Photobucket

“ I do not know, I hope not.” – Gov. Oca Moreno

“Hanjin kisses Misor project goodbye”

Herbi Gomez and Susan Palmes

The Korean firm Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Corp. has decided to withdraw its US$ 2 billion shipyard project from Misamis Oriental due to difficulties in dealing with the government, highly placed sources said yesterday.

A senior Hanjin executive told The Gold Star Daily that the Korean firm started moving out last Saturday. Lawyer Jose Alejandro Pallugna, a columnist of this paper also claimed to have been informed by reliable sources about Hanjin’s decision to back off from Tagoloan and Villanueva towns in Misamis Oriental.

“I do not know, I hope not, “ said Misamis Oriental Gov. Oscar Moreno when this paper asked him about the reported hanjin withdrawal. The last time he checked, Moreno said, Hanjin suspended its operations to assess its Misamis Oriental project. Moreno’s mood had radically changed. Just a few weeks back, the governor was in high spirits because of the Hanjin project that was seen to create 40 thousand jobs in Misamis Oriental. The Misamis Oriental would have been the biggest Hanjin Shipyard outside South Korea and one of the biggest in the world. Moreno said the problem on Hanjin project would be included in the agenda of President here today. Moreno said there were “events” that made things complicated for Hanjin. Sources said a confluence of factors resulted in the Hanjin decision to back off. The bottomline: the locals made it difficult for the Koreans to invest in the province.

They cited some of Hanjin’s reasons for the withdrawal: failure to secure an environmental compliance certificate from the environment department, relocation problems, a disagreement with the state run National Power Corporation over billing conditions, landownership issues and alleged moves in the Senate to summon Hanjin’s top executives due to environmental concerns.

A Hanjin official said they received an ECC from the environment department yesterday morning days after the firm started moving out. But he said the EC did not make any difference because a decision has already been made. He said some of Hanjin’s executives left for good yesterday. “I brought them to {Lumbia} airport,” said the executive.

On local television earlier Moreno hinted that Hanjin officials experience4d “hardships” and decided to defer the implementation of the US$ 2 billion shipyard project until they could comply with all the requirements of the government. He said the situation was volatile. But an alleged act of aggression last weekend may have been the last straw that broke the camel’s back. “Things have changed after Saturday’s incident,” said Moreno.

Moreno said a driver of Hanjin was barred from the construction site and was attacked by an unidentified man on Saturday. He said a former official of Tagoloan town then seized the hanjin workers’s identification card and camera. The same day, Hanjin started moving out, according to sources. Moreno said he feared Misamis Oriental would lose the project which he called “a strategic investment” with long term effects.

“Its effects on employment would be felt even by the next generation…long after us,”

he said.

Hanjin planned to operate a shipyard that would extend from Tagoloan to Villanueva. Its training center alone would occupy eight hectares; the planned shipyard would be on a 70-hectare property in Tagoloan and on a 400-hectare property in Villanueva.