Archive for the ‘Philippine Exports’ Category

Information About Guam

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

 

The island of Guam, which is called Guahan in the Chamorro language; it is an unincorporated U.S. territory. It is the most southern of the Mariana Islands and is located in the western Pacific Ocean, about three fourths of the way between Hawaii and the Philippines.

It is an organized, unincorporated territory of the United States. Geographically speaking, the island is located around 1,500 miles to south of Japan, 1,400 miles to east of the Philippines, 2,000 miles to north of Australia and 3,800 miles to west of Hawaii. It is about three-quarters of the way from Hawaii to the Philippine. Guam shares most of the rights of Americans and is one of the five US territories that have an established civilian government.

Guam is the largest of the Mariana Islands. The highest point in Guam is Mount Lamlam. Settlement in the Mariana Islands dates back around three and a half thousand years. It is thought that early migrants to the Marianas, which are known as the Chamarro and it was from Southeast Asia.

The economy depends on US military spending, tourism, and the export of fish and handicrafts. Over the past 20 years, the tourist industry has grown rapidly, creating a construction boom for new hotels and the expansion of older ones. More than 1 million tourists visit Guam each year. The industry has recently suffered setbacks because of the continuing Japanese slowdown; the Japanese normally make up almost 90% of the tourists. Most food and industrial goods are imported.

Wildfires plague the forested areas of Guam every dry season despite the island’s humid climate. Most fires are man-caused with 80 percent resulting from arson. Poachers often start fires to attract deer to the new growth. Invasive grass species that rely on fire as part of their natural life cycle grow in many regularly burned areas.

During the rainy season sediment is carried by the heavy rains into the Fena Lake Reservoir and Ugum River leading to water quality problems for southern Guam. Eroded silt also destroys the marine life in reefs around the island. Soil stabilization efforts by volunteers and forestry workers to plant trees have had little success in preserving natural habitats.

Online Fashion Course – Fashion Membership Training Program

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Online Fashion Course. A fashion course created by someone who started from her kitchen table to export worldwide. 20 weekly lessons in a 5 monthly membership paying 50%, of $37 for 4 months, 50% of special offer month of $4.95 … minus fees. Online Fashion Course – Fashion Membership Training Program

FOOD NOT WEAPENS IS THE GLOBAL NEED

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

FOOD NOT WEAPONS IS GLOBAL NEED

     Introduction            BY GHULAM MOHYUDDIN WANI  DVM,Ph,D

            The change in climate and the droughts in the world food deficient areas have brought famine like conditions in Africa and Asia. The recession in industries and commercial production other than food processing has revived interest in agriculture in some of the developed countries ,It is said food industries suffered less recession than others, thus the food production and agriculture production interest revived.USA is the biggest contributor to the food aid but the recession has it effects on the transportation as at time s transport of ton of food grain costs more than the price of production. Thus the old burning of food grains in one content  rather than its shipment to needy is slowly reborn. This  demands self sufficiency on content or region basis .

FOOD INSECURITY AND ITS EXPORT

             In recent years we have seen countries banning export of the food, fearing the insecurity in world food prices. This  entails a judicious location specific food security policy.It  will need more money in institute building, food processing and mitigating post harvest food losses. The amount spent on defence warfare if reviewed shows that world spends more on deadly weapons than on food. Thus all those countries and individual groups who are engaging the world in wars have to rethink their mandate. If both claim to be human and earth friendly, they have to abounding war and work for the peace .This is the only solution for mitigation of the climatic change, this is the only way to peace and avoids doomsday disasters in this world. This episode shall describe and review the amounts spent on defence and warfare by the world .The next which shall follow it will discuss world strategies to combat the global hunger and death.

           The man came to earth with his eve quite naked and having no companion or livelihood means or even any skills. The earth was a punishment announced to him on his discharge from the heavens. The GOD created him of clay well melded and infused a soul in to it, He gave him all knowledge which even angles envy and feel jealous of, all angles and the gains were asked to bow before MAN. All obeyed except the abeles who felt it disgrace to him to obey .He was cursed .He became an enemy of Man and owed to lead him astray, The God gave him the chance to him to do this and promised to fill the hell with people who obey the devil or the belies the satanic is this animosity which threw the Adam out of the heavens. He was mislead by the devil and tasted the wheat, WHICH  WAS   FORBIDDEN .                     Thus from the very existence of this universe devil mislead the man and odes it even now, He had the heavens still wanted to have more and in his greed for more he was   out of the heaves and down to this earth. This narration refers Quran verses. It is reproduced here only to impress that man is never satisfied what he has and wants more power, money and this lust always destroys the world. In today’s paper we shall review what is in the world and whether combining all resources we have enough to spend for food or are we spending more on weapons than the food.                    The American on an average spends 215 us dollars on defence which an almost similar to the average mans income in the world. WE HAVE A AVERAGE OF LESS THAN 1000 DOLLARS  being earned by a common man and the told cost to feed him is around 300-400 a year. Imagine a single country of the world US SPENDING MORE THAN 215 DOLLARS per capita of whole human population in this world. My point here is we have avenues to feed all humans and animals in this world if we abandon wars and weapon and embrace peace. Imagine a world free of tensions and wars and all concerned to eat only after the nearby has eaten or is cared off,                          This paper shall review the global wealth and resources being spent on wars and defence, which if saved can save us all, Thus peace is the answer and an essential component of our existence on earth, In this worked of today about one billion out 6 billion live on less than a dollar per day. The world food prices have increased by 43 % in USA.                        The world think tank institutions are not in palace to meet their demands because of deficient bugets, Most of the institutes in the world are suffering from spasms or a sickness, Many countries have even found it difficult to use the food as aid due to heavy increase in the transportation cost. Out of one dollar food aid organizations spent 0.65 dollar i.e. 65 * ON TRNAPORT, The viable economic module to sent food from neighbouring food out lets is not forthcoming. For example in recent years the sale of rice by large exporting countries Philippines and Vietnam has been restriced, the fear of the drought in India might have Benn stimulus to stop exports and to build country reserve for the bad crop seasons in future, the purchasing power of the landless and the poor have been another problem.                   The programming of the rural development programmes in the India called NAREGA has substantially helped to avoid the food crisis by providing 100 days employment at the rate of RS100 per days .This provides a man or women Rs 10,000 per year, which may help him to make a square meals and avoid huger. The programme in its objectives is one of the best programmes thought of in the world and if implemented properly may help to avoid huger to a sustained level.

