Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Sendong's Fury

It has happened again this year.  A lot of Filipinos, this time from Northern Mindanao, did not celebrate Christmas as they are still reeling from the effects of typhoon Sendong or its international name Washi.  Last year, it was the Bicol region which was severely affected by the massive floods that inundated days before New Year.  Among the Philippines major islands, Mindanao is seldom hit by typhoons or weather disturbances that tend to ravage Luzon and Eastern Visayas.  This ideal climate makes Mindanao conducive to farming of grains, fruits and vegetables.  When you want to eat the best fruits at affordable prices, go to Mindanao.  It shocked me no end when Sendong vented its wrath on Cagayan de Oro and Iligan cities causing deaths and damage to property.  Indeed, no one or no place is safe nowadays.

The fury of Sendong

Meteorologists or people who study the weather join advocates of the environment in reminding the world of the ill effects of global warming.  The effects are not going to happen years from now but are within our midst already.  Floods, earthquakes, tsunami were felt in different parts of the world in rapid succession.  We have to act now if we want to put a stop to these abnormal weather disturbances.  Let's start with planting trees in our bald forests and exercise prudence in the disposal of our waste.

Meteorologist

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WMRhMbEaddu6sYzpHlGkhozoCr7MYVRTThlxyQ0LQyhlZyGSJmSXUS+sMgKgnO4cqc56jBNixsGFxNO4AZ9ESAdoItRXPxLvI3wBUdQaZPq/stU9s4XJjeTf7KvC6n8W0Cqniy3LNZkY8lzG5z3Gl49vjlx+Bq+0v8AGUXLbRuxwfLuyKNS46+9g57N17QeIv5n+ui/fFTbwE/huYNPxEqc4ugp/SS0tkYfiCKfx9R8x+2sv4M/PcT/ALfL/wAGGtJJcrGrSP7qKzt38qgsdu+wrL8m5z4cuRFBJcMEYot9MWZ+a7TFWn0xszg2spUlmVUYMoQls5rd2FsI4Yo191I40GSScKgAyTuT8ayFtB//AJdyHCMRYy5floQHFuNQWRAOWCzyPymBf2jNkA6Rs4D5F/RX9lddPXN9fH0zAAknAAJJPQAbkn4UpiuAx+kSagMHkx4IYIwGXaM4KyNuN/dXbYs+VvHeLiTIG8Ub6WA2M1wrhVjUkgFRINJB2LDHRTlcOFvKwkuJDntEhzGm4YE6gRK4wRrIx5jpC9aVvpk5DKIWLrjdxzp2SaONMRhFETXJKIGZ2wJYtJzKur3gAo8xFMLbj8vMRNdrPrDFQjPBKwjwshWOTWjYYnbWuw2zvipHYRqQVQLjGwGB5RpTI6HSuw9ATVGXgY87gsWJ1aV0gPpyFV9ZOslDyyzN0x7uKiPrKshs7a/RyVBIcDJRhpcD10nqP6QyvoTVisLHxqSJ1ikzJgF1GCpABVdnAeQlQNZdfKNQVjWh4fxvLxI+Ss6cyCUjSZMDU0brtplC+bA2IDHA0kVtW8WTNUfiexJt5HTAeJWmiYgNpdFLbg9QwyjDuGYUs8MX8rW+I4S2mXlL5gFjiKpIupnbUVVZCo0hjhF2PWmHjPifLg5YJBm1KSOqwIpe4YbjcRgqP6UiDvVKe6a0s4nYYLSxGbf3DcTBpjntpLkZO2BXPetazi42YWrHhxklYPIrKmdSI7sVdtQ0l8DBCyFdiH8udtWFeWFtHa29wfMRiSaVti8jkFnbfbJAwBsAAoGABUygAADYDoBsB8h2ql4hf+I3I18sugiVsZ0vKeUm3fzOP/5W/GK16Kk7aDUwhMKM4UKoz1wABvWb45dlbO6YBc89Y+nUGaKDJx1ITAz/AER6VppvePzrJce81jc6d/40o233F3ECNviCPurj/Lsb2iiiuhIqNhUleMKDhHVDjfE/o8EkgXWyqSiZwZH6IucHGWIGcHGc1m77xdLO3Ls8IpBP0hkMiEDSfIAQGyGyrEhTjyl98VuH2DR6meead3wWaV8jb7CABIx8FHzzgUlPE4rdREy3D80F0VlXypEjuEJjVQSwXOfMSSAdxVDicQhurx5MnJglJCl2ETJyhsN9KNFIdugYnHUmzxfhTyhuXLoLIY2V11xOhzsU1KQ25w6kHc9dsRS8PnlIN3NGQE5bclGjMqkgkSO8jbEjouk+ZhkAkGOP7tVvWHPBY1gnaVslmUIxUnzafd1AnDFegbqBtnG1Nr7xUkZAEFxKD1MSK2nbO6lw59NlPUUoJpdfSSxNzF9pFj2iY9omPrx49/bcodzjy7+VrTjZcO45BOdMbnXjOiRHilA9eVKqvjcb47ilXG7WS1la8tYDMzhEuIUIDSopwsqDHmlQMRgkal2z5VpfrWWNekkZw6dxuMq6HqpwchlIO/Wm3C+Msh0S+aPSSjkkuNDIjK+ff/OoQ/U+YMMjU4Saz8V2skfMMyx4BLrOeTJHjOQ6SYZMYPXbbIJG9V5/GcDK30M/S5NgqQHWhZtl1TKDHGg3yxO2D1OAW9zY29xjmJFLjzLrVXwDtkagcdD+FWuX6Uy1R4VZNGuZX5krbyPjAz2