Cebu Carbon Market vendors struggle amid rising oil prices

Amid oil price hikes and fewer customers, fish and flower vendors at Cebu City's Carbon Market are seeing sharp drops in earnings. Product prices like shrimp have risen by up to P100 since March 17, 2026. Transportation costs for fish carts have also doubled.

Fish vendors at Cebu City's Carbon Market, like Josephine Salientes, report scant earnings after covering rising costs. "There is little left in our salaries. Adding to the fact that rice prices have also increased. It’s pitiful that, instead of earning a little extra, this is not possible due to the fish. It’s expensive," Salientes said in Cebuano. Fish cart transportation costs have doubled from P15,000 to P30,000 due to oil price hikes. As a result, her son has paused studies for the semester, and her husband may need to work.

Relocation since July 2022 demolitions has worsened matters, moving vendors from near Freedom Park to in front of the Unit 1 building. Selling hours are now limited to 3 p.m. to 12 a.m., compared to the previous 4 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Flower vendors face similar transport cost increases. Annabelle Olanolan noted higher expenses for flowers from Davao, Manila, and Mantalongon due to gasoline. Peak daily earnings reach P10,000 to P20,000 during seasons like Valentine’s, but March sales are slow at P500 per bundle. "I had to ask for snacks from my neighbor," Olanolan said, with no income over the past three days.

Mary Gabuna awaits Holy Week bulk church purchases but fears flower spoilage. "We would have to wait. [But] the flowers, we’re at a loss already," she said. Vendors expect relocation to a renovated, smaller-stalled Freedom Park by year-end.

This stems from a Cebu City government deal with Cebu2World Development Inc., a Megawide Construction Corporation subsidiary. On March 17, around 2,000 vendors and advocates rallied for a contract review, as reported by Rappler.

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Illustration of long vehicle queues at closed Philippine gas stations during nationwide fuel crisis.
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Fuel crisis closes 425 gas stations nationwide

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A total of 425 out of 14,485 gas stations nationwide were temporarily closed as of March 27 due to the fuel crisis triggered by the Iran war, according to the Philippine National Police. The Cordillera Administrative Region recorded the highest number at 79, while President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. declared a national energy emergency.

Surging fuel prices are grounding more fishers in the Philippines, reducing daily catches and threatening food security, witnesses said at a Senate hearing on April 8.

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Motorcycle taxi and habal-habal drivers in Cebu City are facing reduced daily earnings due to oil price hikes linked to the US-Israel war on Iran. They report waiting up to 30 minutes for passengers and higher fuel costs, often earning less than P1,000 a day. Local governments plan subsidies while transport groups stage strikes for relief.

Due to the war in the Middle East, diesel prices in the Philippines are expected to exceed P100 per liter, prompting public utility vehicle drivers to consider other jobs. Jeepney and tricycle drivers like Renie Rabago and Omeng Elardo struggle with rising fuel costs while their earnings remain low. The government offers a one-time P5,000 subsidy to assist them, though some say it is insufficient.

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A fuel price strike that ended on Tuesday revealed Mombasa's heavy dependence on food supplies from outside the county. Major shortages hit Kongowea market, driving up prices for residents and traders.

The Marcos administration has lowered port and toll fees to mitigate oil price shocks from Middle East tensions, Malacañang announced yesterday. Executive Secretary Ralph Recto urged national agencies and local governments to help truckers of farm produce benefit from the toll and port fee holiday to ease food and transport costs.

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Transport group Manibela announced a nationwide strike from April 15 to 17, coinciding with the government's service contracting program rollout. The action responds to high fuel prices and demands a rollback to P55 per liter. Chairman Mar Valbuena criticized the government's inadequate response to oil price shocks.

 

 

 

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