SET-listed energy giant Banpu on Friday announced total sales revenue of US$2.397 billion for the first three quarters of this year, a 106% rise on the same period last year.
Banpu CEO Somruedee Chaimongkol said some of the increase could be attributed to rising energy consumption. The company also saw returns from renewable and clean energy investments like solar and wind farms.
Somruedee said Banpu’s NEXT strategy for green energy expansion will focus on five elements: solar roof, battery, energy management solution, electric vehicles, and energy trading.
Banpu operates three core businesses – energy resources, energy generation and energy technology – in 10 countries: Thailand, Indonesia, China, Australia, Laos, Mongolia, Singapore, Japan, the United States and Vietnam.
Somruedee Chaimongkol also unveiled Banpu’s “Love Song from Clean Energy” campaign on Friday. The face of the campaign – aimed at promoting clean energy among the new generation – is Thai-Belgian pop singer Violette “V” Wautier.
APEC CEO Summit carves new path for future business travel
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Sanan Angubolkul is no stranger to business travel, especially in his role as chair of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (TCC) and host of the upcoming Apec CEO Summit.
“This is the first time in three years that this event is being hosted face-to-face. Apec 2022 is a great opportunity for the business sector and Thai people,” he said. “Thailand will not have a chance to host an event like this for another 20 years.”
Apec is a regional economic forum with 21 member economies established in 1989 to promote economic integration in a non-legally binding, friendly manner.
Next week, landing on Thai soil will be leaders not just from the 21 Apec economies, but also from Saudi Arabia, France and China.
Since diplomatic ties have been rekindled with Saudi Arabia, Thailand has welcomed more than 800 business travellers.
With Apec member economies accounting for more than 60% of the global GDP, the summit is attracting many key business leaders from different countries.
To accommodate them, the Thai business sector has teamed up to form the Apec Business Advisory Council (Abac).
This entity comprises TCC, the Federation of Thai Industries, and the Thai Bankers’ Association.
Sanan said the Thai private sector is playing a key role in supporting the Apec 2022 theme of “Open. Connect. Balance”.
“The subjects of trade, investment and doing business across borders will be discussed closely and everybody hopes all obstacles will be unlocked,” he said.
The meeting is also expected to help Thailand’s small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) learn from their Apec counterparts, so they can gain confidence and potential.
To help tap opportunities for Thailand’s SMEs, Abac has come up with five key issues to bring to the attention of world leaders, namely regional economic integration; digital infrastructure; sustainable practices of micro-entrepreneurs, small and medium-sized enterprises; sustainability; and finance and economics.
“Thailand is strong in the agricultural sector, especially when it comes to food security. This is a factor that we need to highlight and explain to western countries. We want to show them that Thailand is ready for the future,” Sanan said.
He also pointed out that as the host of Apec 2022, Thailand will earn invaluable experience that will have a greater impact in the long run.
“Each country’s leader will come with their own media representative and businesspeople. These people in turn will bring their families and friends to visit Thailand,” Sanan said.
“Though the meeting will only last for two days, many business leaders have arrived several days ahead.”
This, he said, was not surprising because Thailand is known globally for its hospitality and ability to cater to all kinds of visitors.
“I believe anybody coming to Thailand, falls in love with it,” he said.
To support businesspeople arriving in Thailand for Apec 2022, TCC and its business alliances have also selected young entrepreneurs to offer them a helping hand.
This will also give young businesspeople a global perspective and experience in working with executives from other nations, much like the “Young President Organisation” that was held several years ago, he said.
“Business travellers need things to be easy and services that go ‘beyond expectation’. I’ve travelled a lot and if I land at 1am, I don’t want to bother my driver. I would rather have a special service that is ready and waiting for use,” he said.
Business travellers also value the option of skipping lengthy immigration queues and going for the “quick lane” when they visit a country.
Sanan Angubolkul, Chairman of the Thai Chamber of Commerce
For Apec 2022, Thailand has set up fast immigration lanes for official attendees. This service is also available for holders of the Apec business card, Sanan said.
He added that getting a VIP business card is always a wise decision, because businesspeople require easy access to excellent services, such as a personal assistant who can meet their needs.