VR9VF6KDk9ySSSYfER/M/10P74ppopV4hO8P9dD+/UW8Nn/Bn57if9vl/4MNNvEag2VypfRqhkTVnBBkXljBPfLDHxxVTw/w8wy37MCFkuTMrNsCrW8Oog/ZDh1z/AEap+Jb/AOkwcq1AkBlh5kmrRCsccqySKJcEOxCacRhyMnOMYOcR2DS1shLFckqHWVHQZRsyRuZJUAdjl00ThQuAFKuBsdl91xFnjt4bdiJLiNXD4wYoAqcyXB3DYcKgI95lyMK1HEOOvDAgWYRxICs0zI8rogHkddbsWOwUu4Y5IYjBOJ+AcLaNeZLnmSKmAwQGKBRiGHCKqjSCSQBjU7dQBXRSe8YfWuRslV3YqtykUalY7aCMqo9xTI0kS/EkJGw3+2TuTkfU0wRSzdB6Akk9AAoyWYnACgEkkAAkgU34nwnW6zRFVnQFVZh5ZEOC0UmBkoSMgjdT5hndWQXk8jBJLdSrxShzE7BQzRMVkiZ1DADUGwwyPKp6UvpXJ1jHaVblsHVBcqRtg28pJ3wCNKkEfrHfFT3VvNHE0r202lQDhQryYPU8tGLbdwMn4VeTxlcMci1WNfKAs0q632bX5otarjCEdScPkDY1Qu+O8RbnKjW6pIfJJ5+ZAhABATTolYbkMWXcjIwMVGQ1yn9onuRpXSGk5m0appPMPLaXYuyrgorHJIqLh3DLuQxCS3jt4UuFuT7UNM2hfIuhFZF8wXJD9NgBVfi3Fo7OykJcKqR4TLZYui4hwScl9QXfr39a2VnOXjRyNJZVYj0LKCR92cVp84iWU9Mb40kT6daxSbc4wRrq6FFleecKPVjFbIx9GWtLd2qyxvHINSOrI49VYYb9Rr58Q+Ho7uNVbyvGwkhkAy0My7o4B2bBxlTsf2exRTBCHVGcAYKllV2xvkaWMYz8X/6VH1pO7BxPT48KzObWNZSTJHqicnqzRO0JbqfeKav73bpXx4ykIs9u9xZKfkbqP/KrXBLB4ogsjamJd2OMAvI7StgdlBYgZ3wBneq3i6HXbIucarqwGfT+NJWsbw7Ov82im94/Osbxi5D2l6uPcvI0Oe+Z7eTP4OB91bGTqfmaxHEFItuI5BGb+E7+muzwa5Y9dbpFFFFbpFYnxH4hNxpitmIjZmVpCNOt4wsyoiuAJo3QOCw8pGdz3t/lCv35C20RIe5JQsql+XAMc59ORnZlT3h+dznasz4etAH8iiMICuIjrRcO7GNpWJMmTIJsBV07DUwFTaWlK6Y2HvTBlwyshJLa5XWWJXQyP1cqwkiDHqIB0GKhjvWe7eNc6IowX2GDLKQUGevlRWO23tB6VMhxelf+1tSeh961m1Zz0OVuWBz9hfWq9xBJFJJJDGJTLo1KziLSY10ghtBLZGBpPTBOd8U4HnRnSXxeo+ilyMiOW3lPwEc8bOcd8Jq2/wCtfT8RvACfoKnHYXS5PwGYgPxIr6lkF1HLbyo8LSRMCr8tmCPqj1qUdlODv12JX1oI2I3qhfTM4McONR8rud1iBG5x9d/RPXdsDrT4pcuLeFC2lpHjt5XQHKFgVdlHbLDSGJ8vMDb4GWFwwghJjiLBB5Y0Byd+gABJO5OwJO+xPUCWztVijSNM6UVUXJydKKFXJ7nAFfU/VP0Z/wB62pT4a4+10rF4GiwI2Uno6yAkEZAORjftuME1NxiUpJbsGVci4iOskINSJcKzYIBx9GYAEj3+oxujXWOQBk7HUMEqQfVWUhlPY4IyCQdjU8HFbiPGmYsOmmZQ4xt0ZdL52O7M3Wq9FTq5iJNV8Qzd2jH/ANFj/wCfVa44pK/vSgenLiVT0280rSjOcn3fT76EswXGQx1EL5VLYJ7nA8o/pHYVA/EQGkUpJ5AGyUKo+QCAkjYRmJOnGetPS4wszRK7anDSHOQZmMoUjppjPskO/VUB6b7DEV5xRQwDuxZgdOFeT3SFPug9Cw2+fYEhRccXEYD+1VWljZ2kkQLEGYxsp1FtKqyoGQYxzhgjJwt4PwtruF3kjAiTTCYo1MUs1yGaRY10Oyxq3OEhkQDAkbfTqNA2IMfCqvxO4GpByYABNIFZVmbbNvpLMGTWGZsEggIMkMdXS71dwfuqv4b4ItpbrEoGfecqMKXPvaR2QbKq/VVVHamE6ZU7Z9PnVVnJcn0nkxviTxI0bC3tQr3TjV5t44IztzZcf+FOrH4UqsuD8u25CyyZw2Zcjml3Yu75IIDFmY9DjP31F4cA5bFo2juCzNdK7apOfkgkt1K49ztpxjO5Lale2yy86IXti9wywZXTJrlmbzlJDEE5cKtkatBGSQVUEjBY4DKP8n8LeaWMTMdy1wzSkn0KnygD7OkAelO+B8LVEB+LEZ6kklmY+pLEnNNqunz2Nkpt/TMW3ga3Rwy21shByGSJAw+IIQb1pkXAAHbavaK1rWK+JmdFFQXt2Io2dgSB2UZZiThVUd2JIA+dKYOLcxypWSNwNelxg6OmVKkqQCQDg5BIyBkZVr8RFdPaT+JNR+iRpp9pe2urOfdiL3Jxjv7HH39uorcU4gbeIzDOIymVHRkMgVxjIGcMxB7HB6ZBt8aU/SuHKP8AamY/JLWc/wDU0uXKrSkZaD01lvEf8mvP7Ta/ts61Gay/iP8Ak15/abX9tnXHX11t3RRRXQlyvxZxBZuKHC62thoRSurWvKd7pYlyFkmYNEmljsEc7ZBZhwy2flRKs+VjZV2hVNSRry2jK9E86ndQMAADbcoY7V2muFCEO89+pSRmWORZZXkhc6H1Q61JAcIXcQ4GFya1lnepMgkjdXU58ynKkqSrYPfDAj7qytLopHSpexfxuyYMR5ruMqOjLJas5z8mhXb7+wq3Va8/lVl/WT/8nPVmrr4i3svaVxe0vHbG0EfKB9Xm0yyD02VIeu/nPwyzqC0tgmv+k7uT6ljkd98DC/3RTSmkjDAqwBBBBBGQQdiCDsR8KUW1lJasNDvJb5A0OdTwZPvI58zxjIyjZKgZB20lzXy6AgggEHYg7gg7EEdxQZP4e4eI2nw7EBxEqHQFjjjyyBVRRjaQ7nJwF9Ks8fhU27O6hlhPPZSMh40VlnUr0bMDzYHrpqxdWQchgzI4GAynt6Mp8sgzvhgcb4wTmouE8RZ+YrgCSF+W+PcYlFkDLkkhWR1ODuMkb4yQime71CSJwsqnnK0enVhAq6IgYdQLFWVz3Cv08pxLdcTYakfEYZkiVkfTIrvGWcqJVAlKnGnl6yfs5BWntp+TGMQiNpncBeWC2GbkaOUse+yjlhVbSAG0gkDNSRfkyiUgrcTjT08xK+6qe6TpPlRRuO2epJKxXJkpOLkMdMjEqiHd4wBGAHVpUmCGKSVjy8741KfL0pVbossnLghSUghoQiRtbwtO2iSBjE/JJ0KPOxLDmE47V0u3/JxZhdMolnHpNNJIpOdWShbSTkDfG2Kt8WjggSGNSkKiRXVFXqIyGbCoNgB1OMDvR4U2ZvhPgBVlNxfuszgsVTSpSKMvzNJZUUzaSM7jGdwASSXXgu0120c8gBaXVcrncobjL4B+EbLGD9lNsBio945GZ0+ixsNUwAk3wUtWOmVx8WXUi/Fs9FbDi34hHpjADqHLIgaORDlAcghlBXZSRnGQMjNKNxneVuiq1rxOKRUZHBEm6di3Xopwfqnt2NTvIBjJAycDJxknoB6n4U2TL+LuDa/aIdEgBCyAZKE77/aQkDUvQjHQ4IV8MkMqISNLNsy9dLg6XGfQMD+FbySMMMEZFYufgF5BcubZrdoX8y87mBoXP5whUHtQd2wWTBY746nHlLOYxoEUAYHbavqq1hZcpNOpnYks7v7zuepONh6BRgKAAAABVmupkjkXVlWUFSCDnBBB2KlT1BHzHXPxWzW6i15IecxsHjEyecxrkrvJuRpHl1kHYZY9TV+AyNcFMRcvRqB1tzSc4OY+XpC5z5tefhXx4Y4M8cMMcuOXAgiRDpYnQdKMxUlcqoC49QT1xjK9piY4taU30s4veCTlyQOsqwylplhYyNoeKSP3I9Rcgur6CNwpxuBUwIOCMEEZBG4IPofTYfhVu7vuHzfxgzRK6BgJQ4SQKhIZTndkyD5WBU7HB2NULGbWzNp05MTafsmSJJGB2BJ1E9fU1Nv3RpzXiXPaG9cKSPoySYZRnM8kT7gn6sauvQZLFdyAMM0v42fiNh5sKi3sxHXUyxxxL8iOcxz8/XaHwZahLSADfEUe565ZQx/bVpRr4iuP5i2ct+ldSKFH3LbMSDj3l65OF5TTr3c6pLxS3UI4lwVmurTA3OcyW0YB2280bfqp1Uc1rrKDONMiP650nOK5o9dJsK9oorpS4tw6FpQpkUAjllJMxKgfHsroI4DStGHjhG5RiSAB1rZWl0rhtOo6GMbakZPMoGcBgMjfqMj0NY+2tIzGoQ24GJowxYPplEsc8TSMzKdp2BaJQRqdAcjYbSEMFUOQWAGogYBbG5AycDOdsnFYy6aqd3ETc2rAbIbhm+Rt3jHz8zqPv+FWaTtxUvxHkKBphiZpDvnmSFNKDbGApVj+mvocua0r4zt6KKKKZCiiigClXDoys93qBGt0kXPRkFvFESPkyEH029RlrSrxKpFs8iLmSIcyLGx5g2A+TAlSOhDGgNxwT8039dc/8xJV2lfhy4ys6krmOeYeXPSQ/SEzkbHRMv400pogVmPEEIPELYSlxHLBPCCsjRjmiSGYJqQqcusb7Z3CEdNWdPSfjPhO2umVp1dipDLpmmjAdfdYCORRqGNmxkdqBMa8g8N2qDC20P3xqxJ9SzAsx+JJJr6HBbcN5Y0jYjOYvZPgbZzGVbHb78VX/wBCLb1uv8bef+/SO84DHHcyrFPcJiKDpc3DOpkeY51yStgERAYx6mq5Qz4St3/gdW5hiuJI2kZHcuFl1siLEuXOmYYRcbSgeZsghiDWuPDl8pblSWjqTMcFJLd05pL5SRTIqsHYuG0ZBJ33IpnZeFkkiRxe3rB1VgRdSYIYAgj4HNT/AOhy/wC133+Kk/zpbB8ZZzHE45nle3aU4fQYp4GKo7kmL2iphVAjIKxliyAszA6BB/D9xbtpFpxSRcxkjkQsWxmSR9cQ0mSR8K2TjBYjDYA1X+hy/wC133+Kk/zo/wBDl/2u+/xUn+dLo+LHQ+JJUjWJOH8TRUWMIVtD5TH3wZiWRtsoTsFK/WDLCnie6Dk/wfxPBaRhi3dQnM0DdOeQ4Uc1gCcZKkaa6JDwXSuBcT9AAWKOdsb5dDk7dTnrSLj3Fp7aZY45YpMxSynmxkFVRkVSzRuOupuifVPTvXJH6f8AplF8RXjqNXD+IiU7BuS4KBn0jDpNGp0pknyqJCEzp06izt7C5cyj6NcxrIDqDNEqs7k6n9ncqJCFKppdcuIwWfJJOrgubvSGe1iIJGOVPqbQRkErJFGAfhqPzNTS8SdVJNrcbDJ0iJj9wWXLfcKNGZ+CqwkmQAS2+hIk80h5KghQPMqRSPoAUHyY9MHbBRzQTSjnywSLC6iSYQXDI0sekY12pQ7hMBgsoYgY3OlRpV4uLhXjNneaWVlYPEIwVYaWGppBuQexzVJvCUjwpFcIkyxjQpE8tuHiwAFlhjBRyAApyWU4OwyRT1PD+oMmLBF5EavnGkauWuCNjnScDp2+7bFZ7h93cLc3RYRK0hhlGpJZCIDHy4VDExbZjkfGNjKcgEmtlaWHkImCsT1UDyKv2RkDUPUkb5OwGwTceTF0G7NEB8zG5xgfDm7/AKQ+FTedhfzpx9S8GupriDmxmEjVKnmSSPzRSNEwwJX21IcHPQ9Kc2Fu+hTMFWT6wjYsgOexZQTtjqBST8nx/i8y9lurtVHoDMzn/wATMfvrT1HGGgoooqicX4MTrUXEbPomdWMiwychUciJVVPaQ65FQ5YMcw5OBuNmjlUzKVyBlyoIXA3YgEkgY+JpBxizWHiE6BB5mNyNClJVV0IkkR0TEsjPI6IrbjzkNuQL3Hg8loURSGn5UGlveQXDpC+orq3VXbJGcYJz3rKfXRWetUfDFnJGX5+lpJgl4HA3KXIyULd9DR6ewwIzgdA/pj4qhUSW8nQkvD8SGXm4/wDw/wDzJpdWjKBRRRQYoryigPa8oooCz4QuR9Kv4wdwbWUj4yWyxk5+PJxj+j8adcZmZYvIcMzxID9nmSpHn44DZx8KVcCsj9J5yg4MRiffbKSCSHy9z7Wbftj40z49bO9vIISOaAHjzupljYSxhh9ksqg9Nidx1ppX817S3w9xtLu2SZAV1DDIwIaORTpkjYEAhlYEHbtnoaY0g9rA8Ruf4zxBsksHtrdQMHHsVKDGN25ly3X1A2Arc3FwsaF5GVFUZLMQqgDuWOwFcs4dxc3d2RCmUk4g8yy59g0cSLGuk9ZSTCr+Xyg6QWHYkOqxRBFCqMKoAHwUDA/VXgnU9GH4ioprBZIykwWVW3KyKpU/DSRjHzz86p3/AAKyZNM9vbFT2kjjxn7x1oBrRWc4jbSWMLS2p1RRKXe3kLMCiDLcmQktG2kHCnUhwAAmS1O7G+jmjWSJg6MMqynIPbrQE9cxvJxd3lxnJWW4isFx15MBzP0bOMtc79gM9K6JxbiK29vLM3uxI8h+SKW/6VgPAvCCr2UbjDQxS3Mg22nkGg7dRvPPjG3lI+Sk3SRXtFFMPK9oooArP+J0xJbt682P/eUSY+fsf1GtBSbxQvskbHuyx/drPJP6pCPvz2okir8nJ0txGPVki8aTG+As0MUgA