MANILA(March 29) — The Philippines will host a scaled-down ASEAN Summit this May, as Ferdinand Marcos Jr. shifts the regional agenda to crisis response amid surging fuel prices and economic uncertainty triggered by tensions in the Middle East.
Describing the gathering as “bare bones,” Marcos said leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations agreed to push through with the summit—despite earlier talks of postponement—arguing that coordination is more urgent during periods of instability.
“The consensus… is that it is precisely now that we must coordinate our efforts,” Marcos said.
Instead of the usual multi-day diplomatic program, the May summit will run for just a day and a half, from May 7 to 8, with discussions narrowed to three pressure points: oil supply, food security, and migrant workers.
The shift signals how deeply the ongoing Middle East tensions has unsettled Southeast Asian economies—many of which rely heavily on imported fuel and are now grappling with rising costs and inflation risks.
For the Philippines, the stakes are particularly high.
As a net importer of petroleum, the country remains vulnerable to global supply disruptions. Manila has already taken the unusual step of declaring an energy emergency, underscoring concerns that fuel availability could tighten beyond the second quarter.
Marcos said the government is continuing negotiations with potential suppliers, but details remain limited, raising questions about how quickly alternative sources can be secured.
The administration has also moved to cut the summit’s original PHP22-billion budget, redirecting funds toward sectors hit hardest by rising fuel costs—a decision that highlights the trade-offs between diplomatic engagements and domestic economic relief.
Still, the pared-down summit raises broader questions about ASEAN’s capacity to respond collectively to external shocks.
While focusing on essentials may streamline discussions, it also reflects the bloc’s reactive posture—prioritizing immediate crises over longer-term integration goals such as energy resilience, regional supply chains, and labor protections.
A second ASEAN Summit in November—typically attended by major partners like China, Japan, and the United States—is expected to proceed as planned, potentially offering a fuller platform for strategic dialogue.
For now, however, the message is clear: Southeast Asia is in damage-control mode.
Whether this “bare-bones” approach leads to concrete, coordinated solutions—or merely underscores the region’s vulnerabilities—will likely define ASEAN’s relevance in an increasingly volatile global landscape.