Philippines opens Mindanao’s longest bridge to boost development

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. opens the Panguil Bay Bridge connecting Misamis Occidental and Lanao del Norte in the southern Philippines on Sept. 27, 2024. (Presidential Communications Office)
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Updated 27 September 2024
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Philippines opens Mindanao’s longest bridge to boost development

  • 3.17-km-long Panguil Bay Bridge to be followed by a longer one in Mindanao’s southeast
  • It cuts travel between Misamis Occidental and Lanao del Norte from 2 hours to 7 minutes

Manila: President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. inaugurated on Friday the longest bridge in Mindanao in a move expected to boost connectivity in the long-underdeveloped southern Philippines.

The 3.17-km Panguil Bay Bridge linking Tangub City in Misamis Occidental province to Tubod town in Lanao del Norte slashes travel time from about 2.5 hours to seven minutes.

Funded by a loan from South Korea’s Economic Development Cooperation Fund, construction of the 8-billion-peso ($143 million) two-way, two-lane bridge started in February 2020 and was completed this month.

“The increased economic activity is going to be a very important development building block for both the provinces and for the entire island of Mindanao,” Marcos said as he officially opened the bridge.

“With this bridge, what once took two hours will now take seven minutes and will benefit 10,000 travelers a day … I would like to highlight the ripple effect it will have on local businesses.”

Approved during the Benigno Aquino III administration in 2015, the bridge’s construction started under the administration of Rodrigo Duterte and was completed under Marcos.

Hailed as a landmark infrastructure achievement in the region, the Panguil Bay Bridge will soon face competition.

The 3.98-km Samal Island-Davao City Connector in Mindanao’s southeastern Davao Region is set to surpass the Panguil Bay Bridge as Mindanao’s longest in 2027.


France tightens infant milk rules after recalls

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France tightens infant milk rules after recalls

PARIS: France has lowered the safety limit for cereulide toxin in infant formula, aiming to strengthen protections after several major ​groups ordered worldwide recalls over contamination concerns, the farm ministry said on Saturday.
Cereulide, which can cause nausea and vomiting, has been detected in ingredients from a factory in China supplying a large number of baby formula makers including Nestle, Danone ‌and Lactalis, triggering recalls ‌in dozens of ‌countries ⁠and ​raising concerns ‌among parents.
The new threshold will be of 0.014 micrograms of cereulide per kg of body mass, compared to 0.03 micrograms per kg currently, the ministry said in a statement.
France’s move follows a European Union meeting on ⁠January 28 and is in line with an updated ‌guidance from the European ‍Food Safety Authority that ‍will be released on Monday, it ‍said.
The lower threshold is likely to lead to further withdrawals in France in the coming days, it added.
The recalls illustrate how a single ​compromised ingredient can spread through the infant nutrition supply chain, despite tight regulation, and ⁠cause rapid market jitters.
French investigators said on January 23 they are looking into whether there is a link between the death of two infants and recalled formula products.
On Thursday, consumer group foodwatch said it had filed a criminal complaint in Paris on behalf of eight families whose babies it says fell ill after consuming contaminated infant formula, ‌claiming companies waited too long to warn the public.