+/V+3vWzrn/AOTq7J4jxaPGyvaPnudcGkj7tA/GugUQkUUUUwxnjuyPMikGd8L7wUK0WqRHIKkPpRp3CkblF6dRUDsxs+WeZqmgyxGCyBTKz6dtJ8mcY23GK2HGeFLcRFDkEeZGUlWSQAhWDDoRn9o36VmfD9mHuoiy3AaJJGkWRpikc/liAyx0ybNPjBYEYb7JqJjuGlbftmGm4zaCSEgjJXDr8GXcEY71lmuYVbTJMobcFUBlcYODqEedHX6xHQ+lbV0BBBAIOxB3BB6giuPrxMvOXuGDSx89HMYIjiSN2iLOM7azbZXbIzj4m0w1A4tGCMQuw3yXkVOhA2WMNnv1IG3WvmTjPmOiGIKD5S2uRiO2U1KAfjqPTp6Lgc0UlYvrxqUd4u/SEKBvsMFmPTG+fwqlJdXBJIunXJJwIrXA+AzATj5kmqnEeJx26cyUkLkA4BJ367DcgAFjjspPavbdyumOV1aXzg6cgPobSzKCBkbruNjqBGxFBZC8k0ne9nHygsz/AOSKm4dczqwD30TgnPtbABgPs5inUffp71Tr6TqPmP20aMavwlfvPbrMeQUkGoGJXQ5z0KMTgjcHzHptTust+S3/AFRbfon941qaCgi4t4NgnkM2ZYZiuky28rQuR21adnx21A9aiPhi4I0txS7K79EtlfG/84IM/eB2rRUUDCCz8DWiSLI8bTyKQVe5ke4ZT6rzWIQ538oFZDwENc1qxUKWiubkpjJH0m5LqwY9BpTAx19BXS5pQqlj0UFj8huawHgC1xOmndFsrEIWxqw0cjuMjfq6H0okNvxa+5FvLNpL8qOSTSNi2hS+kHsTjH31n+EeBomHO4gqXVy+WZpV1pFq35UUb5EaL06ZO5PoNRNEGVlPRgVONtiMHftWZl44iaYb0yxyrqAkTWBKoZU1qYiWw2uLIIxqbSCSKAm4c8EFzcxRnRDFFHLImfZxM5kJ05OI8ooYoMAYVgBqOc5+Sa6PIiUKwQwrgMGyEDSFH1SfVJ1JpUtjCnCBsH4ueILdRy2XDYnSJmJu5pVkV3D45iozozPK4IBkk2AIxn6rXwpYa5FkCmNY9J0EEj82VjGshCGWNwChQ6PMCSSCJ3ZIx8euDZ8onHPkih64yrOGlHQ59ksmx6jIqp4GkMk17J9VZEtl69Yk5jnB29+ZhkddPwFW/FsZZ7YYOlWkcnOBq0ctQR9b84x9BpPfFRfk4TNgshzmeS4n3IO0kzlOmw8gTb50/wAqaiiiimBRRRQBSLxwccPuHJYctRNlfe9i6zYGfXRj76e0s8TWhlsrmNV1F4ZkA23Zo2AG+3XFBMv4Q1Jxq+XbTJb2snx9m0kQ+W+v9VdArmPgm/DcStnO30nhqtuc5dJEcKD3IWVyfuNdOojxMiiiimBRRRQBXGZVTWS+CFnuWAYMgDfTbtSQ4GJXKtgRHrg+tdmrjUyNzDjWp51z3ePWv065lwhYaHY6U2G+GbJANBwbo4IBHQgEfI7iva8jfIBIIyAcHqMjODjbNQX07qoES65XIjiT7UjbLn0Ubsx7BWNSs18JcMFzdvK4DRWwMSgjIa4kX2pweuiNgnzlkHastxWzktJZIQZGa2GmH2ImH0RtcsLaiysGOh7U+YAmOH4V1ngHB1tbaOFTq0DzMeryMdUjn4sxZj86z/5QuHKRDLgZLC3YtuoErAwFgMZC3SW7dRgat9yDSN7Z6CcMNjvgZB2ZdShgGU7qcEHB9amTqPmP20q4RN5VGh/Pg6tAVRpjTIbzFl8xYANvsRkgAlqnUfMftqVnv5Lv9UW36J/eNamsr+S7/VFt+if3jWqppFFFFBq/EPzMn6D/ALprEfk1di7htuXBYqBjBA+hwsQfjlmrSeNv9WX39muf+C9U/DMYF3dtjdmTJ9cQQAUE09Vbvhscv5xAxwRv6HqPiD6Hbc+pq1RQZSPDkWoE5ONxnfzaxISQTpO6rp8vkwdGnNMLW1SNFSNQqqAAFGAABgfqFTUUEyHj3iHLjkYdY4nYDGcuQdIwNzkhRj41oeB8OFvawQj+aiji9fcQJ1AGenXFLbzwaks/NknuGGtJOUWTlZRg6Lo5edIKr3zt1rQUogxRRijTTIUUYooMV8uuQR67fjtX1RQHHvBr6JeCMrDQBdWrEgjzcs4wegJeEgDfPbNdmrkEGNETKoHI4swHYYe+eI4A+E+MfDPwrr4ohMiiiimQooooD4nlCqzHooJPyG5rj5gcyJlQXSOPDPkhX5KOQ7tvI2uWfEkew1EE710jxperFYTl20hl5WojIXmkRZIyMga8nfsa5wgkeWWb2bSlpG8ryYfWcqg5ikrEEaJgBtqzsKSoNqb+BuFiVjeMMrho7fI20H85MP0yAF9FTI/OGlVrwdruXkDIiwDO429mcgRg/afBB9F1HYlc9IjjCqFUAAAAAbAAbAAdhRAmX1SXxnYNNw+5RB7Tls0fYiWP2kRByMEOqkHIxgGnVeGmlxXhtxqlLxI2mXLprQoojeTntgx5T3JcqW8zFSM4zT15NILfZBO/Tbes+1iY5CkQKlGeEMi6WYw3EkEeZGYJKEtxjluNR06gc71f40XNncAoNRSZFVTnIbUibkdSpXb1OKS4bvwDDo4XaDTpPKUlfRjuw3+Oaf1X4bY8qGOMfUVV+8Dc/jVjTQQoo017pNAVOJ2glgljIDCSN0IPQ6lK4PwOaX+H+FyRPO0mPOyEYOc4ijQ59N1NPAlehKBr4r0LUmKKZa+AlfQWvaKC0YooooAooooAooooDzTXhSvqigOQ8UttFpxRMHMc91KQ3XGVux27owI/SHxrrqHIzWD8W2Ta7pI7K4lE6nU0axlGZoRD1Min3VUHbtWv4GkgtYBNnmCKMPqOTrCDXk9znNKDXqKKKZCiiigMJ+VTi6RraRtLy9U3NJ1BDpgUsDliAcStC2M52771lfDVwk0uiOSKaVtIGjSG0sokkLESNhNWpj0Cny4J056B418My3ixCFolMbMxMqM+crpwArD1P6qyJ8BcRibmQ/RuZHvG8cro5OwOVaErpIzlCxBG2c4IQ2YdH4VwxYIwi9erN3dyACx/ADHYAAbAVcqpwqWZoUNxGscuPOqNrUN08rYGQeu/rVumBQaKKA4l4gtlhubhWKnXfTbswUeaOB1TQwbK6rnSWUAgFjlc074bZi5+joqqUMkJYYLKEhYSsN8HrFpyR3G1R+KLzRfXEfJGBIsoZufl3lt0jcgxyIMAKoAHQoD1Fe8E8afRnJkttaHVloTIZV1MWb2crEOuegVgQBgA0hyjx1WiqvDOJx3ESyxElG6EqynbY5VgGU/AirVMCiiigCiiig
Let's start planting.


