*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
When my daughter Juliana Rizalhea asked me about what the solution to the present fuel crisis is. I go back to the social media post of Senate President Tito Sotto on the filing of Senate Bill No. 1934, the Philippine Strategic Petroleum Reserve Act; I immediately felt that it was very timely. In a political environment where many are focused on the visible and the immediate, it takes a different kind of leadership to recognize what is urgent even when it is not yet felt by the majority. While others continue to focus on band-aid solutions—ayuda, subsidies, and short-term relief—Senate President Sotto is proposing a long-term solution, one that will not only address present vulnerabilities but will also protect even the next generation in times of crisis.
In politics, there are proposals that sound technical, almost distant from the daily struggles of ordinary Filipinos—until you realize that they quietly determine whether the price of diesel will rise tomorrow, whether the tricycle driver can still afford a full tank, whether the farmer can bring his harvest to market, and whether a father can still stretch his budget to feed his family. When I read the proposed Philippine Strategic Petroleum Reserve Act, I did not see barrels of oil. I saw stability. I saw foresight. And more importantly, I saw a rare attempt to solve a problem before it becomes a crisis.
We have long been a nation that reacts. When oil prices surge, we scramble for subsidies. When inflation rises, we look for short-term relief. When supply chains tighten, we issue statements and hope that global conditions will normalize. But hope, as I have always emphasized in my lectures and reflections, is not a strategy. Preparedness is.
More than ninety percent of our petroleum is imported. That is not just a statistic—it is a vulnerability. It means that decisions made in distant capitals, conflicts fought in faraway deserts, or tensions brewing in contested waters can directly dictate the cost of living in San Mateo, Antipolo, or any barangay in this country. It means that our economy, in many ways, is hostage to forces we do not control. And yet, despite this reality, we continue to operate without a true national buffer.
This is where the proposal becomes more than policy—it becomes a statement of maturity in governance.
A Strategic Petroleum Reserve is not just about storing fuel. It is about storing time. Time for the government to respond. Time for markets to stabilize. Time for the people to breathe before the full impact of a global disruption hits our shores. In the absence of that time, panic fills the gap. Prices spike, speculation increases, and the burden once again falls on the ordinary Filipino.
I have often spoken about what I call the “psychological cage of governance”—that tendency of institutions to remain trapped in reactive thinking, always waiting for the problem to appear before acting. This proposal attempts to break that cage. It shifts the mindset from reaction to anticipation, from improvisation to institutionalization.
And this is where the deeper value of the measure lies.
Because energy security is not just an economic issue. It is directly tied to national security, food security, and even social stability. When fuel prices rise uncontrollably, transport fares follow. When transport fares increase, the cost of goods escalates. When food prices rise, frustration builds. And when frustration builds, social tension is never far behind. We have seen this pattern before—not just in the Philippines, but across the world.
What this bill is really saying is simple: let us not wait for the next crisis to remind us of what we failed to prepare for.
Critics will always point to cost. They will say this adds another burden to government spending. But I ask a more uncomfortable question: how much does unpreparedness cost? How much do we spend every time we roll out emergency subsidies, fuel assistance, or price stabilization measures? How much economic activity is lost when logistics slows down? How much confidence do we lose when investors see a country that reacts instead of prepares?
Preparedness is expensive, yes. But panic is always more expensive.
In my years in public service, in the academe, and in policy work, I have learned that the true measure of leadership is not how it responds to crises, but how it prevents them. Anyone can act when the problem is already visible. Few have the discipline to act when the danger is still invisible.
This proposal, if pursued with integrity and proper safeguards, reflects that discipline.
It is not perfect. No policy is. It will require transparency, strong oversight, and protection from the very disease that plagues many of our institutions—corruption and mismanagement. Because if this becomes another project riddled with leakages, then we will have built not a reserve of security, but a reservoir of waste.
And that, for me, is the real challenge.
Not just to pass the law, but to implement it with the kind of integrity that the Filipino people deserve.
As I reflect on this, I am reminded of a simple but powerful truth: nations are not weakened by the crises they face, but by the crises they fail to prepare for.
The Philippine Strategic Petroleum Reserve Act is not just about oil. It is about whether we, as a nation, are finally ready to outgrow our habit of reacting—and begin the harder, but wiser, discipline of preparing.
And perhaps, just perhaps, that is the kind of governance we have long been waiting for.
As I finish writing this, I cannot help but think of my daughter, Juliana Rizalhea. Like many young Filipinos, she will grow up in a world shaped not only by the decisions we celebrate today but also by the risks we fail to prepare for. One day, she may ask me, "DadDoki, when the country had the chance to prepare, what did you do?” And I would like to answer, with quiet conviction, that we chose foresight over convenience, preparation over reaction, and responsibility over delay. Because governance, at its core, is not about the present alone—it is about the future we leave behind for those who will inherit this nation long after we are gone.
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*About the author:
