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Ang Kalusunan Columns

Ang Kalusunan: The power of youth and climate action

Ang Kalusunan: The power of youth and climate action

By Aimee Oliveros

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When I was younger, I remember a song by John Denver that I sang at a school program. It starts at a low pitch and progresses to a high pitch towards the end. It was a song that I remember practicing over and over, with the dancers behind a silhouette, only their shadows were visible. There was a time when I almost lost my voice, lost my tune, and lost my confidence, but I didn’t give up. I still remember the lyrics from start to end.

I want to live I want to grow
I want to see I want to know
I want to share what I can give
I want to be I want to live

And I can still remember the feeling I felt when I was singing that particular song—the feeling of hope, the feeling of being seen and heard. I was on a stage and people were listening to my story. I felt that I was making a difference with my song and my performance.

That experience was life-changing in a way that I would only realize years after. I heard this familiar song on the radio just a few years ago and all memories came rushing in. All the familiar lyrics but somehow, I felt the meaning of the song changed for me after all these years.

 
 

We are standing all together
Face to face and arm in arm
We are standing on the threshold of a dream
No more hunger no more killing
No more wasting life away
It is simply an idea
And I know its time has come

It was no longer just my story, but the story of so many others like me. The story of struggle, the story of pain, loss, resilience, and strength. The story that every advocate is fighting for—justice, equality, and life.

If I was younger, I would use my voice not just to sing, but to share a message. Not just to perform, but to connect. Not just to entertain, but to inspire action. I cannot turn back time, but I know that there is still time.

The power of the youth towards climate action will not foster if they are not given opportunities to be heard and be seen.

 

The do’s and don’ts

 

The power of the youth to lead and influence climate action is critical not only in their communities but across the globe. More and more youth climate advocates are given opportunities to make an impact and become beacons of hope for the future.

At the core of climate action is education. In line with our pursuit to provide opportunities for young climate advocates to deepen their understanding of climate science, policy, and governance, we introduced Klima Eskwela to Palawan State University. 

Klima Eskwela is Climate Reality Philippines’ knowledge exchange program that provides opportunities for young climate advocates and other stakeholders to deepen and broaden their understanding of climate science, policy, and governance.

With education comes action, and here are some of the commitments shared by our participants during the two-day session.

“I commit to engage more in different environmental activities and advocacies such as reducing the use of single-use plastic to improve ecological balance and environmental integrity to achieve sustainable development.”

“I will make myself available when it comes to research, especially when it talks about carbon sequestration and plastic pollution. I will be part of the solution where I will promote non-single use plastic.”

“I will be more responsible for the things I use and consume through an eco-friendly lifestyle, healthy living, participate in community programs related to the environment, awareness on the things I use, and small actions like proper segregation of waste.”

“As Environmental Science students, we would like to be catalysts in solidifying the ban on single-use plastics, and [promoting] sustainability in our campus by pushing and supporting such policies, and also by collaborating with different organizations to further [this] cause. It would also be of great help if we were to advocate and spread awareness about the topics of single-use plastics and their effects. I have observed plastic pollution around the campus despite many trash bins, so it’s crucial to really fulfill such advocacies. Lastly, it would be most effective if we were to showcase such commitment ourselves.”

“To someone who cares about the environment and recognizes their role in the ongoing pollution and the climate change crisis, I want to be more responsible with the things that I do. I will try to involve myself with green movements, make sure that I am recycling my waste well, and share what I know with other people as well. Small things that may work big time.”

“As a student, I have suggestions about the problems that we are facing today. We all need discipline even in the little things and be aware of its impact. We must be responsible and think not just for ourselves.”

“As a member of my community, I pledge to protect my environment, promote and advocate for sustainable development. To conform with the laws for the environment, and its principles. And to be at all times be a good citizen who long for global betterment. Make use of my knowledge to reach others and widen the awareness about environmental problems”

The highs and lows 
 

As we look back on the past quarter, we look back at the different opportunities we have engaged with Climate Reality Leaders and climate advocates, particularly the youth.