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Going Green Business


Thinking of going in business but do not know what business to get into?  For starters in business,  it would be better to go into something that is growing like green business.  For a growing industry, there are lesser competitors and for a newbie that is welcome news.  Not only will the earnings be bigger but there is more room for expansion and leeway for the mistakes that you will be committing.  Remember you are a newbie.

Why am I recommending green business?  First and foremost is that there are fewer competitors as it is a growing business.  Secondly, there is utter satisfaction from doing something good for mankind.  Lastly, there are a lot of raw materials that remain to be untapped.  It would be good to make good use of these untapped resources while they are still free or cheap and abundant.

How does one go into green business?

1.  Find alternatives for costly and hazardous raw materials.  Examples would be the biodiesel and ethanol.  Biodiesel and ethanol main raw materials come from plant which are renewable, sustainable and doesn't pollute the environment compared to heavy pollutant and dwindling petroleum-based fuel.  A start up entrepreneur can go into farming of corn, coconut, soy, palm and other sources of alternative fuel.

2.  Want to start real small?  Grow organic herbs and vegetables and fish in your own backyard.  Herbs and salad vegetables do not need a big space for them to grow.  You have the option of growing them using hydrophonics or maximising space vertically.  Herbs and salad vegetables are growing businesses anywhere as a lot of people are into eating healthy.

Hydroponics
Vertical Gardening

Fish like tilapia, bangus and catfish can raised in fish condominiums.  Raising fish through this method was introduced as a source of income for the urban poor.  I saw this set-up at the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources compound in Dagupan City, Pangasinan.  It sure has a good potential of being an income earner.

Fish Condo

http://sundaypunch.prepys.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/6-FISH-CONDOS-FOR-U

3.  Organic farming of fruits and animals are becoming a trend nowadays.  People are going back to basic, i.e., eating naturally grown animals like chicken and pigs and fruits like mangoes, papayas, and the like.  They may cost more now but I am sure technology will be available in the very near future to make them affordable.

The rule of thumb is to start small as majority of consumers still patronize cheaper goods and eating and living healthy is just an aside.  For my family, I serve home-cooked meals most of the time and as much as possible use healthier alternatives to chicken and vegetables.  I look up to the day when we will be eating organically-grown foods and practicing green living.


Monday, October 17, 2011

Scented Candle: Ideal Gift

It is barely ninety days till Christmas time and folks from all walks of life are wracking their brains thinking what  gifts to get for people on their Christmas list.  When you visit the stores, candles of different colors, sizes and kind occupy majority of the space of the display racks.  Why not candles?  You ask yourself, "Will it be scented or plain?"  

Most store-based candles are made of paraffin wax.  Paraffin wax is a by-product when refining crude oil  into gasoline and is one of the major sources of wax today.  Advocates of candles made from soy wax claim that it is safer to enjoy a quiet evening with soy wax candles as they are naturally grown and do not contain paraffin wax, a petroleum-based wax.  Imagine walking into a room with candles lit.  The smell of petroleum is unmistakable specially with unscented candles.

Aside from not having the side effects of paraffin wax, soy wax candles are biodegradable.  Soy wax come from soybeans which takes only 80-120 days to grow.  That makes soy wax renewable and sustainable as well.  There is also a big reduction in the soot emission when using soy wax candles.  Soot can usually be found at the rim of the candle containers and can be toxic.  The particles of soot can travel deep into the lungs and people afflicted with asthma and other lung diseases could be vulnerable.

Soybeans
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2708/4359844903_2fcd606ff6.jpg
Another advantage of using soy wax candles is that they burn at a lower temperature.  At a lower temperature, candles burn slowly thus it will take a longer time to fully consume it compared to one of the same weight made from paraffin wax. 

When my husband and I entered the business of trading of vegetable-based lubricants, we were likewise introduced to candles made of healthier alternatives like palm wax and soy wax.  I was surprised that candles can actually come from plants.  Candles from vegetable bases like fuel from similar sources share the same advantages, i.e., renewable, sustainable and biodegradable.