Introducing the ABTC Privilege Card
The Apec Business Travel Card (ABTC) has been specially created to provide superior privileges to business owners of every level.
The card is operated by World Reward Solutions (WRS Group), a leading provider of services for wealthy and VVIP customer organisations and individuals.
ABTC is already offering special privileges and benefits to Thai businesspeople.
What’s on offer
The holder of the ABTC Privilege Card will be eligible for benefits at participating destinations and stores. It cannot be used as a substitute for cash and cannot be used in place of the Apec Business Travel Card (ABTC).
The card will have 1-year validity from the date the application fee has been paid.
The ABTC Privilege Card comes in three categories:
• Apec Prestige Ultimate (Black): This top-level card has an annual membership fee of 60,000 baht
• Apec Prestige Premier (Red): This mid-level costs 20,000 baht per year
• Apec Prestige Explorer (Blue): This first-tier card is free
To enjoy business travel and lifestyle exquisite privileges please apply for ABTC Privilege Card by simply clicking through www.abtc-privilegecard.com or call to 02-113-4838
Fall in crude oil price, refining margin erode PTT Group’s Q3 net profit
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
PTT Group’s third-quarter net profit this year plunged 62.30% year on year to 18.16 billion baht, from 48.18 billion, due to a decline in crude oil price and refining margin.
The group’s net profit during the first nine months from January to September was down 9.33%, at 168.55 billion baht, from 185.89 billion baht in the same period last year.
PTT Group consists of seven companies, namely PTT, PTT Exploration and Production (PTTEP), Thaioil (TOP), PTT Global Chemical (PTTGC), PTT Oil and Retail Business (OR), IRPC and Global Power Synergy (GPSC).
The third-quarter net profit of PTT, TOP, PTTGC, IRPC, OR and GPSC dropped due to a decline in crude oil price and refining margin.
However, PTTEP witnessed a rise in third-quarter net profit of 24.17 billion baht, up 153% year on year. Meanwhile, the net profit in its first nine months was 55.29 billion baht, up 96% year on year.
PTT’s third-quarter net profit was 8.88 billion baht, down 14.76 billion baht, or 62.4%, from 23.65 billion baht last year. Net profit in the first nine months was 73.30 billion baht, down 9.30% from 80.81 billion baht last year.
PTT president and CEO Auttapol Rerkpiboon said the company faced a decline in third-quarter net profit due to loss in derivatives, income tax and foreign exchange.
He said a decline in PTT’s third-quarter net profit accounted for 13% of PTT Group’s third-quarter net profit.
“The group’s third-quarter net profit was affected by a decline in crude oil price amid uncertainty over the global economic recession,” he said.
Rebound earns Thai Airways profit of THB3.92 billion in Q3
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Thai Airways International (THAI) is back in the black now that tourism has started picking up.
The airline announced on Friday that it made 3.92 billion baht in profit in the third quarter of this year, compared to a 5.31 billion baht loss in the same period last year.
The national carrier said that it and its subsidiaries had recorded a revenue of 32.86 billion baht in the third quarter, up 582% year on year.
Revenue from passengers and cargo stood at 30.89 billion baht thanks to more frequent flights in the first half of the year to destinations, including London, Frankfurt, Chennai, Bengaluru, New Delhi, Mumbai, Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Phnom Penh, Jakarta, Dhaka, Denpasar, Taipei, Singapore, Copenhagen, Munich and Zurich.
THAI has also reopened routes that were previously closed due to the Covid-19 pandemic such as Penang, Tokyo (Haneda) and Brussels. The airline boasted an average load factor of 77 per cent in the third quarter of this year, compared to 9.9 per cent in the same period last year.
The total expenses for THAI and its subsidiaries came in at 28.94 billion baht, up 186% from the previous year due to rising operational costs. The price of fuel has risen by 80% compared to the previous year and is responsible for 44 per cent of the operational cost, THAI said.
As of September 30, THAI and its subsidiaries had total assets of 183.29 billion baht, up by 22.07 billion baht from December 31, 2021. Total liabilities came in at 265.79 billion baht, up by 33.32 billion baht on December 31, 2021.