Last May, we partnered with the Philippine Science High School Cordillera Administrative Region Campus for the Pebble Poem Workshop and the  community screening of the documentary film “Delikado” in celebration of their STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) week. It’s always inspiring to see the passion of the youth as they share their stories and forge their path towards becoming climate advocates.

We also completed a two-day Virtual Youth Summit for Climate in partnership with the Rotary Club of Makati San Lorenzo and the Rotary Club of Tai Po. The event provided aspiring climate advocates an opportunity to learn from the experts in the field of clean and just energy transition, sustainable urban mobility, zero waste practices and solutions, and food security. 

Lastly, we conducted the Luzon leg of the in-person sessions of REaltalk: A Movement Building Workshop on Renewable Energy in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan. Organized in partnership with AktivAsia Philippines, the workshop produced 29 campaigners set to engage public and private schools, offices, companies, and other entities to switch to renewable energy through the Green Energy Option Program (GEOP).

We would love to hear from you! Do you have any climate questions but are too afraid to ask, or maybe a comment on our monthly column, just email at aimee.oliveros.ph@climatereality.com.   

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
 

Aimee is the Luzon Coordinator of The Climate Reality Project Philippines. She is a human resources professional with over 10 years of corporate work experience in different local and multinational industries. With her experience in organizational development, training and employee engagement, Aimee is deeply passionate about promoting learning and wellbeing. She is a Climate Reality Leader having joined the 2020 Global training which solidified her inner passion for community work and service. Being an advocate for the environment, she co-founded RE-Store MNL, a small shop promoting refill and reuse in Paranaque City. She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Social Sciences at the University of the Philippines Baguio.

ABOUT ANG KALUSUNAN

Ang Kalusunan or the “Northern Part” is a space that aims to amplify the climate stories and initiatives of the more than 1,200 Pinoy Climate Reality Leaders in Luzon.

It is one of the regular columns launched by The Climate Reality Project Philippines to elevate the climate discourse and strengthen climate action across all regions in the Philippines.

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: The impacts of the climate crisis to Philippine heritage

Eleventh Hour: The impacts of the climate crisis to Philippine heritage

By Roxanne Omega  Doron

I

Aside from its hospitable and beautiful people, the Philippines is also blessed with rich, diverse, and multifaceted natural, cultural, and built heritage.

We are known for over 100 ethnolinguistic groups spread across the archipelago. Each group has distinct and unique traditions, languages, music, dance, clothing, dishes, craftsmanship, rituals, poetry, and oral histories that have existed for hundreds or thousands of years.

 

We are known for our colorful, vibrant, and crowd-drawing festivals celebrated in almost every corner of our community, even in geographically isolated areas. These festivals celebrate various aspects of local culture and history that often date back to prehistoric times and are strongly connected to the spiritual and natural world.

 

We have UNESCO World Heritage sites, such as the Vigan City colonial-era houses, Baroque Churches of the Philippines, Banaue Rice Terraces, and Tubbataha Natural Reef, among others.

 

Our rich heritage, however, is facing various risks due to neglect and decay, rapid urbanization, infrastructure development, and land-use changes, and lack of awareness and education on their importance.This year, the global community will convene once again for COP28 to tackle a myriad of issues involving the delivery of adaptation, mitigation, and loss and damage finance to communities that need them the most.

To address these risks, Republic Act No. 10066, also known as the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009, was passed into law to protect, preserve, conserve, and promote the nation’s cultural heritage, its properties, and histories. The law also aims “to strengthen people’s awareness of Filipino heritage, to instill pride in our Filipino identity, and to stimulate cultural consciousness, appreciation, and pride.”

However, the discourse on heritage conservation is now compelled to also recognize the emerging risks posed by the global climate crisis to Philippine cultural heritage sites and their associated ecosystems.