 USA will spent 534 billion dollars in 2010 on defence .IMAGINE a world of 9 billion in 2050 and average food cost of a man around a dollar, this amount alone can sustain 60 days of the 9 billion population.Whenwe add the amount spent by other countries we will see world spends more on weapons and army than we need all the future population in this world. I ask a question from all those increasing weapons and defence expenditure is not it foolish to go for weapon when peace is much cheaper than the war. More civilized have been killed in wars than the food shortages, then why we go for the weapons. This is what are devils desighs.He makes us to feel little when we are humble but insists us to in an attempt to live better they grab and subdue others .We wish to accumulate gold and wealth to let our lust and greed be satisfied and not for our existrnce.If global resources are pooled all the populace shall live with honour. This and third id the right thinking and perhaps all religions and GOD wishes us set up such a system.CAN WE PLAN AND DO IT? The answer is yes and if you ask how my answer is to read further.

Global defence Budget.

The war of Iraq and A fganistan has coasted around 900 billion dollars to USA IN 2008.The war killed  many whose costs we are not able to calculate, but yes the wars wounded 33,000 men and women whose treatment coasted the world  few billion dollars more, these costs are shown in American budget as oversee contingency operations and must not be less than few hundred billions for 2010

          Economic calculations but simulations show that adjusted to 2009 vale of the dolls USA HAS ANNUALLY SPENT 2000-2500 billion dollars from 1962-2014,Thus these spending are continuous ,Some times we use to kill people in Vienam ,then in Cambodia ,Iraq and Afghanistan followed by many wars covertly or overtly. All have coasted more than it would have coasted to feed the entire world race including animals. Thus the weapons and wars are what breeds terries and regional fights be it Israel,phalestien,Irag,Bangladesh or camaroen,The net result is environmental degradation,asrenalization do the world. I would blame America and all other super powers to have wasted and exhausted the global resources for the destruction than the reconstruction of the global natural resources. This is what devil must be proud of, He has lead us to kill,killand kill and not to peace.

       It is not Americans alone who are to blamed the whole world dances to the tune of devil.Let us review the world spending on defence.

                           The 2009 U.S. military budget is almost as much as the rest of the world’s defense spending combined and is over nine times more than the defence budget of china.The Usa spent 37 ,8% of its GDP IN 1944,Today it spends around 4%,,During VEITNAM  spent around 9.4 % on defence. The americium economy and growth is externally supported by deposits and debts from rest of the world. Thus the real spending and not the saving has been the slogan of uncrossing money flow and employment’s omen economists criticize it as a divesting for the world financial order.         

           If the banks in the world go bankrupt it is not the money of any one country but the whole worked which floats and sinks .Thus a new reformation model is necessary. We leave it to the economists to devise one. May be the Islamic models thought of in Malaysia and other countries need a try. This topic has been death by the economic reviewers, we may try to discuss economics of food production and distribution in this global village in our next episode, and here we conclude that world spends on destruction more than it needs to sustain life on earth. Thus the devil plays his game of divide and rule.

           Let us all the humans and subjects of one and only one GOD assemble,discuss,prepose and concise on peace and not war. Let the love of GOD be dear to us than the love of devil. HUMAN IS TO BE FED AND NOT KILLED, No bullet fired by friend or foe is desireable.Every on killed in this war of today is a human from this earth and not from any other sphere. Even if someone comes from other alien spheres we must meld them to peace  not war ,this make our goal for a universal brotherhood series more relevant and important. Please write back to author your views and support

fastwani@in.com.

Import From China

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

This is a membership website that teaches people how to successfully import products from China. The content has been created by a group of import experts and has a variety of media including video tutorials, articles, message board, reports and audios. Import From China

A Closer Look At Torture

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

On January 16, 2003, the European Court of Human Rights agreed – more than two years after the applications have been filed – to hear six cases filed by Chechens against Russia. The claimants accuse the Russian military of torture and indiscriminate killings. The Court has ruled in the past against the Russian Federation and awarded assorted plaintiffs thousands of euros per case in compensation.

As awareness of human rights increased, as their definition expanded and as new, often authoritarian polities, resorted to torture and repression – human rights advocates and non-governmental organizations proliferated. It has become a business in its own right: lawyers, consultants, psychologists, therapists, law enforcement agencies, scholars and pundits tirelessly peddle books, seminars, conferences, therapy sessions for victims, court appearances and other services.