The shareholders’ equity, meanwhile, is in the deficit by 82.50 billion baht.
However, thanks to fast-growing tickets sales and EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation) at over 2 billion baht per month, the company’s cash balance has risen steadily from 6.01 billion baht in March to 13.47 billion baht in June and 23.3 billion baht in September.
In October alone, THAI recorded an average 80.4% load factor, averaging 21,557 foreign passengers per day, which accounts for 30 per cent of total foreign arrivals at Suvarnabhumi Airport. The tally includes Thai Smile Airways passengers.
Rolls-Royce races to decarbonise aircraft industry with new technologies
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Picture this: if the aviation industry were a country, it would be the sixth-largest emitter of carbon dioxide in the world after China, the United States, India, Russia, and Japan, according to a recent study published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
Picture this: if the aviation industry were a country, it would be the sixth-largest emitter of carbon dioxide in the world after China, the United States, India, Russia, and Japan, according to a recent study published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
The study indicates that aviation is responsible for around 4% of human-caused global warming, and if current trends continue it will be responsible for an increase in warming of about 0.1 degrees Celsius (0.2 degrees Fahrenheit) by 2050.
It is estimated that 4.3 billion passenger journeys were made in 2018 before the Covid-19 pandemic struck. While the pandemic halted most global travel, and aviation traffic fell by 45% in 2020, it’s also true that earlier CO2 emissions have remained in the environment for hundreds of years. They don’t just disappear.
While this recent disruption in air travel may have slowed the advance of warming by around five years, that is of minor value compared with aviation’s total climate impact on the world.
Aviation engines undeniably play a huge role in climate change and its effects.
Some researchers do not believe that zero-carbon emissions can be achieved with aviation fuels, but a major aviation engine maker, Rolls-Royce, is a firm believer that “sustainable aviation fuel (SAF)” is among the technological breakthroughs critical to achieve a net-zero future by 2050.
“Using sustainable aviation fuel to power gas turbine engine rather than jet fuel used today will dramatically reduce CO2 emissions,” Dr Bicky Bhangu, Rolls-Royce President for Southeast Asia, Pacific and South Korea, based in Singapore, said during a recent visit to Bangkok.
Without doing anything, the curve (see the grey line in the chart) will keep rising, he added.
Rolls-Royce realises that most of its products contribute to some of the most carbon-intensive parts of the economy, and the company is choosing to make all its products SAF-compatible and using technology to drive incremental improvements in efficiency.
On the one hand, the company has existing products with a long lifecycle that need to be altered to be compatible with the net-zero requirement. On the other hand, it must come up with new technologies to drive its growth amid heated competition from other engine makers.
The British aircraft engine maker has thus lined up a wide range of technologies, including electric and hydrogen power and propulsion, to change the landscape and ecosystem of the aviation industry and that of other businesses such as civil aerospace, power generation, defence, shipping, and rail on the journey to net zero.
Rolls-Royce’s products and services are essential to ensure that they can help decarbonise transportation across air, land, and sea.
How does Rolls-Royce forge ahead on the path to net zero?
In 2020, Rolls-Royce joined the UN High-Level Climate Champions to launch “Race to Zero”, the UN’s campaign to mobilise the leadership of the world’s businesses, cities, and investors to commit to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.
Rolls-Royce has pledged to do its share to help the world hold the rise in global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius by using its technological prowess to help key sectors of the economy reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, as outlined in the Paris Agreement on climate change.
But Rolls-Royce alone cannot do the entire work regarding the development of sustainability. It recognises that global collaboration and partnerships are essential.
“Sustainable aviation fuel, for example, has challenges, which are price and scale,” said Dr Bicky. “That needs government regulators, suppliers, and engine makers to come together as an ecosystem to form the same agenda for the market.”
Rolls-Royce is focusing on three major technological leaps: engine efficiency, small modular reactor (SMR), and electrical technology.
Rolls-Royce already makes the world’s most efficient large civil aero-engine in service, the Trent XWB, and its successor, UltraFan®. They are respectively 15% and 25% more efficient than the first-generation Trent engines. Using SAF with UltraFan will significantly improve the economics.