We experienced the past several years the regular occurrence of extreme weather events such as floods, droughts, tropical storms, and wildfires, which might cause significant damage to our historic structures, including buildings, monuments, biodiversity, and archeological sites. 

The changes in temperature, precipitation patterns, and sea level rise due to climate change are also projected to result in the loss of cultural landscapes, such as coastlines, wetlands, and agricultural landscapes. The long-term effects could be the irreversible disappearance of traditional land use practices, cultural traditions, and indigenous knowledge. 

The loss of biodiversity due to the climate crisis also impacts cultural practices and traditional ecological knowledge. This will eventually lead to the loss of species and habitats, which are culturally significant because they relate and connect us to the natural world. 

Communities are displaced in a deepening climate crisis since they are affected by rising sea levels, floods, and droughts. This will lead to communities disconnected from their sacred place, pride of place, communities, and ancestral lands. 

The economic impacts of the climate crisis and its destruction of our natural and cultural heritage are bleeding billions. Once ignored or left unnoticed, the significant economic effects on heritage sites, lost tourism revenue, and increased maintenance and preservation costs will continue until we can no longer afford to preserve them. 

We cannot monetize the contribution and benefit of our connections to the past. Our heritage contributes to the identity and sense of community and instills pride of place among our people. Once they are gone, they are gone forever and this can have profound socio-economic and cultural implications for our communities and future generations.

Preserving heritage, therefore, entails deploying climate change adaptation (resilience building) and mitigation (emissions reduction) solutions to our communities. This requires the crucial participation of ethnic and indigenous communities, who are also at the forefront of intensifying climate change impacts.

We cannot afford to lose our heritage because detachment from our pride of place is the biggest catastrophe.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 

Roxanne Omega Doron is a Climate Reality Leader based in the Visayas, founder and executive director of Bisdak Pride, Inc., a lecturer at the University of the Philippines Cebu and a heritage advocate connected with Diyandi Cebu Heritage Center. 

ABOUT ELEVENTH HOUR

This article was originally published on The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ weekly column for the Manila Bulletin called Eleventh Hour.

This column serves a digital space to discuss our organization’s work on supporting the country’s just transition into a clean, affordable, and self-sufficient energy system; advancing sustainable urban mobility to highlight the issues of equity and democracy; and raising public awareness about the need to phase out single-use plastics. It also serves as a platform for Pinoy Climate Reality Leaders to share your stories, promote your climate initiatives, and provide critical insights to issues that matter to climate action, environmental protection, and sustainable development.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 

Kristine Galang is currently the Communications Lead of The Climate Reality Project Philippines. Before joining the branch in 2021, she worked as the speechwriter communications focal of the former vice chairperson of the Climate Change Commission. Prior to working in the climate change sphere, she worked at Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office under the Aquino administration as deputy of its media monitoring division.

ABOUT ELEVENTH HOUR

This article was originally published on The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ weekly column for the Manila Bulletin called Eleventh Hour.

This column serves a digital space to discuss our organization’s work on supporting the country’s just transition into a clean, affordable, and self-sufficient energy system; advancing sustainable urban mobility to highlight the issues of equity and democracy; and raising public awareness about the need to phase out single-use plastics. It also serves as a platform for Pinoy Climate Reality Leaders to share your stories, promote your climate initiatives, and provide critical insights to issues that matter to climate action, environmental protection, and sustainable development.

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Why rewrite climate finance in COP28?

Eleventh Hour: Why rewrite climate finance in COP28?

By Aina Eriksson, Maria Faciolince, and Kristine Galang   

I

Since its inception in 1994, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has aimed to push forward international commitment and action on climate issues. The treaty focuses on increasing scientific research to inform how best to adapt to a changing climate and safeguard adequate food production and biospheres, while still enabling continued (albeit so-called ‘sustainable’) economic development.