Human rights activists target mainly countries and multinationals.

In June 2001, the International Labor Rights Fund filed a lawsuit on behalf of 11 villagers against the American oil behemoth, ExxonMobile, for “abetting” abuses in Aceh, Indonesia. They alleged that the company provided the army with equipment for digging mass graves and helped in the construction of interrogation and torture centers.

In November 2002, the law firm of Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll joined other American and South African law firms in filing a complaint that “seeks to hold businesses responsible for aiding and abetting the apartheid regime in South Africa … forced labor, genocide, extrajudicial killing, torture, sexual assault, and unlawful detention”.

Among the accused: “IBM and ICL which provided the computers that enabled South Africa to … control the black South African population. Car manufacturers provided the armored vehicles that were used to patrol the townships. Arms manufacturers violated the embargoes on sales to South Africa, as did the oil companies. The banks provided the funding that enabled South Africa to expand its police and security apparatus.”

Charges were leveled against Unocal in Myanmar and dozens of other multinationals. In September 2002, Berger & Montague filed a class action complaint against Royal Dutch Petroleum and Shell Transport. The oil giants are charged with “purchasing ammunition and using … helicopters and boats and providing logistical support for ‘Operation Restore Order in Ogoniland’” which was designed, according to the law firm, to “terrorize the civilian population into ending peaceful protests against Shell’s environmentally unsound oil exploration and extraction activities”.

The defendants in all these court cases strongly deny any wrongdoing.

But this is merely one facet of the torture business.

Torture implements are produced – mostly in the West – and sold openly, frequently to nasty regimes in developing countries and even through the Internet. Hi-tech devices abound: sophisticated electroconvulsive stun guns, painful restraints, truth serums, chemicals such as pepper gas. Export licensing is universally minimal and non-intrusive and completely ignores the technical specifications of the goods (for instance, whether they could be lethal, or merely inflict pain).

Amnesty International and the UK-based Omega Foundation, found more than 150 manufacturers of stun guns in the USA alone. They face tough competition from Germany (30 companies), Taiwan (19), France (14), South Korea (13), China (12), South Africa (nine), Israel (eight), Mexico (six), Poland (four), Russia (four), Brazil (three), Spain (three) and the Czech Republic (two).

Many torture implements pass through “off-shore” supply networks in Austria, Canada, Indonesia, Kuwait, Lebanon, Lithuania, Macedonia, Albania, Russia, Israel, the Philippines, Romania and Turkey. This helps European Union based companies circumvent legal bans at home. The US government has traditionally turned a blind eye to the international trading of such gadgets.

American high-voltage electro-shock stun shields turned up in Turkey, stun guns in Indonesia, and electro-shock batons and shields, and dart-firing taser guns in torture-prone Saudi Arabia. American firms are the dominant manufacturers of stun belts. Explains Dennis Kaufman, President of Stun Tech Inc, a US manufacturer of this innovation: ”Electricity speaks every language known to man. No translation necessary. Everybody is afraid of electricity, and rightfully so.” (Quoted by Amnesty International).

The Omega Foundation and Amnesty claim that 49 US companies are also major suppliers of mechanical restraints, including leg-irons and thumbcuffs. But they are not alone. Other suppliers are found in Germany (8), France (5), China (3), Taiwan (3), South Africa (2), Spain (2), the UK (2) and South Korea (1).

Not surprisingly, the Commerce Department doesn’t keep tab on this category of exports.

Nor is the money sloshing around negligible. Records kept under the export control commodity number A985 show that Saudi Arabia alone spent in the United States more than $1 million a year between 1997-2000 merely on stun guns. Venezuela’s bill for shock batons and such reached $3.7 million in the same period. Other clients included Hong Kong, Taiwan, Mexico and – surprisingly – Bulgaria. Egypt’s notoriously brutal services – already well-equipped – spent a mere $40,000.

The United States is not the only culprit. The European Commission, according to an Amnesty International report titled “Stopping the Torture Trade” and published in 2001:

“Gave a quality award to a Taiwanese electro-shock baton, but when challenged could not cite evidence as to independent safety tests for such a baton or whether member states of the European Union (EU) had been consulted. Most EU states have banned the use of such weapons at home, but French and German companies are still allowed to supply them to other countries.”

Torture expertise is widely proffered by former soldiers, agents of the security services made redundant, retired policemen and even rogue medical doctors. China, Israel, South Africa, France, Russia, the United kingdom and the United States are founts of such useful knowledge and its propagators.

How rooted torture is was revealed in September 1996 when the US Department of Defense admitted that ”intelligence training manuals” were used in the Federally sponsored School of the Americas – one of 150 such facilities – between 1982 and 1991.The manuals, written in Spanish and used to train thousands of Latin American security agents, “advocated execution, torture, beatings and blackmail”, says Amnesty International.

Where there is demand there is supply. Rather than ignore the discomfiting subject, governments would do well to legalize and supervise it. Alan Dershowitz, a prominent American criminal defense attorney, proposed, in an op-ed article in the Los Angeles Times, published November 8, 2001, to legalize torture in extreme cases and to have judges issue “torture warrants”. This may be a radical departure from the human rights tradition of the civilized world. But dispensing export carefully reviewed licenses for dual-use implements is a different matter altogether – and long overdue.

