Building solutions beyond the crisis

WorldBusiness & Finance
9 Jun 2026 • 12:07 AM MYT
The Manila Times
The Manila Times

One of the longest-running English broadsheets in the Philippines

Building solutions beyond the crisis

THE declaration of a national energy crisis, set against the backdrop of instability in the Middle East, is understandably framed in terms of vulnerability. The country’s structural dependence on imported fuel exposes it to global price shocks, geopolitical conflict, and supply uncertainties that ripple quickly through electricity costs, transport, and the broader cost of living.

Yet, a crisis of this nature, while deeply disruptive, also has a way of clarifying incentives and accelerating transitions that would otherwise take years to unfold. For Filipino entrepreneurs, the present moment is not simply one of endurance, but of strategic repositioning, an opportunity to build enterprises that are not only profitable but also systemically valuable.

The most immediate effect of an energy crisis is price volatility. For firms used to stable input costs, this strains operations. For entrepreneurs, it reveals unmet demand.

As energy becomes costly and unreliable, the market rewards alternatives that reduce dependence, improve efficiency, and enhance local resilience.

In the Philippine context, where geography fragments distribution and infrastructure gaps persist, the premium on reliability is especially high, creating space for decentralized energy models at the community, small-enterprise, and local-government levels.

Distributed renewables are now economic necessities. Solar rooftops, microgrids, and hybrid systems offer viable responses to rising costs and supply uncertainty.

Entrepreneurs who can steer technical, regulatory and financing barriers can capture value, especially by offering bundled solutions that make adoption affordable for households and small and medium enterprises (SMEs). At the same time, energy efficiency is an underexploited frontier. Firms that can audit, retrofit and optimize energy use can deliver immediate savings, positioning efficiency not as a cost, but as a competitive advantage.

The Middle East dimension adds another layer of urgency. As conflicts disrupt global oil markets, import-dependent countries like the Philippines are effectively price takers.

This external dependency underscores the strategic importance of local energy ecosystems. Entrepreneurs who invest in supply chains for renewable components, battery storage, and smart energy technologies contribute not only to their own bottom lines but to a broader form of economic sovereignty. Over time, the localization of these supply chains can reduce exposure to external shocks, creating a more resilient national economy.

There is also an underappreciated opportunity in digitalization. Energy systems are becoming data systems. The ability to monitor consumption in real time, predict demand, and optimize distribution creates efficiencies that were previously unattainable.

Filipino startups operating in the energy analytics, smart metering and platform-based energy management space can play a transformative role. In an archipelago like the Philippines, where coordination across islands presents persistent challenges, digital tools can bridge gaps that physical infrastructure alone cannot.

None of this should be mistaken for a call to exploit crisis conditions in a narrow sense. The distinction between opportunism and entrepreneurship lies in orientation. Opportunism extracts value from disruption without regard for long-term consequences. Entrepreneurship, at its best, builds solutions that endure beyond the crisis itself.

The energy challenges facing the Philippines are not temporary aberrations; they are symptoms of deeper structural issues. Firms that pursue short-term arbitrage may capture fleeting gains, but those that invest in durable capabilities — technical expertise, customer trust, alignment with public policy — are more likely to shape the next phase of the economy.

The role of government, while not the focus of this reflection, remains critical. Regulatory clarity, incentives for renewable adoption, and support for innovation can either accelerate or constrain entrepreneurial activity.

But even within existing constraints, Filipino entrepreneurs have historically demonstrated an ability to adapt and improvise. The current energy crisis, sharpened by geopolitical conflict, demands precisely this kind of adaptive capacity.

In moments of constraint, the contours of the future become more visible. The Philippines stands at an inflection point where energy is no longer a background condition but a central economic variable.

Entrepreneurs who recognize this shift and who approach it, not merely as a problem to be endured but as a system to be reimagined, have the potential to create enterprises that are resilient and consequential. In doing so, they contribute not only to their own success but also to a more stable and self-reliant Philippine economy.

Severo Madrona Jr. is a professional lecturer at the Department of Commercial Law, RVR College of Business, De La Salle University.