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₱3-B coco deal signals deeper 70 years of PH-Japan relations

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A potential ₱3-billion integrated coconut oil processing facility — designed with renewable-energy components — has emerged as one of the headline investment leads when the Philippines and Japan opened the 70th year of their diplomatic relations, with the coconut taking center stage as a platform for innovation.

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THEPHILBIZNEWS FILE PHOTO

The project surfaced alongside a wave of business engagements during “The Philippine Coconut: Tree of Life, Seed of Innovation,” the flagship exhibition mounted by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) through the Philippine Trade and Investment Center (PTIC) in Tokyo at the Tokyo Midtown Design Hub.

The show officially opened the year-long 70th anniversary celebration of Philippines-Japan diplomatic ties, supported by the ASEAN-Japan Centre (AJC), and the Japan Institute of Design Promotion (JDP), in coordination with the Philippine Embassy in Japan.

But the story unfolding in Tokyo went far beyond exhibits. It reframed the coconut much the way PH–Japan relations themselves have evolved: from traditional foundations into diverse, technology-driven, future-facing collaborations.

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Virgin coconut oil. PHOTO FROM DOST

Coconut, reimagined

Long associated with copra, oil, and coco lumber, the coconut is now branching into sectors that mirror Japan’s own innovation priorities in healthcare, advanced materials, pet nutrition, and clean energy.

Engagements on the sidelines of the exhibit included:

  • Coconut residues as agricultural fertilizers for use in Japan
  • Expanded sourcing of Philippine medium-chain triglyceride (MCT) oil, including products from Chemrez Technologies
  • Possible cooperation programs between the Philippine Coconut Authority and Japanese counterparts
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Patchmed. PHOTO FROM DOST

In healthcare, coconut-based bacterial cellulose derived from coconut water is being eyed for Japan’s growing advanced wound-care market. One example already in the Japanese market is PatchMed, whose Good Design Award-winning wound dressing is made from nata de coco and coconut water.

In pet nutrition — an unexpectedly premium and fast-growing segment in Japan — coconut-derived medium-chain triglyceride (MCT) oil is being explored for formulations addressing age-related cognitive decline in pets, pushing the coconut into the frontier of functional nutrition.

Meanwhile, coconut kernel shell is being positioned as a sustainable biomass feedstock, with applications ranging from renewable power generation to emerging pathways for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) — directly aligning with Japan’s decarbonization push.

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Coco coir to control soil erosion. PHOTO FROM IPOPHIL

Even in disaster resilience, coconut coir geotextiles already in use in Japan for flood control, erosion mitigation, and landslide prevention show how an agricultural byproduct becomes climate infrastructure.

Relations that evolved like the coconut

The breadth of coconut applications — agriculture, design, medicine, energy — closely parallels the arc of PH-Japan relations over seven decades. What began largely with trade in primary goods has matured into cooperation in technology, sustainability, infrastructure, and advanced industries.

That shift was precisely the point of the Tokyo initiative.

“What is most important is that these are no longer theoretical possibilities,” said Dita Angara-Mathay, Commercial Counselor and Head of PTIC Tokyo.

“By deliberately convening public agencies, industry partners, designers, and technical experts within a single, coordinated framework, we were able to translate policy objectives into concrete market engagement,” she said.

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Meeting in Tokyo. PHOTO FROM THE DTI

“The resulting level of market interest and follow-through affirms the evolution of the Philippine coconut — from a traditional natural resource into a platform for high-value innovation across health, nutrition, design, and clean energy. This approach is essential to sustainably raising farmer incomes and strengthening the Philippines’ position in global value chains,” she added.

Like the coconut, PH–Japan ties are no longer defined by a single “product,” but by a value chain of cooperation—from grassroots farmers to advanced research, from raw materials to high-end design and science.

Heritage meets high design meets farmers

The exhibition also connected innovation with heritage. A dedicated section on the Coconut Palace featured original watercolor renderings and blueprints by National Artist Francisco Mañosa, alongside a 3D model and virtual-reality tour. This is timely as the palace has been designated an official venue of the ASEAN 2026 Summit.

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PHOTO FROM WIKIPEDIA

Award-recognized coconut-based furniture, co-created design products, food innovations, and premium spirits further demonstrated how the coconut bridges craft, culture, and contemporary industry — much like PH-Japan engagement today spans culture, commerce, and cutting-edge technology.

Behind the design hub displays are 3.5 million coconut farmers and more than 10 million Filipinos across the coconut value chain. Through participating exporters and supply-chain partners, the initiative is estimated to have reached coconut-producing areas supporting around 220,000 farm households, linking anniversary diplomacy directly to long-term income and value-chain upgrading.

In its 70th year, PH-Japan relations are being told through a familiar symbol — but in an unfamiliar way. The coconut is no longer just the “tree of life.” It is becoming a platform of innovation, just as the bilateral partnership has grown from traditional trade into a multidimensional alliance built on sustainability, science, and shared futures.

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