Uncommon Currencies (Part 1)

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Planning and implementing – not to mention maintaining – operations offshore is hardly the world’s easiest task at the best of times. During a period of economic and financial upheaval, with uncertainty and concern around every corner, it becomes altogether trickier (as many SSON members can ruefully testify): pressures to cut costs and increase margins can send even the most granular business plan into the blender. The last thing, then, that those looking for offshore solutions want to rise up before them is extra uncertainty in the form of currency fluctuations impacting upon the most critical numbers in the ledger – but in accordance with Murphy’s infamous law, that’s precisely what the shared services and outsourcing space has had to cope with during (and partly as a consequence of) the most serious financial crisis in living memory.

In a nutshell, currency fluctuations are a nightmare for those organizations with offshore infrastructure (most relevantly, captive SSCs) since they render budgetary planning immeasurably harder (and can lead to significant extra costs in a comparatively rapid timeframe). If a US-based company sets up a center in, say, the Philippines, with wages, utility bills etc all payable in Filipino pesos – but, crucially, with the parent company’s income still overwhelmingly dollar-denominated – and the peso then appreciates against the dollar by ten percent over twelve months, at the end of the year that center has become ten percent more expensive in real terms for the parent organization. This kind of situation, obviously, can take a serious bite out of the cost savings which the centre has been set up to generate.

Fluctuations of ten percent per annum are by no means too outlandish to consider – indeed, especially over the last year or so, relative values for a wide range of currencies have oscillated by significantly more than that. The value of sterling against the dollar, for example, grew by over 20 cents per pound in a little over three months from the end of April this year. Meanwhile the crucial rupee-dollar rate – of critical interest for all those firms operating centers in India – while behaving slightly less aggressively, has fluctuated towards a stronger rupee by approximately 7.5 percent since April 29. This means that firms earning in dollars but paying for their Indian centers in rupees have seen real costs rise significantly through no fault of their own – while firms with outsourcing deals with Indian providers, with contracts typically dollar-denominated, have transferred this burden onto the unfortunate providers whose bills remain payable in rupees. (This cuts both ways, however: during 2008 the notoriously volatile rupee dropped from a monthly average 39.27 to 48.48 to the dollar, resulting in comparative gains for those operating captive centers on the subcontinent despite a degree of inflation.)

A major factor in the general volatility witnessed in the currency markets over recent times has been the performance of the dollar – still effectively the world’s reserve currency. The greenback has fallen by over 10 per cent against the euro since the beginning of May, taking with it a host of other currencies pegged either officially or de facto against the dollar. However, as Chris Towner, Head of FX Advisory at HiFX, points out, “it’s never going to be one-way traffic”: at the onset of the main phase of the financial crisis with the fall of Lehman Bros the dollar soared as anxious investors sought a safe haven (particularly affecting sterling: the dollar-sterling rate saw a dramatic range of 60 cents last year, while in comparison the range between 1993 and 2002 was effectively between $1.40 and $1.70 to the pound). Now, with the dollar having weakened – and further weakness likely into 2010, according to Towner – investors are turning once again to other currencies including the euro (nearing the psychologically significant $1.50 mark) and beyond cash to commodities (hence the current record-breaking value of gold, and strengthening the so-called “commodity currencies” such as the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand dollars whose values are greatly affected by commodity prices due to the importance of commodity exports to their respective national economies).

So what does all this mean going forward for offshore SSOs? Clearly, one major issue is the impact of currency fluctuations for the wider organization (“If a company is importing or exporting even a small movement in the currency rate can have a large impact on profit margins,” says Christina Weisz, Director, Currency Solutions): the cost-savings for which the shared services model is renowned might become even more valuable for organizations feeling the squeeze thanks to unfavorable developments on the currency markets, driving firms which might hitherto have been insufficiently interested in the model towards embracing shared services. As a result, and somewhat ironically, in some circumstances the offshore option might prove more attractive now despite the relevant exchange rate being less favorable than it was only a short while ago.

However, for many companies with existing offshore shared services infrastructure the situation is less satisfactory. Essentially, the safest course of action is to allow a significant safety net within annual budgets to provide for the impact of fluctuations – so if operating costs are expected to be X over 12 months, firms will allocate X plus an agreed percentage to cater for the possibility of fluctuation-induced extra costs. However, the big drawback inherent in this approach is that it ties up precious capital which might be required elsewhere within the company. Of course, this can be mitigated to a certain extent by arranging to borrow the extra cash should it be required – but then, they don’t call it a credit crunch for nothing, and extra borrowing might well be impossible or at least prohibitively expensive, especially for smaller organizations.

Another option – particularly of interest for companies which haven’t yet set up offshore centers, or those looking to expand their footprints, but also a worst-case option for firms operating centers in countries whose currencies become insupportably erratic – is to look for suitable locations within currency areas less subject to dramatic fluctuations. Of course, there are many other factors to consider than just a location’s currency attributes: but it might well be that the stability or lack thereof of a country’s currency could prove critical in the eventual decision as to where to site a center.

One important currency which has thus far retained a good degree of stability – as a result of its effectively being pegged against the dollar, despite officially weighing against a basket of currencies led by the dollar, the yen and the South Korean won – is the Chinese renminbi. As the Chinese government ramps up its attempts to lure overseas firms into setting up SSCs on Chinese soil, the solidity of the country’s currency is likely to prove an increasingly significant draw.

