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05/21/2008

Eastern unit to expand cassava plantations

Cassava Chips Eastern Renewables Fuels Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of Eastern Petroleum Corp., plans to expand its cassava plantation to 4,500 hectares this year to meet the growing demand for biofuel, the parent company’s top official said. The company has harvested cassava from an initial 1,000 hectares and the cassava chips will be shipped to the ethanol processing facility of its partner in China, the Guanxi State Farm Bureau, Eastern Petroleum chairman and chief executive Fernando Martinez said. Martinez said Eastern Renewables hoped to harvest the cassava from a further 3,500 hectares by March next year. He said that since the company had yet to set up an ethanol refining facility in the Philippines, cassava harvested from its plantations would continue to be shipped to Guanxi for processing. “What we produce here will be for processing and consumption in China,” he said. “But we may also consider buying back the processed ethanol, especially when the mandated blend takes effect.” Under a biofuels law, gasoline distributed in the Philippines should have an ethanol content of at least five percent by 2009. The mandated blend will rise to at least 10 percent four years after the implementation of the law. Eastern Renewables has cassava plantations in the provinces of Zambales, Sarangani, Davao del Norte and South Cotabato and in General Santos City. It is also eyeing a spot within the petrochemical park of government-owned PNOC Alternative Fuels Corp. in Bataan province, where it plans to set up an ethanol production plant and depot.Plesner has already identified her next project, a spoof of the "Mr Men and Little Miss" series of children's characters by Roger Hargreaves. "I have a drawing for a T-shirt called 'Little Miss Child Prostitute'. It is a little bit like the same thing -- you take something from the Western world and you twist it a bit to show that, for other children, life is very different," she said.