The aviation industry is expected to continue expanding in the near-to-medium future. Therefore, greater engine efficiency alone won’t significantly reduce CO2 emissions overall. That will require a better aviation fuel: SAF
The goal of “carbon-neutral” air travel is lofty but not unachievable.
It will be quite some time before electric-hybrid or hydrogen-powered aircraft of any practical size are introduced to aviation. Here, progress in aviation battery technology, alongside storage of huge volumes of hydrogen are required.
However, SAF today is a viable alternative to traditional jet fuel that may be used in airplanes with no major modifications. When combined with cutting-edge planes and engines, SAF represents a crucial development for a greener future in aviation.
“By 2023, all our current civil aero engines will be 100% SAF compatible,” he said.
For the second innovation, Rolls-Royce has set up an SMR business and designed an SMR power plant, which has the capacity to generate 470 megawatts of low-carbon energy and with the potential to transform ways to power cities or industrial processes.
“The technology that differentiates Rolls-Royce is SMR,” Dr Bicky said. “It’s not to generate only electricity, but electricity that can be used to manufacture the hydrogen or SAF, which are energy-intensive manufacturing processes. We’ve got to break the hydro-carbon link of all value-chains from the beginning all the way to the end — and SMR allows us to do that.”
For its third breakthrough, in electrical technology, Rolls-Royce has made large investments in electrical technologies and is building a leading position in power and propulsion technologies for all-electric and hybrid-electric flight.
Spirit of Innovation
It’s hard to imagine how to fly an airplane with only electric power, but an all-electric plane has already broken the world’s all-electric flight speed record.
The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale awarded Rolls-Royce three world records for its groundbreaking battery-powered aircraft, the “Spirit of Innovation”.
On November 16, 2021, the aircraft hit a top speed of 555.9 km/h (300kt) over a distance of three kilometres, shattering the previous record for electric aircraft held by Siemens’ Extra 330LE in 2017 by a massive 115kt.
In a later run from Boscombe Down, the Spirit broke the previous record over a 15km track by 158kt, reaching 532.1km/h (287kt).
Additionally, it set a new record for the fastest ascent of 3,000 metres in just 202 seconds, or nearly 2,924 feet per minute, beating the previous mark by 60 seconds.
According to Rolls-Royce, the aircraft is the world’s fastest all-electric vehicle of any kind. During its record-breaking runs, the aircraft reached a top speed of 623 km/h (337kt).
“The first flight of the ‘Spirit of Innovation’ was a great achievement,” said Rolls-Royce CEO Warren East.
“We are focused on producing the technology breakthroughs that society needs to decarbonise transport across air, land, and sea, and capture the economic opportunity of the transition to net zero.
“This is not only about breaking a world record. The advanced battery and propulsion technology developed for this programme has exciting applications for the urban air mobility market and can help make net zero a reality,” East said.
For Rolls-Royce and its dedicated staff, the “Spirit of Innovation” proves that fully electric aircraft are within the realm of possibility. Despite the Covid-19 pandemic having rocked the aviation industry and delayed the development plans of many companies, Rolls-Royce has moved forward with a strong portfolio of technologies to achieve its net-zero target.
“At this point, I can tell we will be better off than we were in 2019,” said Dr Bicky. “When Rolls-Royce gets there, it’s not just Roll-Royce’s win, but that of the aviation industry, including supply chains as well.”
More than 400 airlines and leasing companies, 160 armed forces and navies, and more than 5,000 companies use the services of Rolls-Royce in more than 150 countries.
In 2021, the company spent £1.18 billion on R&D, in addition to assisting a network of 28 university technology centres throughout the world. Around 70% of research and development budget will be spent on sustainability technologies.
Timeline
2020 Rolls-Royce joined the UN High-Level Climate Champions to launch the “Race to Zero”, the UN’s campaign to mobilise leadership of the world’s businesses, cities, and investors to commit to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050 at the latest.
As part of this, Rolls-Royce has committed to aligning its business and value chain to the Paris Agreement goal of limiting the rise in global temperature to 1.5°C by using its technological capabilities and playing a leading role in enabling vital parts of the economy achieve net-zero carbon by 2050.