“The outlook for the renminbi is pretty much stable,” says Towner. “Over the last 18 months the currency has been kept at more or less between 6.81 and 6.87, looking as though it’s been managed pretty heavily by the Chinese government. China with growth of 10 per cent is obviously outperforming most economies; the Chinese are heavily reliant on exports (fighting with Germany for the position of the world’s largest exporter). Given the credit crisis [the Chinese] want to ensure that the currency remains stable against the dollar. When they start to recover they might look at freeing their currency a little but a very high level of their reserves are dollar-denominated and held in US Treasury bonds; they have to act very carefully.”

(..to be continued..)

________________________________________________________________________

This article was first published on the Shared Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON) – Read it here: http://www.ssonetwork.com/topic_detail.aspx?id=6142&ekfrm=6&utm_source=ssonetwork.com&utm_medium=SMO&utm_campaign=DIRECTORIES&mac=SSON_External_Listing_2066

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Insider’s Guide to Successful Importing from the Third World

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Learn How-to Start Your Own Business Importing from the Third World and The Money Will Follow! With 30+ years in the business importing from the Third World, I’ll teach you all you need to know to become successful in import export business. Insider’s Guide to Successful Importing from the Third World

The Many Different Kind Of Nuts

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Since the earliest of time and even before agriculture was used by the Greeks to have better food resources, `Nuts’ were a stable food and nutritional source in the diet of manhood in the dark ages.  During those times, nuts were plentiful, as there were much more forests as today, and well liked for their easy storage, which enabled people to keep them for times in which food was hard to find.  (Winter, rainy season, etc).

There is evidence that as far back as the second century B.C., the Romans distributed sugar almonds on special occasions such as marriages and births.

Nuts have their place in all cultures and through almost all cuisine around the world.  Nuts are liked by people of all ages for their subtle taste and high fat and carbohydrate content.  It is this subtle taste that Chefs like when creating new dishes and variations.

DESCRIPTION & SPECIES

Under the category nuts, we understand anything from a seed to a legume or tuber. The peanut, as an example, is a legume, the Brazil nut and macadamia nut are seeds and almonds are the seed of a fruit similar to a peach.

Botanically nuts are single seeded fruits with a hard or leathery shell that contain a edible kernel, which is enclosed in a soft inner skin.

Generally, all nut trees grow slowly but live long.  Trees of walnut, chestnut or pecan continue to produce nuts, often more than hundred years after planting.

Nut trees of any species are found all over the world.  Almonds for example are found in California, Spain, Morocco, Italy and even Australia, where as the walnut can be found anywhere from North America to the Andes and Persia to Australia. Asia also has a great variety of nuts. Ginkgo nuts in China, candle nuts in Indonesia and Malaysia, coconut in throughout southern Asia, cashew nuts in India and Malaysia and the Philippines, chestnuts in China and Japan, and the water chestnut which is found in China, Japan, Korea and the East Indies.

SOME OF THE BETTER KNOWN NUTS :

ALMOND

Scientist consider the almond as a stone fruit, much like cherries, peaches and prunes.

Because most people only know the seed (stone) of this fruit, it is generally accepted as a nut.

Almond on the tree, look like small green peaches.  When ripe the shell will open and reveal the nut in its shell.

There are various varieties of almonds.

The bitter almond is in fact the kernel of the apricot, which was found growing wild in China as far back as the late Tang Dynasty (AD 619-907).

This same apricot was taken to Europe and became the apricot fruit, which is now enjoyed all over the world.  The bitter almond kernel is toxic in its raw state and must be boiled quickly and poached in a oven before being further used.  It is primarily used in Chinese desserts like the almond bean curd.

The sweet almond is generally confined for fresh consumption.  In 1986, California alone produced 70,000 tons of almonds, which is half of the world’s production.  The almond has been cultivated around the Mediterranean since ancient times and can still be found wild in Algeria and around the black sea.  Sweet almonds can be bought whole, shelled, cut in 1/2 with skin, without skin, flaked, blanched, slivered ground roasted or salted. they are used for snacks, marzipan, confectionery, and desserts as well as for the production of liqueur essence, oil and cosmetic products.

BUNYA BUNYA PINE NUT

The bunya bunya tree is a member of the pine family and grows almost everywhere in Australia.  Originally the trees originated in the area of Brisbane and Rockhampton in Queensland Australia.  Only the female trees are producing a 2cm x 2.5cm nut in the pinecone.

In the old days, the bunya bunya pine nuts were stable food for the aborigines and also used in ceremonials.  These days, the nuts gain in popularity through the trend of native food in Australia (bush food) in recent years.

The nut is rich is carbohydrate, similar to the chestnut, and therefore used more like a potato than a nut.  the bunya bunya nuts can be eaten raw but are usually boiled for easy removing of the skin. Shelled nuts are then butter fried and flavored with pepper or sugar, or added to stews and soups.

RED BOPPLE NUT

The red bopple nuts are a relative of the macadamia nut, and native to the tropical rain forest of the East Coast of Australia.

The nut is about the same size as a hazelnut and has a thick (0.5cm 0 1cm), woody husk with a bright red outer skin, which only appears if the nut is fully ripe.