 

With 198 member states, also called Parties, the UNFCCC and its yearly meeting, the Conference of the Parties (COP), is the world’s largest platform for international climate agreements. Throughout the years, negotiations have pulled forth new priority areas, such as transitioning away from fossil fuels and coal-based energy, keeping the average rise of global temperatures below 1.5C degrees, and increasing climate action and its transparent reporting.

The 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27)  held last year yielded historic wins in its final decision, including the agreement to set up a loss and damage fund for nations most vulnerable to the climate crisis and the call for a reform of multilateral banks such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank.

This year, the global community will convene once again for COP28 to tackle a myriad of issues involving the delivery of adaptation, mitigation, and loss and damage finance to communities that need them the most.

Will finance finally reach the most vulnerable communities?

One of the critical policy points in this year’s COP is the operationalization of a loss and damage fund to finance the needs of communities disproportionately affected by the climate crisis.

The most contentious issues that would have to be settled are determining who pays for the funds, how much, and what will be the basis for access, reporting, and financing mechanisms.

At its core, the envisioned loss and damage facility requires high-emitting countries to acknowledge their historical role in the climate crisis and take responsibility for it.

Ideally, the facility is to be governed by rules and modalities that leverage the best available science and risk data and lift the burden of proof from vulnerable communities. Innovative and responsive instruments utilizing a trigger-based and pre-arranged design must be made available to deliver an additional layer of protection for our communities.

Another issue to be tackled in COP28 is the progress of the Climate Finance Delivery Plan, which sets out when and how the developed world will meet its promise to mobilize USD100 billion per year starting 2020 for the adaptation and mitigation needs of developing countries.

A Progress Report on the Delivery Plan released last year projected that developed countries will collectively deliver the full USD100 billion this year and that climate finance flows for vulnerable communities in 2024 and 2025 will exceed US$100 billion, reaching the US$500 billion aggregate goal for the five-year period (2020-2024).

This year’s COP will be an opportunity for rich nations to provide more clarity on how they will deliver their commitments and unlock more climate finance by reforming institutions like the World Bank to align with the Paris Agreement.

Related to this, the World Bank Group has embarked on the development of an Evolution Roadmap that will spell out how the institution will operate moving forward, recognizing the multiple global crises that are setting back progress toward its goals.

This is an opportune time for the institution to revolutionize financing for vulnerable populations—to pave the way for an international financial architecture that is fit for climate.

What is the role of culture(s)?
 

Culture encompasses our ways of understanding and dealing with change, taking care of others and envisioning our collective realities—and must have a central role in building resilient futures. When technical expertise is pinned as the lens through which climate-related issues like finance are seen, we lose sight of the very real experiences accompanying the changes taking place in our very homes. Market-based solutions—the same ones that helped produce the climate crisis—will not be the main mechanisms to overcome the climate crisis.

This task requires a thorough revision of the very systems and relationships that sustain life.

And the guidelines for this, in large part, come from cultural understandings. Culture is not an add-on to socio-ecological factors considered primordial in allowing communities to prosper. It is precisely the system of values and beliefs that encompasses individuals, collectives and environments, which manifests itself in profoundly different ecological consequences.

And while culture—in the sense of living cultures—gives us our framework for relating to the places we inhabit, culture in the sense of creative expression assists us in interpreting (and reinterpreting) our world, and in communicating our visions with each other.

Culture lives outside any walls. Outside any conference. But there is a responsibility that comes with occupying spaces of power as well. As world leaders and decision-makers meet to determine the fate of many communities, the contributions of culture need to be spotlighted as valuable knowledge sources for collectively reimagining and creating paths towards regenerative planetary relationships.

Why and how to rewrite COP?

 

Rooted in the conviction that culture, along with creative inquiry and storytelling, is  vital to tackling the climate crisis, Agam Agenda and Climate Reality Philippines launched RewriteCOP in the lead-up to COP28.

