and communication technology (ICT).

The new projects, which yielded committed investments totaling P1.22 billion, also generated 682 new jobs.

Expansion projects by existing business locators in the Subic Freeport reached 16 in 2020, with a total of P163 million in new investments, Eisma said.

The expansion projects, which were concentrated in construction, leisure, real estate, logistics, and petroleum trading, generated 264 additional jobs.

“Apparently, there emerged some winners and some losers in Subic ever since the Covid-19 pandemic drastically changed how business is done globally. But the SBMA has done its best to help the businesses survive,” Eisma said.

She said of the more than 3,300 companies operating in Subic when the pandemic broke out early last year, a total of 83 had since opted for non-renewal or pre-termination of their contracts with the SBMA.

“As of last month, there are still more than 200 companies that are not operating, including a few which are not yet allowed to operate under Covid-19 restrictions.”

She said most, or about 70 percent, of these are in the leisure industry, followed by manufacturing with 22 percent, and ICT at 6 percent.

Aa a result, a total of 8,129 workers were also affected by the business slowdown, she said. A total of 4,138 workers were put on forced leave; 2,265 were retrenched; and 3,642 entered into work arrangements with irregular work hours.

Eisma said Subic had since gradually eased Covid-19 restrictions, but there is strict compliance with protocols laid down by the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF).

Aside from giving business locators various forms of economic relief assistance during the pandemic, she said the SBMA will also continue to be proactive in managing the Covid-19 situation in the Subic Bay Freeport.

Read full article on BusinessMirror

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