In contrary to most other nuts, the red bopple nut is very low on fat, but very high in calcium and potassium.  the low fat content make this nut very easy digestible.  The nuts are eaten raw or toasted.

COCONUT

“He who plants a coconut tree”, the saying goes, “plants food and drink, vessels and clothing, a habitation for himself and a heritage for his children”.  Indeed every part of the coconut is used, but only the coconut milk and the coconut meat are foods.  The shell is used as charcoal, the husk is used to make ropes, clothing and brushes, and the trunk of the tree and leaves are used for roofs of houses and building material respectively.

The fruit of the palm `cocos nucifera’ has an edible kernel and therefore qualifies as a nut.  The palm tree is native to the Philippines, Malaysia, Brazil and Indonesia, and can produce 50 – 100 nuts a year, over a life span of 70 years.  Coconut palms grow best close to the seaside but have been proven to withstand high altitude, although the production rate is diminishing as further away from the sea the tree grows.

The large thick green pod encloses a brown fibrous husk around a brown shell , which contains a layer of soft white flesh and the clear water in the center.  Sub-species found only on one island of the Seychelles, in the Indian Ocean, produces a nut often weighing more than 20 kg, which needs 10 years to ripen.

Coconuts are the worlds most commercially used nuts.  Especially the meat, or copra, as it is called after sun drying, is vital for the export industries, in coconut growing countries.  The coconut is a important food source especially in South East Asia, India, Brazil and the South Pacific Islands.

The copra can be brought shredded or desiccated and is used in confectioneries, ice creams and to coat chicken or fish for frying. However much of it is pressed for its oil also called coconut butter as it is white and fatty at room temperature.  Not only is it used for cooking and to make margarine, but it also goes into soaps, detergents, shampoos, face cream, perfumes and candles.

It is also a major ingredient in glycerin, synthetic rubber, safety glass and hydraulic brake fluid. Coconut juice or milk is the natural juice of the nut, but not the water inside the coconut. It is won by shredding the raw coconut meat, then adding water and straining the mixture through a cotton cloth.  The coconut milk has then the consistency and color of skim milk and is available canned or frozen.

CANDLE NUT

The candle nut gets her name, from when threaded tightly on the midrib  of a palm leaf it has been used a primitive candle.  More recently, the nuts were grounded to a paste, mixed with copra (grated coconut meat) and ten formed into a candle.

Candlenuts are the seed of the candle berry tree native to Indonesia and Malaysia but widely spread throughout south East Asia, the South Pacific and Sri Lanka.

The nut has a very high content on fat and is valued for the extracted oil for lighting as well as cooking.  The nut is colored gray to black, about 5cm in diameter, with a thin, papery husk containing one or two nuts.

Candlenut oil for lighting purposes is extracted by roasting the nuts when they are only half ripe as oil for cooking is extracted by roasting the nuts when they are fully ripe.  For human consumption, the nuts have to be roasted as raw once have been causing sicknesses.

Ripe candle nuts are roasted, then pounded into a meal and mixed with salt, chilies or shrimp paste for usage in curries or as a spicy condiment to curries.  Traditionally, the Javanese have roasted the nuts for eating in the whole.

PALM NUT

The palmyra palm native to most South East Asian Countries produces a hard, shiny nut, from which a sweetish sap or gel is extracted.  While this sap is used in the Indonesian cuisine for soups and desserts, it is on other well known product that is begin produced out of the palmyra palm – The Palm Sugar (gula melacca).

There are not reliable data available on the nutritional value of the palm nut, but it is widely known that the fat is saturated.

MACADAMIA NUT

Native to Queensland and New South Wales in Australia, the macadamia nut takes its name from Dr John McAdam, a scientist and early promoter of the cultivation Australia.

The macadamia trees are evergreen and reach a height of up to 20 meters. The edible seed of the silk oat tree has a very hard, light brown shell, 2 – 3cm in diameter.

In 1888, macadamia trees have been planted in Hawaii where through careful cloning and hybridization, it became an important commercial product.

Today, macadamia nuts are also cultivated in South Africa, Zimbabwe, California and parts of South and Central America.

It is very difficult to crack the macadamia nut as it’s shell is very hard and so tight to the kernel that when cracked the nut is smashed.  In Hawaii, American scientist developed a way of separating the kernel from the shell by shrinking them in drying bins.  They then developed the first commercial cracker. It was through these two developments that the macadamia nut could be formed to the commercial importance it has today.

This is also the reason why macadamia nuts are only available already de-shelled.  Macadamia nuts also are valued for their oil and the macadamia nut butter.

They are available roasted and salted.  When buying macadamia nuts, give care that they are packed in a air tight or vacuum bags, as they become easily rancid once opened.

Macadamia nuts are used for confectioneries or as snacks, but also gain in popularity in the kitchen as they have a very mild and subtle taste and add texture to salads, and hot dishes.  It’s oil makes excellent vinaigrette and cold sauces.

WATER CHESTNUTS

The name refers to a nut like tuber of a aquatic plant called Trapa.  The plants are common to several parts of the world, but are mainly used in Japan, China and Thailand where it is also a sought after ingredient in it’s cuisines.

