Overview of the extractive industries
3.1 Exploration data
Requirement:
Fully met
90
The Philippines has ensured that an overview of the extractive sector in the country and its potential, including recent, ongoing and planned significant exploration activities, is accessible to the public. Systematic disclosures of this information on the DOE and MGB websites are sufficient to address all aspects of this requirement, although these are also summarised in successive PH-EITI Reports.
6.3 Contribution of the extractive sector to the economy
Requirement:
Fully met
90
The Philippines has addressed most aspects of this requirement by publishing the extractive industries’ contribution, in absolute and relative terms, to GDP (including informal activities), exports and employment. Public disclosures on the government’s extractive industry revenues are limited to the four sub-sectors considered material (metallic and non-metallic mining, coal, oil and gas), not for other extractive sub-sectors. However, PH-EITI reporting has been transparent about some of the constraints hindering disclosure of a figure on total government revenues from the extractive industries, including legal taxpayer confidentiality provisions. The issue of full government disclosure of all extractive revenues is covered in more detail under comprehensiveness (see Requirement 4.1).
Legal and fiscal framework
2.1 Legal framework
Requirement:
Exceeded
100
The Philippines has addressed all aspects of this requirement by ensuring that PH-EITI reporting summarises descriptions of the legal environment and fiscal regime for mining, coal, oil and gas, including the roles of government entities, the level of fiscal devolution and ongoing of planned reforms in mining, not oil and gas. Government websites provide much of this information in a dispersed manner, including updates on ongoing reforms in the petroleum sector. The Philippines has exceeded the minimum of this requirement by ensuring systematic disclosures of the information mandated under Requirement 2.1, ensuring timely public disclosures.
2.4 Contracts
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The Philippines has made progress on most aspects of this requirement, including in clarifying the government's policy on contract disclosure and documenting actual practice. In practice, most mining contracts are published, and the three oil and gas contracts in production are published. While the MSG’s comments noted that contracts of coal had been published on the PH-EITI Contracts portal, the comprehensiveness of contract publications remains unclear (with the material company Semirara’s contract not appearing on the portal for instance). The MSG has included plans to assess the comprehensiveness of contact disclosure to date in its 2021 work plan. The recent publication of PMDC’s joint operating agreements (JOAs) with its operators, referenced in the MSG’s comments, is commendable. The MGB and DOE have confirmed that no operating contract has been awarded or amended in the 1 January - 31 March 2021 period. However, the 6th PH-EITI Report’s reference to the DOE’s inability to publish contracts whose project terms are still active is a concern, as it raises questions about the prospects for the systematic publication of new coal, oil and gas contracts and amendments in future. Nonetheless, government officials consulted did not raise any barriers to the publication of all operating contracts in the coal, oil and gas sectors, evidenced by the recent publication of some contracts. Of more immediate concern, there does not appear to be a comprehensive list of active contracts and licenses (including exploration licenses) indicating which contracts are publicly accessible and which are not. In addition, the full text of licenses does not appear to be published and it is unclear whether there are significant variations between licenses (permits).
6.4 Environmental impact
Not assessed
The Philippines’s 6th EITI Report provides a basis for stakeholders to assess the adequacy of the regulatory framework and monitoring efforts to manage the environmental impact of extractive industries, and to assess extractive companies’ adherence to environmental obligations. Indeed, it provides company disclosures of their contributions to environmental funds.
