Philippine President Marcos urges Asean to activate fuel-sharing pact
He proposes a regional study on joint oil stockpiling
[MANILA] Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr on Wednesday (Apr 15) called for the immediate activation and testing of the Asean Petroleum Security Agreement (APSA), saying it should be implemented while there is an oil crisis due to the Middle East conflict.
Speaking at the Asia Zero Emission Community (AZEC) Plus online summit hosted by Japan, Marcos said the closure of shipping routes had exposed the vulnerability of Asian economies that are heavily dependant on imported petroleum.
Marcos offered the Philippines as host or co-chair of the first APSA emergency simulation exercise, saying the mechanism exists and it should be tested now.
He proposed a regional study on joint oil stockpiling.
He said the Philippines is accelerating development of a domestic strategic petroleum reserve, a government-controlled physical buffer intended to absorb shocks when commercial markets fail.
He wanted fuel companies to have larger emergency reserves, including raising mandatory stocks of petroleum to 30 days from 15 days and of liquefied petroleum gas to 21 days from seven days.
SEE ALSO
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
He said the Philippines is pursuing a risk-calibrated oil procurement strategy to reduce heavy reliance on Middle East supply routes and choke points. REUTERS
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
On the board but frozen out: The Taib family feud tearing Sarawak construction giant apart
Is it time to scrap COE categories for cars?
Thai and Vietnamese farmers may stop planting rice because of the Iran war. Here’s why
Former manager with DBS Bank admits cheating 7 victims, including his uncle, of over S$1 million