2021 Rolls-Royce announces its pathway to become net zero by 2050.
2023 All in-production civil aero engines are to be proven compatible with 100% sustainable aviation fuels.
2025 Increase the proportion of gross R&D spent on lower carbon and net-zero technologies from approximately 50% to 75%.
2030 All new products are to be compatible with net zero; reduce lifetime emissions of newly sold products from Power Systems by 35%; new generation Series 2000, 4000 engines to be certified for sustainable fuel. All facilities and operations (excluding product testing and development) achieve net zero.
Bitkub Online gets another 30 days to fix adminTransfer technology
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Cryptocurrency company Bitkub Online has been given another 30 days to fix its “adminTransfer” technology for transactions with its Bitkub Coin (KUB) tokens after it missed its November 5 deadline.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Thursday gave the company a second 30-day extension to rectify actions that may cause damage to the public. The SEC initially gave Bitkub Online a 30-day extension on October 6 to plug holes in the KUB token project, especially with the adminTransfer technology, which allows administrators to transfer digital assets from any digital wallet. The SEC wants this technology to be changed to limit unauthorised access to users’ digital assets.
The company was required to provide clear evidence of such remediation to the SEC within 30 days from October 6 and disclose risks associated with adminTransfer of KUB coins on the Bitkub website within three days from the set date.
The 30-day deadline ended on November 5, but Bitkub has yet to successfully fix the adminTransfer technology, so the authority decided to give it another 30 days.
SEC said that if the issuer of KUB tokens chooses to cancel the use of adminTransfer technology altogether, Bitkub must employ risk-control measures to minimise an impact on the digital assets of KUB token holders.
Thai companies prioritising ESG to attract foreign investors: Deloitte survey
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Nongluck Ajanapanya
Thailand’s companies prioritising ESG (Environment, Social, and Governance) practices to transform their operations and attract international investors, according to a new report by Deloitte Thailand.
The “Thailand ESG and Sustainability Survey Report 2022” polled executives at 106 leading Thai companies in key industrial sectors such as consumer products, energy, resources, and industrials, financial services, technology, media and telecoms, and life sciences and healthcare, between August and September.
It found that most Thai business leaders prioritise ESG awareness in the organisation and integrating ESG into corporate strategy.
Just over a third (34%) of respondents have a committee to oversee ESG in their businesses, and some have board directors with clearly defined roles in driving corporate sustainability.
The majority of respondents believed that improved corporate sustainability performance will result in the following three benefits: operational efficiency and cost savings, brand credibility and image, and risk management.
Meanwhile, 85% of respondents in finance agreed that sustainability plays an increasingly important role in corporate finance. The majority of them prioritise their role in reporting on sustainability KPIs or metrics as part of the standard cycle.
The survey also found that 51% of respondents currently report on ESG management approaches and KPIs as part of their reporting cycle. However, one-quarter of respondents collected ESG data but did not make it public.
The main gaps respondents saw in efficiently meeting sustainability reporting requirements were a lack of technology for data collection, lack of talent and skills within the organisation, and unavailable data.
Almost half of respondents worried that their organisation lacked the necessary technological tools to meet new ESG disclosure requirements.
The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) is the most commonly used ESG disclosure standard among respondents, while internal ESG KPIs are commonly used to set their data collection template and structure.
Narain Chutijirawong, Deloitte Thailand’s executive director of clients and markets, said that encompassing sustainability will help companies recover from Covid-19 impacts and create resilience to future disruptions.
He said it was time for businesses to begin integrating ESG as a strategic priority and preparing for ESG data disclosures in line with global mandatory paths that are environmentally and socially responsible.
Huawei promotes ICT technology to support Thailand’s digital port transformation
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Today, around 90% of global trade is carried out by sea. Ports, as the bridges linking the world’s maritime fleets, connect the global trade and supply market. Because of this, efficient and intelligent ports are becoming increasingly more important in the global supply chain.
In addition, ports also play a pivotal role in promoting international trade and economic development for the country of Thailand. Prioritizing the digital and intelligent development of ports, as well as building green ecologically conscious ports, have therefore become the consensus of the industry and is considered a tangible way to achieve sustainable economic development in Thailand.
