UK | EN |
LIVE
Політика 🇺🇸 США

US Pax Silica hub plan hits Philippine sovereignty wall: ‘no special arrangement’

South China Morning Post Sam Beltran 0 переглядів 2 хв читання
US Pax Silica hub plan hits Philippine sovereignty wall: ‘no special arrangement’
AdvertisementThe PhilippinesThis Week in AsiaEconomicsUS Pax Silica hub plan hits Philippine sovereignty wall: ‘no special arrangement’

Manila pushes back against reports that a US-backed AI industrial hub will come under US laws and diplomatic protections

4-MIN READ4-MIN3 Listen
Tugboats assist a container ship as it prepares to dock at the Manila International Container Terminal on April 8. Photo: AP
Sam BeltranPublished: 10:30am, 24 May 2026A US plan to build an “AI-native” industrial hub in the Philippines has highlighted the political sensitivities around Washington’s push to secure critical technology supply chains, after Manila rejected proposals for the zone to be governed by US laws or covered by diplomatic protections.Philippine officials said the planned economic security zone under Washington’s Pax Silica initiative would remain covered by local laws, clarifying that there would be “no special arrangement” for the US-backed project.

Analysts say the dispute points to a broader challenge: whether the Philippines can offer investors enough certainty while overcoming the infrastructure, bureaucratic and geopolitical hurdles that have long hindered foreign investment.

Advertisement

During a visit to the proposed site on May 15, Joshua Bingcang, president and chief executive of the Bases Conversion and Development Authority, told local media that US officials had requested that the zone be placed under US jurisdiction, “but we did not agree to that”.

A toll booth at the Clark Freeport Zone in the Philippines. Photo: Handout
A toll booth at the Clark Freeport Zone in the Philippines. Photo: Handout

The 1,620-hectare (4,000-acre) industrial hub in New Clark City, 100km (60 miles) north of Manila, is part of the wider Luzon Economic Corridor. The connectivity project by the US, Japan and the Philippines across four cities on the island is projected to generate US$100 billion for the local economy.

Advertisement

Bingcang further confirmed that “no special arrangement” would be accorded to the US, in response to a Wall Street Journal report on April 17 that claimed the hub would be covered under diplomatic protections.

AdvertisementSelect VoiceSelect Speed0.8x0.9x1.0x1.1x1.2x1.5x1.75x00:0000:001.00x
Поділитися

Схожі новини