How a shipbuilding firm jump-started Balamban’s economy | Inquirer Business

How a shipbuilding firm jump-started Balamban’s economy

/ 05:10 AM October 08, 2017

Shipbuilding firm Tsuneishi Heavy Industries, with its more than 11,000 workers, drives the economy in Balamban in southwest Cebu.

More than 20 years ago, there were only a few opportunities for trade and employment in Barangay Buanoy in the southwestern Cebu town of Balamban.

Such is no longer the case these days. From being a fourth-class municipality, Balamban became a first-class town with a total regular income of P301.9 million in one year, according to data from the Commission on Audit.

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With just a few stores initially, more than 1,300 business permits were renewed and 242 new ones were issued by the local government in 2014.

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Among the fast-growing barangays are Buanoy and Arpili where West Cebu Industrial Park (WCIP) is located. WCIP is the economic zone that hosts Tsuneishi Heavy Industries, Inc. (THI).

Charlie Ombao, THI factory support department manager, recalls that in 1994, he still had to go to the town center to buy beer. Ombao was among the first employees of THI and worked during the construction stage of the shipbuilding firm.

Due to labor migration, Balamban’s population grew to 70,000 in 2014, almost double that of 1995, a year after THI was established.

THI has 11,260 employees, 760 of them are direct hires. THI hired qualified residents from Buanoy and from other parts of Balamban, as well as those coming from neighboring Toledo City.

Residents like Jamaica Quimod could not imagine how their lives would have turned out had THI not invested in the town. Quimod’s mother found a job at K&A, another locator at WCIP.

Jamaica got a scholarship from the Tsuneishi Foundation to study civil engineering at the University of San Jose Recoletos. She graduated in March 2016 and began working at THI shortly after as a field engineer.

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Quimod says that with THI, she sees her dreams becoming a reality. “I want to study further, build a house for my parents, and visit places around the world.”

Ombao says THI continues to look for growth opportunities to be able to help Filipinos like Quimod.

Last year, THI built 20 vessels. It received 15 orders scheduled for delivery this year.

To provide quality products on schedule, THI chose AboitizPower to provide reliable and stable power for its operations.

Under the Retail Competition and Open Access regime, big power consumers like THI, or those that require 1 megawatt or more, have the option to choose their own licensed retail electricity suppliers.

“We chose AboitizPower because we trust them. They have a track record of being a reliable and a responsible power company,” Ombao says.

He says THI takes its responsibility to the community and the environment seriously. In line with its parent company’s vision and mission, the facility in Balamban treats its wastewater before discharge, segregates its wastes so that only residual wastes are brought to the municipal landfill for final disposal, and complies with environmental regulations and standards on the treatment and disposal of hazardous materials.

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THI also encourages its employees to participate in annual tree and mangrove planting activities. THI aims to plant 2,500 indigenous tree seedlings in the uplands of Balamban and 5,000 mangrove propagules in foreshore areas.

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