Huawei and Port Authority of Thailand sign MOU on developing Smart Port Project
During this year’s MBBF hosted in Thailand, Huawei Technologies (Thailand) Co., Ltd. signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Port Authority of Thailand (PAT) for strategic cooperation on the research and development of smart port, 5G port, and green port technologies. The partnership aims to upskill talent in preparation for the current digital transformation landscape.
This is the first time that Huawei has established a strategic MOU with the Port Authority of Thailand. Through this partnership, Huawei will support the transformation of Thailand’s port industry into the digital era over a three-year term specified in the memorandum. The cooperation will focus on joint efforts to research and establish port digitalization, 5G ports, and green ports, as well as to upskill talent through a variety of learning and training activities. This will facilitate Thailand’s digital infrastructure development and push forward Thailand’s digital transformation.
H.E. General Prayut Chan-o-cha, Prime Minister of Thailand, attended a 2021 Virtual Executive Meeting with Mr. Ren Zhengfei, CEO of Huawei Technologies, to talk about Smart Ports
Before signing the Smart Port MOU with PAT, Huawei Thailand proposed to use high-tech technologies, such as ICT technologies, to help Thailand build smart ports.
In 2021, General Prayut Chan-o-cha, Prime Minister of Thailand, attended a virtual executive meeting with Ren Zhengfei, CEO of Huawei Technologies. H.E. General Prayut expressed appreciation for Huawei’s continued support of Thailand’s digital transformation and post-pandemic recovery, as well as his eagerness to further strengthen cooperation with Huawei to help promote the Thailand 4.0 strategy and digital talent cultivation.
During this meeting, Ren Zhengfei mentioned that: “Among these actions, smart ports and airports are important potential cooperation areas for Huawei and Thailand”. He also introduced the company’s best practices in smart port and smart airport solutions in China, which builds automation capabilities based on multiple factors — such as people, vehicles, goods, enterprises, and places — to help build safe, efficient, and intelligent world-class ports and airports.
Huawei said that it would maintain depth cooperation with Thailand in the smart port field to improve port efficiency and reduce operating costs.
Huawei Hopes to introduce the successful Tianjin Port experience to Thailand and help build digital infrastructure in Thailand
Renting large cargo ships costs hundreds of thousands of dollars per day. Every hour spent waiting or working can cause wasteful expenditures of tens of thousands of dollars alone, a true embodiment of the phrase “time is money”. Traditional ship docks also require human planning and management, often taking 24 hours to clear, and the processes of which cannot be easily optimized on a global scale. Now, thanks to the ultra-large bandwidth and ultra-low latency of 5G, digital transformation can be fully enabled.
In China, Tianjin port is one of China’s most technologically advanced ports and is a vital hub for the One Belt One Road initiative. Today, Tianjin Port has introduced Huawei 5G+4L autonomous driving into its operations, making the smart port safer and more efficient by adopting intelligent port planning systems, which shorten the operation planning time from 24 hours to just 10 minutes. Not only is the time shortened, but the overall quality is also dramatically improved and planning even considers sudden occurrences such as typhoon weather and equipment failures. Each container now consumes 20% less energy and cranes are 20% more efficient on average, with each crane operating 39 container units every hour.
At the port, remotely controlled quay cranes stably pick up containers that are loaded with cargo from the ships before loading them onto unmanned electric container trucks. Under the guidance of the BeiDou navigation satellite system, the container trucks go to automatic locking/unlocking stations and then drive to the container yard, all while following optimal driving routes calculated in real time. The whole process is completed seamlessly in one go with these automatically guided vehicles solving driver shortage problems and greatly reducing safety risks.
The time spent by ships in the port has also reduced by 7%. Due to the improved loading and unloading efficiency of the terminal, with a throughput of 3 million TEUs, this can increase its annual revenue by up to 29 million. In total, there are five container terminals in Tianjin Port and the potential for efficiency gains in the future is considerable.
Currently, Thailand is the leader in 5G applications in the ASEAN region and certain technologies have started to be piloted in many sectors, including 5G smart railway stations in Bangkok, 5G smart districts in Chiang Mai, 5G smart agriculture in Chiang Rai, and 5G smart ports in Chonburi, etc.
