Sunday, May 31, 2015

Eileen Escueta opens 6th solo exhibit at Ayala Museum's ArtistSpace

During an interview with Eileen Escueta a few years back, she talked about preparations for an upcoming exhibit:

http://business.inquirer.net/152759/executive-coach-blooms-as-an-art-teacher

After two years preparation, Escueta's sixth solo exhibit at the Ayala Museum's ArtistSpace has finally materialized. Aside from her squarcle collection (see picture above), she also features some paintings from her koi fish series as well as a few watercolor portraits.

The "Waterdance" exhibit runs until 07 June 2015.  Art patrons can go to the Ayala Museum in Makati. Entrance is free.

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Eileen Escueta gives business advice to aspiring artists:

http://joyposadaswrites.blogspot.com/2015/08/watercolor-teacher-dishes-advice-to.html?m=0

Thursday, May 28, 2015

In search of greater AIM alumni participation


The Alumni Association of the Asian Institute of Management (AAAIM) is intended to address the needs of the school's alumni.  Chairman of the Board Rowena Palmiery - Bayoneta explains, "The AAAIM is there to serve the alumni and in so doing, increase the alumni engagement to AIM."
Bayoneta continues, "The AIM alumni must be relevant to the community." Thus, the alumni board has embarked on providing continuing education talks covering tech and innovation as well as women in leadership topics, on top of the usual golf tournaments and other events.  Alumni are encouraged to stay abreast with these developments.

On another note, some AIM alumni are not aware that the AIM Conference Center Manila (ACCM) offers lodging to visiting alumni at a special room rate. Just present your alumni card and ask for the special rate.  Bayoneta also mentioned that other discounts attached to the alumni card can also be downloaded on the smart phone. The digital version can be used (instead of the card) in finalizing transactions.

The hotel offers basic amenities.  However, the main advantage of staying at ACCM is its close proximity to the Ayala Malls and corporate offices in the vicinity.  A restaurant and coffee shop also operate inside the hotel. 

Friday, May 22, 2015

The fresh lumpia at the Good Shepherd Tagaytay store

I once wrote a news feature on the Good Shepherd store along the Sta. Rosa – Tagaytay highway:



From the beginning when I first discovered this place, I have pined for only one thing, the store’s fresh lumpia. 

At least as of this writing, I have never been disappointed as I find that ingredients served are fresh.  For only P50 a piece, the fresh lumpia is not only an ordinary man’s meal (part of the store’s advocacy involves helping the poor) but is also a foodie’s delight.




The meal is served in a takeout box complete with sauce and spoon.  After eating, diners  are expected to segregate plastics and biodegradable leftovers into separate trash bins.

Friday, May 15, 2015

Seda Nuvali club lounge emerges in Laguna suburb

Seda Nuvali's club lounge is a modern place where guests can cozy up and finish some work on the laptop.  Light snacks are served during tea time, cocktails, and breakfast. Notwithstanding the lounge's limited food selection, the small enclave offers more privacy, especially on days that are not too busy.
On a clear day, the 9th floor lounge offers an unobstructed view of Mt. Makiling and Mt.Banahaw. Guests can avail of club lounge amenities if they are booked specifically with lounge access.

Tea time snacks may include tuna, chicken, and salmon mini-sandwiches.
Tea, together with coffee and a few sodas, is available all day.
During cocktails, alcoholic beverages are also served.
Appetizers during the cocktail hour may include calamari and chicken roulade.
Guests have the option to take a light breakfast at the club lounge or go for the more complete selection at Misto lobby restaurant.

Thursday, May 7, 2015

What does Paris COP21 and JFK's moon address have in common?


My first attempt at birdwatching and taking photos.  Even these birds are in danger from changes brought about by climate change. 