Licenses
2.2 Contract and license allocations
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The Philippines has made progress in addressing the objective of this requirement, but a number of technical gaps mean the overall objective of transparency in license and contract allocations cannot yet be considered to be fully achieved. Mining: The 6th PH-EITI Report lists the licenses and contracts awarded in 2018, describes the statutory procedure for awards and transfers and the MSG has undertaken a review of non-trivial deviations from statutory procedures in practice in 2018, although stakeholders expressed concerns that consultation processes were not always followed in practice. However, as confirmed in the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment, the MGB has confirmed the lack of new mining license contract and license awards in 2018. The technical and financial criteria assessed for mining license and contract awards and transfers are described in the public domain and government officials confirm that there is no weighting applied to the criteria, even if this is not explicitly stated in disclosures on the MGB website. None of the mining licenses and contracts appear to have been awarded through bidding in 2018. Coal, oil and gas: The 6th PH-EITI Report and online government sources list the one new oil and gas contract award in 2018, while the MSG’s comments refer to a published letter from the DOE confirming the lack of any new coal contract awards or transfers in this period. The minutes of MSG meetings indicate that the DOE was expected to subsequently confirm whether there were any transfers of interests in oil and gas contracts in 2018, although there is no public record (nor reference in the MSG’s comments) of the DOE's clarification of the number of transfers in oil and gas contracts in 2018. The general procedures for awarding and transferring coal, oil and gas contracts are described, including an assessment of non-trivial deviations in practice. Public sources define the technical and financial criteria assessed for coal, oil and gas contract awards and transfers, but do not clarify whether any weightings are applied to criteria assessed in transfers. The bid criteria for awarding the oil and gas contract granted through bidding in 2018, and the full list of bidders was published on the PH-EITI Contracts portal and referenced in the MSG’s comments.
2.3 Register of licenses
Requirement:
Partly met
30
There is no single license register that is publicly accessible for licenses and contracts in mining, coal, oil and gas in the Philippines. It is unclear whether the 6th PH-EITI Report lists all licenses and contracts held by material companies, or only those that gave rise to material payments to government in 2018 (i.e. producing licenses and contracts). While some of the information listed under Requirement 2.3.b is accessible for the mining, oil and gas licenses, there are significant gaps in dates of application, coordinates and commodity(ies) covered. In its comments, the MSG referenced the new publication of Contracts of Coal and oil and gas Service Contracts through the PH-EITI Contracts portal, albeit with gaps in dates of application and coordinates. While the DOE’s question about the relevance of dates of application is noted, the lack of coordinates is a broader concern, notwithstanding the West Philippine Sea contracts whose coordinates remain confidential for national security considerations. The lack of publicly accessible cadastral portals with key data such as coordinates constitutes a significant gap. The Philippines is therefore far from the objective of ensuring the public accessibility of comprehensive information on property rights related to extractive deposits and projects.
Ownership
2.5 Beneficial ownership
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The Philippines has agreed appropriate definitions for the terms “beneficial owner” and “politically exposed person” (PEP), and established an enabling legal environment for beneficial ownership disclosure. While the 6th PH-EITI Report highlighted gaps in requirements for foreign companies to disclose their BO, a new SEC Memorandum Circular in 2020 effectively expanded BO disclosure requirements to foreign companies. While the SEC has started collecting BO data from all extractive companies, including foreign and companies applying for licenses, there are regulatory constraints hindering the publication of BO data given the lack of legal requirements to publish BO data and provisions of the Data Privacy Act. Information on legal owners of companies is available upon request from the SEC’s new platform (SEC Express) at a reasonable fee. Given confidentiality constraints, PH-EITI has worked with companies in the scope of EITI reporting to conclude waivers allowing for the publication of BO data. The 6th PH-EITI Report’s review of BO disclosures lists only 81 extractive companies that had been requested to report this data as of end 2020. The Philippines has established appropriate data quality assurances for BO disclosures. The MSG has published an assessment of the comprehensiveness and reliability of disclosures to date. Yet while information on the filings of companies publicly listed in the Philippines appears to be available online, the MSG does not appear to have published a comprehensive list of all extractive companies that are subsidiaries of companies publicly listed overseas, including references to their statutory filings at their respective stock exchange. Therefore, while the MSG has addressed most aspects of the initial criteria for the Validation of this requirement, there are key gaps related to the lack of an enabling legal environment for the disclosure of beneficial ownership information and the lack of systematic public disclosure of all extractive companies’ BO data given that disclosure consent forms were only requested from the 73 companies in the scope of EITI reporting in 2018.