The trapa plant roots in ponds and lakes and sends, its’ leaves to the surface, similar to a water lily.  The water chestnut grows on the roots underneath the water surface.  Water chestnuts are flat and round with a diameter of 5 – 7cm.  They have a soft black skin and white flesh similar to the flesh of a coconut.  Once peeled, they can be eaten raw, or dried and are a well liked ingredient because its crunchy texture, and sweet subtle taste.  Water chestnuts are also boiled and made into flour, which is used for thickening of sauces and dishes, much like cornstarch.

CHESTNUT

Chestnuts are thought to have originated in Southern Europe and Persia even though they are also found in China, Japan and Northern America.

The nuts of the chestnut tree have a brown shiny color and leathery shell. they can be eaten raw, but mostly are consume boiled, baked or roasted or as a chestnut puree sweetened or unsweetened.  They are also sold in syrup as marron glaces.

Chestnuts are the only nuts, which are treated like a vegetable because they contain more starch (30%) and less fat 3%.

Chestnuts are also made into a flour high on fiber and starch.

CASHEW NUT

Originating in the West Indies and native to the north of Brazil, Portuguese explorers introduced the nut to India and Malaysia as well as parts of Africa.

The hard-shelled nut grows inside the cashew apple.  When mature the cashew nut appears at the end of the red or yellow apple.  The cashew tree is a member of the poison ivy family and farmers must take great precautions when extracting the nuts.  The hard shell contains an oil, which irritates the skin, so the nuts are heated to extract the kernel.  The smoke and steam, which occurs however may still be harmful to skin and eyes.  When heated the cashew nuts are harmless and may be extracted.

GINKGO NUT

The ginkgo is the prehistoric maidenhair tree, which survives as a wild tree only in China.

The fruit looks like a tiny plum but has a foul and bitter shell.  the Chinese wait for the smelly hull to full off, then paint the nuts and use them for festive decorations, before they crack them open to eat the nut. In Japan and Korea, ginkgo nuts are skewered and then grilled, which turns the nuts color from yellow to green.  In China, the ginkgo nut is a popular ingredient to vegetarian dishes. The nuts can be obtained fresh or canned.

HAZELNUT/FILBERTS

The nut of the hazel bush is native to Europe and North America and was mentioned in writings as far back as 2838 B.C., and was credited of currying many human ills as well as being considered excellent for Boldness and use as a hair tonic.  Some say that the name filbert comes from Saint Philibert, a French abbot whose feast day on 22 August coincides with the ripening of the first nuts in the Northern hemisphere.

Hazelnuts have a very hard shell, which has to be cracked by a nutcracker before getting to the kernel.  Hazelnuts are available, raw, blanched, or toasted, chopped, ground, cooking as well as hazelnut liquor.

PEANUT

The peanut is not a true nut.  It is the seed of a leguminous plant with a soft, brownish colored brittle shell and belong to the Botanical family of beans and peas.  But they are usually considered along with the nuts because of they’re physical characteristics and nutritional value.  The nuts grow on the long roots of the plant and below the ground. The peanut is native to Brazil and has been found there ever since the first recording in 950 B.C..

Today, peanuts are cultivated throughout the tropics all over the world (India, China, West Africa, Australia and the USA are the largest peanut growing countries).  Peanuts produce excellent oil, which is used for salads and cold dishes as well as for frying.  Peanuts also produce peanut butter, margarine, and also used in canning of sardines. Peanuts are available whole, de-shelled and de-skinned and raw or toasted. Peanuts are used in all different varieties in everything from salads to main courses and desserts.

PINENUT

These are the edible seed of the pine tree and grow in the cone.  Pine trees are found in the Southern USA, Mexico and around the Mediterranean sea.  It is very difficult to establish a pinenut industry as the trees are growing very slow and don’t carry a lot of fruits until they’re 75 years old.

Pine nuts are mostly obtained raw and then toasted, fried or grilled. Pine nut oil is used for the cosmetic industry. Pine nut flour is used in confectionery.

PISTACHIO NUT

The pistachio nut is a small green kernel, which grows on the pistachio tree originating in Syria, Palestine and Persia.

The natural color of the shell is grayish white, but some times the nuts are dyed red to cover up some of the staining.

The pistachio nut is now cultivated in India, Europe, North Africa, Mexico, the USA and the Far East.  Pistachios are usually sold in their shell or shelled and blanched.

The greenish seed is used as flavoring in cooking, candies and ice cream.

WALNUT

The walnut is related to the hickory and pecan tree and grows anywhere from North America to the Andes and Europe to China.  English walnuts, butternuts and hickory nuts are all walnuts, botanical speaking.  All those walnuts have different shells and kernels but the English walnut with it’s rough, rippled shell and yellow brown kernel is the most popular and popularly referred to as `The Walnut’.

Walnuts are bought in the shell or de-shelled and are sought after for their oil, which is used for cooking as well as for salads and dressing.

OTHER COMMONLY USED NUTS INCLUDE :

Macadamia Nuts                                  )
Bunya Bunya Pine Nuts                           )     Australia
Red Bobble Nut                                  )

Candle Nut                                      )     Malaysia
Palm Nut                                        )     Philippines, Brazil

Coconut                                         )     Indonesia,China
Water Chestnut                                  )

Brazil Nuts                                     )     South America

Beech Nuts                                      )     USA
Pecan Nuts                                      )     North America

NUTRITIONAL VALUE AND INFORMATION

Nuts are rich in fat (40-60%) and dietary fiber (5-15%) with moderate amount of protein (2-25%) and small amounts of starch (up to 10%).  As mentioned above chestnuts are an exemption to this general rule.

