Published December 3, 2018, 10:00 PM
By Myrna M.
Velasco
The Department of Energy (DOE) is
institutionalizing its “ease of doing business” task force so it can rid the
department of thousands of project application backlogs that had already been
gathering dusts since 2011.
Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi
said he was prompted into establishing that body at the department following
his discovery of un-acted project proposals and submissions that could go as
far back as seven years ago.
The task force is headed by Energy
Undersecretary Alexander Lopez and he will have Director Patrick Aquino and
Investment Promotion Office Chief Lisa Go complementing his team.
“There are many business proposals
pending since 2011, there are thousands of them… and there are a lot of modus
operandi that supposedly ‘it’s for the signature of the secretary,’ but there
are people at the DOE bureaus asking for money in exchange for project
approvals,” the energy chief stressed.
Cusi admitted that he heard of
complaints about some people at the department allegedly asking for bribes, so
he wants application processes concentrated via this new one-stop shop body.
“We’re doing the one-stop shop application
process. I don’t want the investors to be going from department to department,”
the energy chief explained.
He noted through this “ease of doing
business platform” that will be enforced internally at the department, what he
wants to see as outcome is “that no documents will be there lounging for a long
time and waiting to be acted upon by various people.”
Cusi qualified under the current
set-up, “a project application goes directly to different bureaus, but that is
a grueling process and the waiting time for investors could take very long… we
have to take note that these investors have lenders or prospective foreign
partners waiting for progress of their proposed projects.”
With the newly established task
force, the energy secretary emphasized that monitoring will be easier – like
which cases had already been decided and which ones are still pending for
evaluation and action.
Cusi said his mandate to the new
team is “to make sure that ‘the ease of doing business’ is complied – I am
pissed off with alibis that the paper is just there waiting for evaluation or
processing.”
For the department’s backlogs to be
fully expunged, Cusi said the task force can either cancel or recommend the
approval of certain projects.
“But if they would have to terminate
a project, they shall make sure that there’s a reason. And if a project can
still be revived, I am instructing them to make sure that the process of
approval is above board,” he emphasized.
At this stage, Cusi said the team is
sorting out inventory of all pending applications – and then they will have to
act on these according to priority or relevance; while his office will be
monitoring progress of these project proposals.
No comments:
Post a Comment