State participation
2.6 State participation
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The 6th PH-EITI Report, together with the SOEs' websites, addresses almost all aspects of the requirement, although there are a number of technical gaps such as the lack of information on the terms attached to state equity and participating interests in extractives projects and the lack of consideration of direct state loans and guarantees to extractive companies. Transparency in state participation is an area where SOE disclosures have been mainstreamed from the start, given the quality of SOEs' existing disclosures. While the MSG comments’ clarification of the terms of loans involving PMDC is welcome, they did not clarify the terms of any outstanding loans from the state to any extractive companies. The list of PNOC-EC participating interests in coal, oil and gas projects referenced in the MSG’s comments do not include the terms attached to PNOC-EC’s interest, including its level of responsibility for covering expenses at various phases of the project cycle (e.g. full-paid equity, free equity or carried interest).
4.2 In-kind revenues
Not applicable
The MSG appears to have considered the applicability of Requirement 4.2 based on 2018 data and has publicly documented its conclusions that the requirement was not applicable in 2018.
4.5 SOE transactions
Not applicable
As confirmed in the MSG's comments, the figures for 2018 dividends from SOEs in the 6th PH-EITI Report are related to dividend payments actually made in 2018. It can therefore be concluded that the MSG has adequately demonstrated that the requirement is not applicable in 2018 given that SOE dividends were below the materiality threshold of 2% of sector revenues.
6.2 SOE quasi-fiscal expenditures
Not applicable
It appears that this requirement was not applicable in 2018. While the MSG’s comments only referred to its review of PNOC-EC and PMDC’s financial statements as a basis for assessing the existence of quasi-fiscal expenditures in 2018, there is no evidence or allegations of any quasifiscal expenditures in the year under review.
Production and exports
3.2 Production data
Requirement:
Fully met
90
The Philippines had addressed all aspects of this requirement aside from the publication of production values for crude oil, natural gas, condensate and coal at the start of Validation. However, the MSG has since published estimates of average commodity prices for coal, oil and gas, and related estimates of production values and referenced these in its comments.
3.3 Export data
Requirement:
Fully met
90
All of the information listed under Requirement 3.3 is publicly available in the Philippines. The MSG’s comments noted that the data had been published with HS code numbers and the associated commodity names, aside from non-metallic minerals. Export information is provided in the Transparency template and since republished in the public summary data file in open data format on the PH-EITI website.
Revenue collection
4.1 Comprehensiveness
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The Philippines has made progress in addressing the objective of this requirement, but there are gaps in the comprehensiveness of the disclosures of government revenues, particularly from the coal sector. The MSG's approach to materiality remains somewhat unclear and the value of the government's total revenues from the extractive industries, including from industries considered non-material, is not yet public. While the MSG’s comments justified the lack of review of materiality thresholds ahead of EITI reporting for 2018 on the basis that the structure of revenue streams has not changed over the years and that all of the largest producing extractive companies were included in the scope of reporting, the lack of justification for the scope of 2018 reporting on quantitative grounds based on 2018 data is problematic given the potential for non-producing companies to make material payments to government. The lack of reporting by a material companies accounting for a large share of government revenues from the coal sector is a concern. While the 6th PH-EITI Report and MSG’s comments describe the MSG and government's efforts to follow up with the non-reporting companies, there are stakeholder concerns among those consulted over whether the government has undertaken sufficient efforts to ensure participation in EITI reporting by all material companies selected to report. The lack of participation in EITI reporting by the sole material coal company after six years of EITI reporting is a concern, given estimates that the coal sector accounted for 7% of government revenues in 2018. Therefore, the broader objective of comprehensive disclosures cannot yet be considered fulfilled.
4.3 Infrastructure provisions and barter arrangements
Not applicable
The MSG appears to have considered the applicability of Requirement 4.3 based on 2018 data and has publicly documented its conclusions that the requirement was not applicable in 2018.
4.4 Transportation revenues
Not applicable
The MSG appears to have considered the applicability of Requirement 4.4 based on 2018 data and has publicly documented its conclusions that the requirement was not applicable in 2018.