Huawei is ready to support the move towards intelligent industries in Thailand with technologies such as 5G, AI, and cloud, in order to accelerate the digital transformation and upgrade of ports to be more automated and intelligent. By bringing the successful experiences of Tianjin port to Thailand, Huawei seeks to create new business opportunities for Thailand and stimulate greater potential in the industrial sector.
Abel Deng, CEO of Huawei Technologies Thailand, explained: “Huawei is willing to provide advanced digital transformation solutions to Thailand and is committed to using ICT technologies such as 5G, AI, and cloud to drive the digital transformation of Thailand’s ports. By building a sample of smart ports in Thailand, we hope to make positive contributions to the output of the “Thailand solution” and to the greater ASEAN region.”
Five international awards reaffirm SCB as the most sought-after employer in the 4.0 era, with more of the new digital generation recruited to further advance its enterprise
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2022
Five HR awards have confirmed Siam Commercial Bank’s (SCB) status as Asia’s most favored company in the 4.0 age. The Bank is committed to fostering a healthy workplace and actively seeking out new personnel to help advance its digital and technological capabilities, fuel its expansion, and realize its vision of becoming A Better Bank.
Speaking about the recognition, Siam Commercial Bank and SCB X PCL Senior Executive Vice President & Chief People Officer Patraporn Sirodom noted that Human resource management plays a crucial role in moving the organization forward in the direction of planned business operations as the Bank makes the transition to become a financial technology business under the SCB X Group, creating new value for the business and enabling it to respond to customers and society amid a changing competitive business landscape. The Bank has therefore consistently and extensively implemented its five primary human resource strategies, which include optimizing its workforce, creating an effective organization structure, developing a robust pipeline of leaders, institutionalizing a sound culture, and providing attractive remuneration. As a result, in comparison to 2021, the Bank’s Employee Engagement Index and Employee Net Promoter Score (eNPS) were higher, and the turnover rate was below the industry norm.
The Bank’s success in attracting and retaining top talent is largely attributable to the policies and procedures it has put in place to manage its human resources. Five prestigious awards received in 2022 included 1) Best places to work in Thailand 2022 from WorkVenture; 2) Dream Employer of the Year Award from HRD Congress; 3) Outstanding Contribution on Health and Wellness Award from HRD Congress; 4) World Asia’s Best Employer Brand Awards 2022 from the HRD Congress; and 5) HR Asia Best Companies to Work for in Asia 2022 from HR Asia. These five honors were determined using a benchmark of excellence against which other global institutions might be measured. They are a reflection of the culmination of efforts to tailor HR management to workers’ needs.
“In order to recruit and retain talented individuals from younger generations, we continually endeavor to establish a company culture that fosters a fun and upbeat place to work, a flexible organizational structure, and the innovative use of technology. To realize its vision of becoming a better bank, the Bank is actively seeking to hire members of the next generation who are fluent in digital and technology skills. In addition, the WorkVenture poll identified SCB as the most popular financial institution among the younger generation. That is because it is one of the country’s most advanced companies at implementing innovative changes to business operations through the introduction of new technologies and a willingness to respond swiftly to new circumstances. In particular, the advent of the remote work paradigm has given workers greater autonomy to concentrate on getting their work done. In this 4.0 era, we are certain that SCB is the most desirable employer fitting the needs of the new generation,” said Patraporn.
The baht opened at 36.17 to the US dollar on Friday, strengthening from Thursday’s close of 36.94 to a two-month high.
The currency will likely move between 36.00 and 36.30 against the greenback during the day, forecast Krungthai market strategist Poon Panichpibool.
The market is in a risk-on state, boosting the baht to near its support level at 36 to the weakening dollar, with foreign investors pouring back into Thai stocks, he said.
However, he warned of exchange rate volatility if worse-than-expected GDP data from the UK confirms recession in the world’s sixth-largest economy, which would see the pound weaken.
He advised that rapid strengthening of the baht may slow and go into reverse if new factors emerge, such as the dollar strengthening or other currencies weakening.
Poon advised investors to use hedging tools such as options to manage risks in a highly volatile currency market.