On Paris COP21 and JFK’s Moon Address

by Dennis Posadas

Just last December 12, a monumental announcement from Paris COP21 rocked the world. Nations agreed to an agreement to limit carbon emissions from fossil fuels to prevent a dangerous 2C rise (ideally not beyond 1.5C) that could wreck massive havoc on the world’s climate. However, the agreement was toned down as the U.S. convinced other countries to adopt the word “should” (instead of the more powerful legal implications of the word “shall”) in order to bypass a veto by the GOP controlled US Senate. There were other compromises from previously hardline positions as well, but one that is to be expected from negotiations of this magnitude.

However this slightly toned down agreement is not necessarily less powerful than it may seem. On the contrary, the moral significance of this agreement should not be lost to everyone – the world’s nations have finally put forth in a document that they agree with the premise of limiting carbon emissions to prevent dangerous climate change.

We should remember that when JFK said in 1961 that “I believe this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth,” the scientists and engineers of NASA did not even have all the knowledge and details of how to achieve the mission. JFK could have said “I command” instead of the weaker “I believe.” But that belief, instead of a command, would turn into a powerful vision that would electrify the world. It would be achieved even after his death, because his words had been the moral force that propelled legions of men and women to achieve what seemed impossible a few years earlier.

The Paris COP21 is like JFK’s moon address. It should even have a greater moral power to propel the world’s engineers, scientists, policymakers, businessmen, financiers, and others to achieve our new moon shot – to move our source of energy from fossil fuels into renewable clean sources in order to prevent dangerous climate change.

Naysayers will always say anything short of a mandatory commitment will not work. But that belief is borne out of a lack of trust in the human spirit. Mankind, if given the chance, can rise to the occasion and show why it was given the power of reason and action. We must believe in our own capacity to create change for good.

Policymakers should continue with their work of adding details to the agreement. Financiers and big business should lead the way towards the transformation of their enterprises into low carbon ventures. Scientists and engineers should continue to find means to make renewables and cleantech better and cheaper. Governments should lessen burdens towards the adoption of clean energy and penalize excessive use of carbon based energy, either through carbon taxes or similar means. Individuals should exercise their power of choice, even if sometimes (though increasingly no longer true) that choice initially may turn out to be more expensive at first, even though eventually it will become cheaper because of innovation and economies of scale.

The harder task is now up to us. If we continue with business as usual, and continue with our current path of using fossil fuels indiscriminately, then the words on the agreement forged in Paris COP21 will be just that – words.

But if we fit our actions to fulfill the moral imperative of that document, then perhaps by the end of this decade, we will have our own version of the impossible dream here on earth.


The Asian Spectator  is a tech blog by renewal energy consultant Dennis Posadas. The articles are syndicated by several newspapers such as HK Economic Journal, Singapore Business Times, Singapore Today, Japan Today, and Yale Global.

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Within the same year that Pope Francis launched his encyclical on climate change, the world finally reached an agreement in Paris:

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2015/12/13/science/earth/climate-accord-is-a-healing-step-if-not-a-cure.html

"The Paris deal sets a more ambitious target, declaring that the global average temperature rise ought to be kept “well below” 2 degrees Celsius, and that countries should try go further, limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius." (NYT)

Now, the hard work begins especially as many of these climate change projects take a long time to implement. Quite possibly, those who signed the Paris deal may not even stay in power long enough to see things happen.

But nevertheless, it is a victorious moment for climate change advocates. At least, the world leaders agreed on something...

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I read a CBS News report that the world just reached a dangerous milestone where concentrations of greenhouse gases have hit unprecedented levels:


During my 2013 interview with former senator and climate commissioner Heherson Alvarez for an Inquirer article, he explained that an additional two degrees centigrade (Celsius) warming of the earth would lead to dire consequences such as food shortages, corals bleaching and fish dying in the oceans, and more:



The world has also eagerly anticipated or debated the views of the Roman Pontiff on this issue.  The much awaited day for the encyclical's release (18 June 2015) has finally arrived.

Pope Francis' encyclical "Laudato Si" can be  viewed online on the following page:

www.laudatosi.com