Fortunately, I was able to meet the owners of Alice Blue candles during a business meeting.  Alice Blue   manufactures for export and for the local market candles made of soy wax.  Their candles come in different scents that are so soothing...a perfect way to cap the day.  You too can have this romantic evening by  going to My Gift Shop.  My Gift Shop delivers your candle of choice right at your doorstep.  No need to be stuck in traffic in going to the malls.

Available in Artichoke Ginger, Baby Shower, Lemongrass, etc.






Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Dark Hours During Typhoon Pedring's Fury

After barely three hours of sleep, I woke up at 4:30 in the morning to prepare breakfast for my eldest son, Marco, who has an early morning class.  I  felt that the wind was gusty to a major degree and there's the rain to contend with.  I switched on the television to check if classes will be suspended as well (before my youngest daughter, Kara, went to sleep, she announced to all that she doesn't have classes the next day as the Department of Education has already cancelled classes for pre-school, elementary and high school on account of typhoon Pedring) for the collegiate level.  My other  children, Marco and Nina, are in college.  Upon hearing that the school administrators of the different colleges have already issued a cancellation, I hastily went back to bed to recover hours of lost sleep.  I slept soundly and woke up late in the morning though there was an electrical outage as several trees have been uprooted and branches have fallen that wrecked havoc on electrical cables.  It was a nice feeling being able to experience a good night's sleep once again without the aid of an aircon.

The nice feeling of sleeping the night away without electricity has been short-lived though.  Preparing for brunch posed a problem.  I badly needed to reheat last night's leftover food using the microwave.  Reheating food using the gas stove means that I have to wash big pots and pans in the dark afterwards.  Dusk has arrived and still electricity has not been restored yet in our area.  My children called several stores for food delivery as it is so difficult to prepare and cook food in the dark.  Nobody answered their calls.  My hubby and daughter instead prepared dinner of leftover food (again) and hotdogs (have to be consumed before they become stale) and fried rice.  We have to consume almost two tubs of ice cream in one seating before it becomes soupy.

Fallen trees
Pedring's fury
The powerless day dragged on for hours, to be exact, twelve hours.  We found ourselves looking for things to do as all our laptops were reduced to useless appendages without electricity.  Mobile phones have erratic signals and cannot be used to send emails as well.  Life in our house practically halted to a standstill.  I thought if solar panels are affordable, then our over-dependence on electricity will be a thing of the past.  I cannot emphasize enough that the Philippines is staring at the big potential of solar energy as an alternative source of energy.  Should the private sector take the lead in this endeavor or does the burden rest on the government's shoulders?

Solar panels on the roof of a house.
http://www.hotpundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/solar-energy-nj-tax-credits.jpg





Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Incinerators Vs. Waste Segregation

Exactly five months ago today, I wrote Is It About Time We Consider Using the Incinerator? also for this blog.  I  wrote that article because I was so aghast seeing the mounds of garbage that lined up Retiro Avenue in Quezon City on my way to the clinic of my dermatologist.  Nearby residents had piled plastics of garbage along the avenue for easy collection by the city garbage collector.  We are a very hygienic people in terms of our own bodies but quite the opposite with our trash.

Yesterday, the Philippine Daily Inquirer featured MMDA Favors Burning of Trash, an article about the plans of the Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) of using incinerators in solving once and for all the pestering problem on garbage.   The problem on garbage disposal has been in the news lately because of last month's trash slide in Baguio City triggered by heavy rains of typhoon Mina that killed several people and buried houses at the same time.  People and houses getting killed and buried by the avalanche of garbage will not stop if there are sanitary landfills.

The trash slide at Baguio City at the height of typhoon Mina.

The environmental group, Ecowaste Coalition reacted negatively on MMDA's plans on making incineration the preferred solution to the age old problem of garbage disposal.   Paeng Lopez of the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, a non government organization under Ecowaste Coalition, in an interview with the Philippine Daily Inquirer said that "large scale" solutions like incineration will not work.  Incinerators emit dioxins and furans that are harmful to health even at small doses.  Mr. Lopez' group is espousing waste segregation as the best solution to our garbage woes which at the same time fertilizes the soil through composting.

Though the concept of waste segregation sounds ideal, it is not the best solution to the problem of waste disposal for an urban community like Metro Manila.  For one, waste segregation requires land space for composting of the biodegradable waste.  We all know that land prices in Metro Manila and other urban centers are prohibitive.  Look outside and residential buildings, whether for condominiums, apartments and townhouses, are sprouting everywhere.  This new style of housing does not come with land space that could be used for composting.  Composting may work in the provinces where land is sprawling and available but not in the urban centers.

Waste segregation bins

The sheer volume of garbage in Metro Manila is no joke.  According to Sec. Ramon Paje of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), garbage from Metro Manila accounts for 25% of the total garbage.  If the trash will not be burned, the sanitary landfills will fill up sooner than we think.

The third reason why incineration is the best solution for Metro Manila and other urban centers is that space for sanitary landfills are getting scarcer by the day.  Communities living near proposed landfills express their opposition to such plans.  Living near sanitary landfills are also not safe for the health of the people and the pollution of the air, water and soil that comes with it.  It is difficult to contain dangerous chemicals from seeping into the land and water system.  Landfills produce methane that is bad for the environment as it increases global warming.

Waste segregation requires the cooperation of a big majority of people for it to work.  If the households in Metro Manila which account for a big chunk of the garbage can't practice composting because of the lack of space to do it, waste segregation will not fly.  For the rest of the Philippines, waste segregation  is it.


Sunday, August 28, 2011

Coping with the High Cost of Electricity

In this day and age, is there anybody who can survive twenty fours hours without electricity?  I won't.  There are a myriad of reasons why I can't.  But with my electricity expense eating a big chunk of my household budget, I am faced with several options.  One option is to cut down on my consumption of appliances that cost more like the airconditioner and water heater.  Another one is to find alternative sources of power.

1.  Cut down on consumption of aircon and water heater.  Me, cut down on my aircon hours and take a shower of icy water?  That is out of the question!  No matter how much the kilowatt/hour rate is, that is unthinkable.  Another thing that I could not live without is my internet connection.  My laptop wakes up when I wake up and goes to sleep when I go to sleep.  My internet connection is my sort of lifeline to my virtual world.  Do you know that I own a farm in Farmville and has amassed 15M in FV money?  Lol.

2.  Look for alternatives.  Since it is obvious that I can't compromise the number of consumption hours, I have to be creative in thinking of ways to pay less while consuming more.  My husband said that we have to replace our present appliances with those of newer and more efficient technology, like the inverter technology.  Airconditioners, refrigerators are the first appliances to be available in inverter technology.  With this technology, usage is maximized while saving a lot of energy and of course, money.