The fats in nuts are mostly monounsaturated and polyunsaturated and contain no cholesterol as nuts are harvested from plants.  Only the coconut and palm nut contain saturated fats.

Significant amounts of minerals can be found in nuts, including zinc, calcium, iron, phosphorus and magnesium.

They also contain some provitamins and vitamins like thiamin, riboflavin, niacin and vitamin E & C.

Nuts contain very little natural sodium and have a high amount of potassium, which in this constellation is recommended for the control of blood pressure.

Unfortunately nuts are often sold salted as snacks, which upsets this natural balance, and by a over consummation of salted nuts people take in a lot of fat and salt.

Nuts are also a great source of energy and often used in diets for athletes.

Used in moderate amounts, nuts in unsalted forms are nutritionally valuable food.

USAGE OF NUTS FOR THE PROFESSIONAL CHEF

One does not know where to start where to compile information about the usage of nuts and nut related product in today’s hospitality. In the kitchens, there is no limit on the amount of dishes and creations a Chef can use nuts or nut products for. From appetizers to salads, soups and desserts, with cheese, fish, pasta, meats and vegetables, nuts are very versatile and do not have a over powering flavor, and its subtle taste and crunchy texture adopt early to almost all given products as a supplement.

Nut oils are also widely used for dressings, frying and flavoring of hot and cold dishes.  Nut liqueurs can be a welcome supplement to savory sauces as well as pastry sauces and creams, marzipan and other nut pastes are often used to produced chocolates and confectionery items. In the Indian cuisine, a cashew nut paste is often used for the thickening of curries and sauces. Through the wide spread of different nuts around the world, nuts are used in almost all cuisines known and its nutritional value make it an asset to so many diets since the ancient days.

In the beverage outlets, nuts are used in form of lacquers (Hazelnut, Almond) and liquid (coconut Milk), and as snacks served with drinks (Salted Nuts)

Having Philipine Real Estate

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

Cebu is located 365 miles south of Manila and can be reached in an hour through air travel, it is in the east of Negros Oriental, southwest of Leyte and northwest of Bohol. Strategically located at the heart of the Visayas, it serves as the jump-off points to satellite destinations in the Visayas-Leyte, Samar, Dumaguete and Siquijor and Mindanao islands – Cagayan de Oro, Camiguin and Surigao del Norte. It is positioned as a resort and convention destination.

Beth Collingz, International Marketing Director of PLC Global, the lead marketing partners for Pacific Concord Properties Inc’s Lancaster Brand of Condotels in the Philippines said Cebu has a proven capability and economic track record. It is the second largest city and undoubtedly the fastest growing economy in the country. It leads in exports of item such as furniture, fashion accessories, carrageenan, electronic products, etc.

Because of its deep-water harbor, Cebu is the base of the country’s domestic shipping. 80% of the country’s major shipping companies are based in Cebu. Likewise, with the Mactan Cebu International Airport, Cebu is an accessible gateway to southern Philippines. It allows easy movement of domestic and international travelers and trading connections. Presently, direct flights are available for destinations such as Singapore, Narita, Seoul, Hong Kong, Kota Kinabalu and Qatar. Chartered flights are also available for Incheon, Kansai, Kaoshiung, Taipei and Nagoya.

Taking advantage of the Real Estate Boom, Collingz said Pacific Concord Properties Inc is expanding its Operations for the Lancaster Brand of Condotels in the Philippines and has acquired by purchase an additional 27 units in its Lancaster Cebu Resort Residences adding another 75M pesos to its project inventory and expansion program. This brings the number of properties held in the development to 75 suites with another 120 units to be added before year end for Condo Hotel rental operations.

Property is all about LOCATION said Collingz. Mactan, Cebu, provides one with both the laid back pace of provincial living, as well as prerequisites of the urban dweller. Schools, hospitals, restaurants, shopping malls, and leisure are all found on the island itself.

Lancaster Cebu Resort Residences, located a mere 3 minutes from Mactan-Cebu International Airport, provides you with easy access to all the essentials of urban living. This ideal location will complement the Condotel operation since Lancaster Cebu will function as a condominium hotel – a preferred accommodation choice of businessmen and holiday travelers alike. Clients can either purchase Condotel Suites for investment purposes or lease the units on weekly, monthly or yearly basis.

We have Fully Furnished Executive Studio Suite and Two-Bedroom Suites available for sale at Lancaster Cebu Resort Residences at Pre-Increase Prices that will be ready for occupancy from December 2007 at the current price. Fully furnished Studio Suites are priced at -Pph-2,753,924.06 whilst, fully furnished 2 BR Loft Type Suites are priced at -Pph-5,467,004.14 and may also be purchased with an initial Reservation Fee of only -Pph-100,000.00 with the Balance Payable without interest over 24 consecutive equal monthly payments. Fully Furnished Suites many also be purchased on Five Year Payment Terms through our no qualification “In-House” Finance Available with 15% Down Payment added Collingz Lancaster Cebu Resort Residences is also offering Studio and 2-Bedroom Fully Furnished Ready for Occupancy Suites on daily, weekly, monthly or yearly lease rental terms. Whilst some renovation works are still ongoing within the complex, unit rentals are now available to guests at ‘Special Promo Rates’.

Beth Collingz
PLC International Marketing Networks