December 3, 2019 | 12:07 am
MINING
companies are encouraged to work with the Department of Science and Technology
(DOST) to come up with new innovations to help the local mining industry grow
and be more competitive.
Ma. Anya Yasmin S.
Roslin, head of the project management office of the DOST’s Science for Change
Program, said mining firms can tap programs, such as the Business Innovation
Through Science and Technology Industry (BIST) program.
The program will cover
up to 70% of the total eligible cost of the necessary technology without
interest. Project proposals will solely depend on what the company thinks it
needs.
“Ngayon lang natin
nakikita na what they really need is to handhold them in terms of proposal.
That is I think one of their gaps kasi wala tayong problema sa kanila in
terms of counterpart funding, pero hindi nila ma-access dahil lahat
ng mga ganitong bagay is proposal driven. (We are already seeing that what
they really need is to hold their hand in terms of proposal. That is I think
one of their gaps since we don’t have problem with them in terms of counterpart
funding, but they can’t access since these programs are proposal driven),” Ms.
Roslin said at the sidelines of the mining lecture series of the Philippine
Council for Industry, Energy and Emerging Technology Research and Development (PCIEERD)
and the Chamber of Mines of the Philippines (CoMP) on Monday in Pasay City.
If mining firms want to
stay competitive, Ms. Roslin said they need do research and development to come
up with new innovations.
“What we discovered
today is that there is numerous opportunities for collaboration that we have
yet to explore. Clearly, mining companies have needs that we have to address.
We have of environmental and social issues that can be addressed through
R&D,” CoMP Executive Director Ronald S. Recidoro said in a separate
interview.
Through the
collaboration between mining companies and the government, he also hopes that
research and development could help lift the image of the mining industry in
the Philippines.
“There is money, we
just need to get that collaboration going and that’s what we plan to do
starting next year,” he added. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang
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