There is an alternative source of power that most of us are not aware are using it already for the longest time.  It comes free and is very abundant in tropical countries.  I am talking about solar energy.  What is solar energy?  Solar energy is simply energy from the sun.  For centuries, people have been using solar energy in such simple tasks as drying of clothes, food and what have you.


What can a private individual do to maximize solar energy?  For residences and business establishments,  it entails the installation of solar panels on the roof to catch the sun's rays.  The solar panels convert the sun's rays into electricity that could be used to empower airconditioners, refrigerators, heaters and other appliances.  The number of solar panels to be installed would depend on the electrical consumption.    A higher consumption would require more solar panels.  

Solar panels on the roof of the house.http://www.hotpundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/solar-energy-nj-tax-credits.jpg
Although solar energy has a lot of advantages like it saves money as it is free; it is environment friendly as it is clean, sustainable and renewable; and is easy to maintain, the main drawback for its use is the big initial cost in installing the solar energy system.  The recovery period for the initial investment will depend on the amount of  electricity used.  The bigger consumption, the shorter time to recover the initial investment.  Once this has been recovered, solar energy is practically free.  

Solar energy is one area that the Philippine government should invest in as the country enjoys many months of sunny weather.  It should encourage the use of solar energy by making financing for this undertaking available to everyone.  If banks can lend money for a house and lot in the form of real estate financing, what is stopping them from providing financing for the installation of solar panels?  What a waste if we don't do anything to store this energy that is God-given, abundant and free at that.  





Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Growing Mangoes Naturally

Everyday man is looking for ways to make life easier for the world.  At this time of my life, I have my fill of instant food like coffee, noodles, juice.   Chicken, eggs, shrimp, fish, vegetables are being mass produced to feed the world population which has been growing by leaps and bounds.  Advances in technology and science are mind-boggling.  The earth is becoming smaller with the advent of the internet and lately science is saying that man can live up to 150 years old!

Though contributions of technology and industrialization today cannot be discounted allowing several things to be done at the same time, I still long for food cooked the old way, food grown the natural way.

The Philippine's pride, the carabao mango with scientific name mangifera indica was not spared from being grown commercially.  When before mangoes can only be enjoyed during the summer months from March to May, now locally grown mangoes can be had anytime of the year.  Of course, they cost more on other months of the year.  They are also at their sweetest during the summer months.


According to Rex Rivera, an agronomist and mango specialist,  growing mangoes using the natural farming system is slowly gaining ground nowadays.  People are beginning to eat healthy and that means naturally grown food.  Mango is one of the cash crops of the Philippines and fetches a high price in the market.  Growing it and making it into a business make sense.  Because it is a centennial tree, one is expected to earn income from farming it for a long time.  At its peak at 45-50 years old, a tree can yield  2,000 kilos of mangoes.  While traditional crops like rice, sugar, rice and corn will earn P15,000 to P60,000 per hectare per year, a hectare planted to 50 trees of mangoes can yield P600,000 to the farmer.  

Mango has many uses.  Aside from being a popular dessert, the unripe or green mango is a favorite appetizer or juice.  I prefer eating it fresh, either yellow or green but the dried form is a favorite pasalubong item.




My dear readers, let's start planting trees and earn a lot at the same time.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Raising Free Range Chicken


Eating healthy has been gaining ground for the past five years or so in the Philippines.  Organically produced veggies are one of the popular items in weekend markets at the Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City and Salcedo Market in Makati City.  Garden enthusiasts are planting herbs like oregano, basil, rosemary, mint in their backyard or pocket gardens so there will always be fresh produce when cooking that favorite pasta recipe or soup.  Suddenly vegan cafes and eateries are sprouting in restaurant rows and malls.  Eating healthy has become the craze as people became aware of the side effects of unhealthy food.  By unhealthy food, I am referring to vegetables, poultry and meat that have been grown using pesticides, fertilizers, growth hormones, antibiotics.

For this article, I will be tackling free range chicken farming as a viable source of income.  I got a lot of help from Dr. Erwin Cruz, a veterinarian who is in the business of growing and selling free range day old chicks.  Free range farming is the growing of chicken which allows the chickens to roam freely and are fed chemical-free feeds.  Antibiotics and growth hormones are not used.  Instead, banana leaves, bamboo leaves, brown rice and other natural supplements are given to help them combat diseases.  The meat of chicken grown using this farming method is the preferred meat source of children with autism, the elderly, persons with cancer and other diseases that are diet sensitive.



As per Dr. Erwin Cruz, free range chicken farming started in 1997 here in the Philippines.  It started as a hobby for some and eventually progressed into a full commercial endeavor.  Free range poultry meat is steadily gaining a following because of its more natural delicious taste and health benefits.  Since chicken growers still prefer to grow the commercial chicken found in supermarkets and markets, it is best to go into business now and be ahead of the pack.

The heart of free range chicken farming is choosing the right quality of day old chicks.  This means that the chicks should come from parents that were raised the same way, that is, free range too.  For those about to venture into business, it is best to follow these tips:

1.  Start small to minimize losses.  Fifty to one hundred heads would be ideal for a start up.

2.  Have a ready market.  Since free range chickens cost double than the ordinary dressed chicken, it is best to know the market.

3.  Have a veterinarian who is well-versed in free range chicken farming for proper guidance.

If commercial chickens are harvested between 28 to 32 days,  the ideal harvest age for free range ones is 60 days.  At that age, the chicken weighs 1.6 kilos and 1.1 kilos when dressed.  If commercial chicken growers can have eight to nine cycles per year, free range farmers can only have four to five a year.  Chicks up to age 21 days are housed in brooding houses where they are given feeds, herbal supplements and artificial light.  On day 22 up to harvest time of 60 days, they are transferred to the ranging area enclosed by a fishnet to graze.  Even if they are allowed to graze, feeds are still given for a high meat recovery and quality.

How much capital is needed to start with one hundred heads?  According to Dr. Cruz, the initial cash outlay is P20,965 broken down as follows:

Housing and equipment P8,660

Operating Costs 12,305

The amount does not include the land used for the farm, at least 500 square meters in size.

On the revenue side, the chicken can be sold at P130 per kilo at farm gate prices.  To illustrate:
     
       100 heads x 97% livability = 97 heads x 1.6 kilos live weight = 155.20 kilos

       155.20 kilos x P130/kilo = P20,175

Housing and equipment costs of P8,660 will be amortized within one year which is equivalent to 5 cycles or grows.

       P8,660/5 = P1,732 amortization per cycle.  This amount will be added to the operating costs of P12,305:

       P1,732 + P12,305 = P14,037 representing production cost per cycle for the first year.