RewriteCOP aims to democratize climate policies by allowing more people to voice their demands for better solutions through art and creative expression.

To rewrite COP28, our first call is an invitation to intervene in the World Bank’s evolution process through erasure poetry. How to?

  • In our starter kit bit.ly/rewritecopkit, you’ll find an excerpt of the draft World Bank Evolution Roadmap. Pick a page you want to rewrite in line with our call for the World Bank to pave the way for a fit-for-climate global financial system.
  • Choose the words that resonate with the climate promise you envision.
  • Using paint, images, makers, or any digital application, erase the rest to create a new version of the roadmap.
  • Head to whenisnow.org/submissions/ to submit your creation.
 

Join us in creating traction for climate policies designed for the realities of the most vulnerable.

Follow Agam Agenda and Climate Reality Philippines to stay tuned for more calls to rewrite our futures.

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ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Aina Eriksson is a Filipina-Swedish communicator passionate about intercultural translation and hybrid knowledge systems. Her experience ranges from science writing, policy engagement, and youth activism in the Nordics and South Africa. She joins the Agam Agenda after several years at Stockholm Environment Institute working with sustainable consumption and production, sustainable lifestyles, and education.

María Faciolince is a Colombian-Curaçaoan communicator, facilitator, ecofeminist activist and creative mind. Her previous work with EJAtlas and other research institutions, and current projects with Oxfam GB and Agam Agenda, are all guided by the need to reimagine and expand narratives around justice and ‘development’.

Kristine Galang is the communications lead of Climate Reality Philippines. She previously worked as head speechwriter of the former Vice Chairperson and Executive Director of the Philippine Climate Change Commission. Prior to working in the climate change sphere, she worked in strategic political communications.

 

ABOUT ELEVENTH HOUR

This article was originally published on The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ weekly column for the Manila Bulletin called Eleventh Hour.

This column serves a digital space to discuss our organization’s work on supporting the country’s just transition into a clean, affordable, and self-sufficient energy system; advancing sustainable urban mobility to highlight the issues of equity and democracy; and raising public awareness about the need to phase out single-use plastics. It also serves as a platform for Pinoy Climate Reality Leaders to share your stories, promote your climate initiatives, and provide critical insights to issues that matter to climate action, environmental protection, and sustainable development.

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Press Releases

Mobility Awards begins search for 2023 bicycle-friendly cities, workplaces, and establishments

Mobility Awards begins search for 2023 bicycle-friendly cities, workplaces, and establishments

Nominations also open for Siklista ng Bayan and Padyak Champion Awards

Quezon City—Public nominations for this year’s Mobility Awards open today, urging citizens, workers, and consumers to nominate bike-friendly cities, workplaces, and establishments in the country. Similar nominations are also open for individuals under the Padyak Power to the People! Awards, namely Siklista ng Bayan and Padyak Champion categories. 

The Mobility Awards is the first citizen-led, incentive-driven campaign encouraging the public to recognize acts of leadership by cities, private companies, and employers to do more for better, safer, and more accessible mobility for the 88 percent of Filipino households who do not own cars. 

“We are challenging Filipino citizens to name cities, business leaders, and employers worthy to be recognized, and we are challenging laggards to do more. This year, all Philippine Cities will be competing; it would be good to see whether there are new cities, businesses, and employers who have taken on and made bold improvements to do more for the cycling commuters,” said Celine Tabinga, national coordinator of the Mobility Awards. “We are looking for leaders who are enabling breathable air, moving more people, and are doing more to help reduce dependence from fossil fuels.” 

“Aside from recognizing entities paving the way for a more inclusive and sustainable mobility system, this year’s Awards also wish to celebrate hardworking Filipinos using bicycles in their everyday lives. These include innovative entrepreneurs using bicycles or cargo bikes for their businesses, and outstanding cyclist messengers and delivery riders,” said Nazrin Castro, Manager of The Climate Reality Project Philippines.