4.7 Level of disaggregation
Requirement:
Fully met
90
The 6th PH-EITI Report describes the MSG's definition of project and presents reconciled financial data disaggregated by government entity, revenue stream, company and (where relevant) project.
4.8 Data timeliness
Requirement:
Fully met
90
PH-EITI financial data has been published in a sufficiently timely manner and the MSG has approved the period for reporting, although more information on the MSG's plans to improve the timeliness of reporting would be welcome.
4.9 Data quality and assurance
Requirement:
Fully met
90
The Philippines has fulfilled the overall objective and has addressed all aspects of the requirement, ensuring that appropriate measures have been taken to ensure the reliability of disclosures of company payments and government revenues from oil, gas and mining. PH-EITI could do more to develop recommendations for the EITI to contribute to strengthening routine government and company audit and assurance systems and practices.
Revenue management
5.1 Distribution of revenues
Requirement:
Fully met
90
While the 6th PH-EITI Report does not comment on whether all extractive revenues are recorded in the national budget, previous PH-EITI Reports had confirmed that this was the case in previous years. The MSG’s comments referenced assurances from the MGB, DOE and DBM at the MSG’s 70th meeting in June 2021 that this was still the case in 2018 and that no new extra-budgetary extractive industry revenues existed in 2018. It can therefore be assessed that the broader objective of the requirement of ensuring the traceability of extractive revenues to the national budget has been fulfilled.
5.3 Revenue management and expenditures
Not assessed
The MSG has addressed all aspects of this requirement, through PH-EITI reporting as well as relevant government websites. However, there is relatively little information in the public domain about the management of earmarked revenues, such as the Malampaya Fund, aside from a COA audit of the Fund in 2018.
Subnational contributions
4.6 Subnational payments
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The Philippines has made progress in addressing most aspects of this requirement, but the large number of non-reporting LGUs due to challenges in the ENRDMT system means that the objective of transparency in direct subnational payments cannot yet be considered fulfilled. The ENRDMT system represents an example of best practice in government systematic disclosure of direct subnational payments, which should provide disaggregated data on all subnational revenue flows once technical challenges in the system are addressed.
5.2 Subnational transfers
Requirement:
Mostly met
60
The Philippines has addressed most aspects of this requirement, although the relatively small number of local government units for which subnational transfers are disclosed raises concerns about the comprehensiveness of disclosures of subnational transfers of mining revenues in the 6th PH-EITI Report. Indeed, subnational transfer data was only disclosed for 11 LGUs receiving shares of royalties from mineral reservations and 36 LGUs receiving shares of mineral taxes, which appears low relative to the number of LGUs entitled to receive shares of mineral revenues. While the MSG’s comments noted that the 6th PH-EITI Report’s disclosures of subnational transfers were comprehensive of all LGUs that actually received such transfers in 2018, it does not comment on whether these disclosures are comprehensive of all LGUs that should have received subnational transfers according to the statutory revenue-sharing formula. It would have been necessary to disclose the notional amount of subnational transfers that should have been transferred in 2018, including to LGUs that did not receive their share in 2018. Therefore, the broader objective of enabling stakeholders at the local level to assess whether the transfer and management of subnational transfers of extractive revenues are in line with statutory entitlements cannot yet be considered to be fulfilled.
6.1 Social and environmental expenditures
Requirement:
Exceeded
100
The Philippines has addressed all aspects of this requirement by disclosing mandatory social expenditures as part of mining companies’ SDMP. The MSG's comments confirmed that Annex 20 is comprehensive of all mandatory social expenditures by reporting companies in 2018, and the description of in-kind expenditures and identity of non-government beneficiaries is provided in Annex 20 to the 6th PH-EITI Report. There do not appear to be any mandatory environmental payments to government in 2018. While there are gaps in company reporting due to 11 material companies’ failure to participate in the 6th PH-EITI Report, these gaps are covered under Requirement 4.1 given that they relate to overall company reporting. Therefore, the overall objective of providing a basis for assessing extractive companies’ compliance with their legal and contractual obligations to undertake social and environmental expenditures can be considered fulfilled.