To get the net income per cycle for the first year, production cost of P14,037 is deducted from the total revenue of P20,175.

       P20,175 - P14,047 = P6,138.  The net income becomes bigger as the number of chicks increase and after paying the costs for housing and equipment starting on the second year.

     







Sunday, July 17, 2011

Moringa: The Miracle Tree

There is a saying that goes like this:  The best things in life come free.  Because they are free and most of the time, abundant, these things are taken for granted.  A perfect example is the moringa oleifera or malunggay in the Filipino language.

Moringa tree, leaves and pods.  Photos from Wikipedia

According to Wikipedia, moringa oleifera is one of the 13 species of the Moringaceae family.  It is the most widely cultivated and is native to the Philippines.  Malunggay grows well in tropical countries like the Philippines and can't tolerate frost and freeze.

Before reports on the nutritional values of the malunggay became known, it was popularly used as a mere fence material and as a vegetable.  It is primarily as a fence that Filipinos plant it.  Aside from serving as a fence, the malunggay's young leaves, flowers and pods are used as a vegetable.  The young leaves are either added to tinola, a chicken soup dish that is popular viand for lactating mothers or cooked with stingray and coconut milk for that delicious Bicol delicacy kinunot.  Besides those two uses, no other use is known.

Recent studies however, showed that the malunggay has other properties and as such has been regarded as a miracle tree.  It was found that it is anti-diabetic, anti-hypertensive, anti-inflammatory, anti-microbial, anti-viral, anti-parasitic, anti-tumor and anti-aging. The Philippine Bureau of Plant Industry said that Weight per weight, the calcium of the leaves is equivalent to four glasses of milk, the Vitamin C content of 7 oranges, potassium of three bananas, three times the iron of spinach, four times the Vitamin A in carrot and twice the protein in milk.  These recent discoveries put the moringa in a different light that a lot of products came up.  Now you can have a cool guayabano-flavored moringa drink to quench your thirst, have an aromatic massage using moringa oil or moringa tea to cap your day.  Others take moringa in either capsule, powdered or tablet forms for their daily dose of supplements.

Aside from its superior nutritional value, moringa oil extracted from the seed is being touted as a possible source of biodiesel. It is preferred to jathropa because it takes only a year to two years for the seeds to mature compared to three to five years of jathropa.  Moringa is environment friendly as all parts of the plant are used while the waste from the extraction of jathropa oil poses an environmental hazard.

For you, the ordinary Filipino, you can start propagating moringa or malunggay in your backyard so as to be within reach to its nutritional values.  Plant one to two meters long limb cuttings during the rainy months of June to August.  It starts to bear pods before it turns a year old and the yield increases two years after it had been planted.  If you have sufficient capital, you can start farming on a grand basis or intercrop it for those who have existing farms.  Who knows you might be the first moringa magnate of the country, sought after by pharmaceutical giants worldwide.







Friday, June 24, 2011

Re-refined Oil is Just as Good

Amid the rising costs of petroleum products like diesel, gasoline, lubricants and others, businessmen and governments alike are thinking of ways to manage the effects that the ordinary consumer will be experiencing.  Petroleum products are after all a vital component to industrialization and progress.  Some of the measures that were instituted were the finding of sources of alternative and renewable energy as fossil fuels are getting scarcer by the day thus making it the priority of governments. For those who want more information on alternative and renewable energy,  I will not elaborate on it anymore as I have just provided the link.

For this article I will be taking a second look on re-refined oil or lubricants.  Why a second look?  Well, you see, re-refining oil has been around before 1960 that a big chunk of the demand for lubricants was made using re-refined used oil.  Used oil is any oil refined from crude oil and has been used.  According to the US Department of Energy, the production for re-refined oil has steadily declined after 1960 because of the abundant supply of low-cost motor oil, there were no reliable tests available to help evaluate the quality of the re-refined oil, and the acid-clay re-refining technology used at that time posed environmental problems.  

All of these are things of the past.  Lubricants or motor oil are getting costlier because of the rising prices of the main ingredient, base oil.  New technologies in re-refinery and evaluation are also available nowadays that do not pose hazard to the environment.  Big lubricant companies are already setting their sights on recycled oil.  Valvoline has recently came out with its newest product, NextGen and this move will surely pave the way for other biggies to follow.

With re-refined oil, you get the same protection as a motor oil from virgin base oil would.  Lubricants are composed of 85-90% of base oil and the remaining 10-15% are additives that enhance the lubricity, viscosity, viscosity index and the overall quality of the lubricant. The base oil component of the lubricant doesn't wear out in time, it is the additives that wear out.  In George Gill's article Rerefining, Ready for Prime Time, he said that with the current hydro-treatment technology, re-refinery has greatly improved.  With the improvement comes better quality base oil and therefore, better quality used oil can be obtained.  

Though people from the First World are embracing this technology of re-refined oil, people from this part of the globe are slow to do so.  In the Philippines, Green and Natural Lubes Philippines Company is in the forefront in the marketing of lubricants made from recycled base oil or used oil and is one of the few doing so.

REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE



Thursday, June 2, 2011

Start Your Own Lubricant Brand

Are you an Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) who has worked abroad for more than ten years and is yearning to be reunited with your family?  Are you in your late 40s or early 50s and is expecting to be in the list of soon to be retired employees?  Or are you tired of working your butt out for practically the whole day for a salary that doesn't compensate your time and efforts?  If you are one of these people, please read on.


Green and Natural Lubes Philippines Company (GNLPC) might have the answer to your present predicament.  GNLPC came to be because the founders believe that Filipinos are entitled to quality but cost effective lubricants. There are two kinds of lubricants according to the origin of base oil used:  plant-based or petroleum-based.  Base oil is the building block of lubes which account to 90% with the remaining 10%, additives.  From an earlier article, Alternative and Renewable Energy, I explained the advantages of using the former.  Aside from fuel, plants can also produce base oil for lubricant use.

How can GNLPC help you?  GNLPC is looking for interested people who would want to start a private label lubricant distribution business.  If you have an entrepreneurial spirit and mindset, has a good marketing plan, has a distribution network and a sufficient start up capital, you can compete in this P12 billion/year industry.  To get a better picture about this business opportunity, visit Green and Natural Lubes Philippines Company or you can send your email to info@gnlpc.com.  The company is also sponsoring a FREE webinar (online seminar about the lubricant distribution business) on June 14 from 10 am to 11 am. Just go to the company's website to register or you can leave your email address in the comment section of this article (you can find it at the bottom of the article).  

Your dream of being your own boss with your family always by your side is not elusive after all.  Just click on the links above and you're on your way to owning your company and lubricant brand.

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