“These people experience firsthand the challenges brought by a car-centric approach to urban mobility. Despite this, they continue to serve our homes. Their stories must be told.”

Public nominations, which will be open until September 7, can be submitted through mobilityawards.ph/nominate. The awardees will be announced in October in advance observance of World Cities’ Day.

The Mobility Awards is jointly organized by the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities, MNL Moves, The Climate Reality Project Philippines, 350 Pilipinas and Pinay Bike Commuter Community, in partnership with League of Cities Philippines and regional partners across the country. The initiative aims to inspire action, involvement, and coordination among local government units, workplaces, and commercial establishments aiming to improve conditions for urban mobility.

In addition to its individual and bike-friendly awards, the Mobility Awards will also run the Bilang Siklista Bike Count in major cities nationwide. Bilang Siklista is a citizen-led national bike count that aims to provide evidence-based justification for investing in better bike and pedestrian infrastructure.

Click here to learn more about this year’s nominations and categories for the Mobility Awards.  

 

CONTACT
Anton C. Onato, ICSC: media@icsc.ngo, +63 969 610 8305

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Press Releases

Climate Reality and AktivAsia in the Philippines train campaigners to engage entities to switch to RE through GEOP

Climate Reality and AktivAsia in the Philippines train campaigners to engage entities to switch to RE through GEOP

Puerto Princesa City—Energy campaigners recognized the potential of the Green Energy Option Program (GEOP) as a means for companies and workplaces to generate savings from power costs, while reducing carbon emissions.

The Climate Reality Project Philippines (Climate Reality Philippines), in partnership with AktivAsia Philippines, capped off the Luzon Leg of “REalTalk: A Movement Building Workshop on Renewable Energy,” producing 29 campaigners set to engage public and private schools, offices, companies, and other entities to switch to renewable energy through GEOP.

 

Climate Reality Leaders and energy advocates underwent campaign and leadership training to increase GEOP participation in the country, on 19-20 May 2023 at Rema Tourist Inn, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan.

The GEOP program, created by the Renewable Energy Act, allows eligible users to switch from being a captive market of distribution utilities and electric cooperatives to source power directly from renewable energy suppliers. 

Fossil fuels dominate the domestic power generation mix at 77.6% which according to the Philippine Climate Tracker 2020 contributes largely to the 50% increase in the country’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions over the last decade. The government now aims to increase the share of renewables in the mix to 35% by 2030 and to 50% by 2040. 

Through the REalTalk workshop, Climate Reality Philippines builds the knowledge and capacity of advocates who shall engage and influence potential switchers to consider sourcing power from renewables through GEOP. 

“We are bringing focus to the Green Energy Option Program, which provides businesses and local entities the option to choose renewables as their only source of energy and which helps advance our climate and sustainability goals,” said Nazrin Camille Castro, Branch Manager of Climate Reality Philippines.

GEOP fosters competitiveness and sustainability for private and local entities

The REalTalk workshop cultivated different campaign plans anchored on addressing high electricity prices and promoting sustainability within offices and workplaces. Christian Soqueño, Program Lead of RE Energize PH Program, noted that potential switchers can enter into different agreements with renewable energy suppliers to access cheaper and more reliable power sources.
In one of the exercises, the groups identified high electricity prices as the most immediate, specific, strategic, and winnable issue for potential switchers of GEOP.

Participants remarked on the value of GEOP in offering competitive and sustainable operations to their identified entities—generating savings that can be used to improve employee welfare, infrastructure, and to fund other sustainable projects and commitments.

Influencing private entities to do the switch

Mapping out key stakeholders, developing strategies and tactics, and other campaign elements and tools were conducted through various group exercises during the workshop. 

“Campaigning is the art of changing what is possible. We campaign because there is something wrong and unacceptable in our society, and that there is a better reality for all of us,” explained Francis Dela Cruz, Country Lead of AktivAsia Philippines.

Dela Cruz also prompted the participants to carefully distinguish allies and adversaries, as well as their values and motivations, to assess who can help or disrupt their campaign plans.

Participants roleplayed scenarios of engaging key stakeholders to support their campaigns to switch to GEOP. They highlighted the value of GEOP to save on power costs and achieve sustainability goals as positive motivational factors.

REalTalk is a training workshop designed to build the knowledge and capacity of advocates to convey the truth on renewable energy, with special focus on the GEOP. The regional workshops focus on campaign and leadership training and are conducted in partnership with AktivAsia Philippines.

The Visayas and Mindanao legs of REalTalk are slated for July and September, respectively this year.

***

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Press Releases

Palawan students lead the charge toward a plastic-free and climate-resilient future

Palawan students lead the charge toward a plastic-free and climate-resilient future

Puerto Princesa City—Around 50 students from Palawan State University (PSU) pledged their unwavering commitment to creating a low-carbon, plastic-free, and climate-resilient university community.

The pledge was a culmination of the two-day event co-organized by The Climate Reality Project Philippines (Climate Reality Philippines) with the PSU College of Sciences and PSU Student Government entitled Klima Eskwela: Climate Science, Adaptation, Arts, and Action last 19-20 May in Puerto Princesa City.

Klima Eskwela is Climate Reality Philippines’ knowledge exchange program that provides opportunities for young climate advocates and other stakeholders to deepen and broaden their understanding of climate science, policy, and governance.

To cap off the two-day Klima Eskwela session, students recited their pledge of commitment for climate and the environment.

“Time and time again, we underscore the need to provide and enhance opportunities for young people to contribute to addressing the climate crisis and advancing sustainable development,” Nazrin Castro, Branch Manager of Climate Reality Philippines, said during the opening of the event.

Castro also recognized the leadership of the local government, local organizations, and the academe in deploying climate and environmental solutions on the ground. “Climate Reality is not here just to cascade what we know and what we want to push for in your community. We are also here to learn from locally-led actions already happening here in your city,” she said.

Dr. Ronald Edilberto Ona, Dean of the PSU College of Science, underscored the need for multisectoral collaboration in climate action.

“We all  know that climate change is a reality. We experienced it here in Palawan when Typhoon Odette hit. We know the consequences of climate change. We need to do something. Climate change is not impossible to combat. What we are doing here with our partners is to take that first step,” Dr. Ona said.

Nazrin Camille D. Castro, Branch Manager of The Climate Reality Project Philippines, and Ms. Padmapani Perez, Lead Strategies for Agam Agenda, turned over copies of Harvest Moon: Poems and Stories from the Edge of the Climate Crisis” and “Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility” to Dr. Ronald Edilberto Ona, Dean of the College of Science, and Dr. Carlos Alfonso Salvador, Vice President for STudent Affairs and Services.

Thinking globally and acting locally

“Let us act locally but think globally,” Dr. Ona reminded the organizers and participants of Klima Eskwela.
 
The first day of the event focused on the discussion of the best available climate science and climate change-related issues in Puerto Princesa City.
 
“There is a consensus among scientists throughout the world that climate change is caused by humans and not simply a natural phenomenon. Ninety-nine percent of 88,000 peer-reviewed studies say so,” Climate Reality Leader Jonathan Maldupana said as he discussed the basics of climate change, including what causes climate change and how human activities are altering the world’s climate systems.
 
“We are spewing 162 million tons of man-made global warming pollution into the thin shell of our atmosphere every 24 hours–as if it were an open sewer,” Maldupana said.
 
Mr. Earl Timbacanya, Local Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Officer IV of the City Government of Puerto Princesa, discussed the city’s climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction management strategies and programs.
 
“Puerto Princesa City is threatened by several natural hazards associated with climatic extremes such as drought, typhoon, heavy rainfall, and geological hazard such as tsunami,” Timbacanya said. “Records on climate extremes also indicate that the city is susceptible to climate-related disasters,” he added.
 
Jacir Bebing, Development Management Officer of the Climate Change Commission (CCC), provided students with an overview of the People’s Survival Fund (PSF), the only national climate change adaptation fund in the Philippines.
 
“In 2012, na-establish ang People’s Survival Fund para sa financing ng climate change adaptation project para maitaas ang antas ng resilience dito sa ating mga komunidad,” he said, explaining the role of climate finance in addressing the climate change adaptation needs of communities.
 
(Translation: “In 2012, the People’s Survival Fund was established for financing climate change adaptation projects to raise the level of resilience in our communities,” he said, explaining the role of climate finance in addressing the climate change adaptation needs of communities.)
 
Ferth Vandensteen Manaysay, Deputy Branch Manager and Plastic-Free Reality Program Lead of The Climate Reality Project Philippines, discussed why the plastic crisis is also a climate change issue.

Climate lens of the plastic crisis

Ferth Vandensteen Manaysay, Deputy Branch Manager and Plastic-Free Reality Program Lead of the Climate Reality Philippines, discussed with the students why the plastic crisis is also a climate change issue.

“Unknown to many, plastic pollution is closely linked to the climate crisis. Almost 99% of the plastic used is derived from fossil fuels such as crude oil. The oils obtained from fossil fuels are used to produce petrochemicals that are separated to become resin, which is used to make plastic,” Manaysay shared.

“The whole plastic life cycle—from extraction, manufacture, and transport, to disposal—produces emissions that may reach up to 1.34 gigatons per year by 2030, which is equivalent to more than 295 new 500-megawatt coal-fired power plants if current trends continue,” he added.

Alonzo Peralta of the City Environment and Natural Resources Office of Puerto Princesa shared the city’s local plastic and waste management policies, such as the City Ordinance No. 993 regulating the utilization of single-use plastic and polystyrene foam in the city.

Students participate in the Poets for Climate workshop.

Creative collaboration for climate action

Climate action that is expressed through community engagements and the arts provides a more powerful message of hope and resilience. 

On the second day of Klima Eskwela, the Agam Agenda facilitated a pebble poem and art workshop, where students were given the chance to create short literary, visual, and musical pieces in response to what they learned about the climate and plastic crises.

“Pag puro statistics lang o data lang patungkol sa climate change ang pinag-uusapan natin, maraming hindi nakakaintindi. Pero yung sining, kaya niyang tumagos sa puso. At ‘yun yung isang paraan para magbigay ng kwento na maaaring maintindihan ng lahat,” Padmapani Perez, Lead Strategist for Creative Collaboration of the Agam Agenda, said during the workshop.

(Translation: “When we talk only about statistics or data regarding climate change, many people do not understand. Art has the ability to pierce through the heart. And that is one way to tell a story that can be understood by everyone,” Padmapani Perez, Lead Strategist for Creative Collaboration of the Agam Agenda, said during the workshop.)

Castro and Perez also turned over copies of the books Harvest Moon: Poems and Stories from the Edge of the Climate Crisis and Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility to Dr. Ona and Dr. Carlos Alfonso Salvador, Vice President for Student Affairs and Services of the PSU, for the university library.

Youth commitment for climate action

The workshop culminated with the synthesis of the pledge of actions each student made for climate and the environment.

On reducing carbon footprint, students collectively committed to promoting and adopting energy-efficient practices and prioritizing sustainable transportation options.

On eliminating plastic pollution, students pledged to minimize the consumption of single-use plastics and encouraging others to do the same. They also committed to promoting and engaging in waste segregation and responsible waste management practices within the university premises.

On climate resilience, students pledged to encourage research and innovation within the university community to develop climate-resilient solutions, technologies, and practices that can contribute to both campus sustainability and the wider community.

The students also pledged to serve as ambassadors of sustainability within the campus and beyond.

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