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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Making finance work for climate and the environment

Eleventh Hour: Making finance work for climate and the environment

By Branch

I

The World Bank Group, one of the world’s largest sources of funding for developing countries to reduce poverty, increase shared prosperity, and promote sustainable development, is in the process of developing its Evolution Roadmap, which will spell out how the institution will evolve its vision and mission, operating model, and financial capacity.

 

The planned “evolution” is in recognition that financial and development institutions must do more in addressing the multiple crises faced by the global community, including the interplay of the climate and the debt crises in the world’s most vulnerable developing countries.

Climate change shocks and disasters have already eliminated US$525 billion from climate-vulnerable economies in the past 20 years, according to research commissioned by the V20 Group of Finance Ministers, representing 58 of the world’s most systemically climate-threatened economies.

These historical losses, together with adverse impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic and the climate crisis, have greatly reduced the fiscal space of low and middle-income climate-vulnerable countries to adapt to the warming world, respond to climate disasters, and meet the cost of low-carbon and climate-resilient development.

In fact, a growing proportion of climate-vulnerable countries are already in or at risk of being in a financial crisis.

Institutions under the World Bank Group should provide the Global South with opportunities to course-correct its debt problems while delivering its climate commitments under the Paris Agreement.

At the Evolution Forum held last April 11, 2023 during the spring meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, Climate Reality Philippines branch manager Nazrin Castro provided the following inputs to the World Bank Group’s Evolution Roadmap:

First, the Evolution Roadmap cannot illustrate the climate crisis as “trade-offs.”

The climate-fueled risks intensify existing risks so it’s not a trade-off. Climate-resilient and the low-carbon transition safeguards our development.

We need the World Bank to step up and pave the way for an international financial architecture that is fit for climate.

Second, a genuine and ambitious Evolution Roadmap must have clear targets and a timeframe in support of the goals of the Paris Agreement.

The Roadmap should be a manifestation of the World Bank’s pivotal role in the low-carbon transition and driving adaptation and resilience of the world economy.

Recognizing the scale and magnitude of the climate crisis and its intersectionality with other global challenges, it should go beyond proposing technical overhauls and direction setting.

Third, the Evolution Roadmap should include strategies, actions, and policies that underpin the Accra-Marrakech Agenda pushed by the V20 Group.

The Roadmap should include strategies that will (1) provide necessary debt relief to debt-distressed climate-vulnerable developing economies; (2) shift investments away from fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive projects, (3) channel capital flow into low-carbon and climate-resilient investments in debt-ridden and climate-vulnerable countries, and (4) ensure the availability of pre-arranged and anticipatory financial support for the unavoidable loss and damage in the most vulnerable communities. 

Lastly, the Evolution Roadmap should uphold the principle of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities embedded in the Paris Agreement.

We need the institution to help climate-vulnerable countries cope with the impacts of the climate crisis without diminishing its already scarce resources intended to support other critical economic and development strategies in education, public health, nutrition, energy access, and job creation

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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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#RealiTalk Blog Feature

#RealiTalk: Climate change impacts on and adaptation solutions for fishing communities with Pinoy Climate Reality Leader Geri De los Santos

#RealiTalk: Climate change impacts on and adaptation solutions for fishing communities with Pinoy Climate Reality Leader Geri De los Santos

For this month’s #RealiTalk issue, we talked to Pinoy Climate Reality Leader Samantha Geraldine “Geri” De los Santos on the impacts of climate change on fishing communities and the need to mainstream and deploy local adaptation solutions in these areas.

 

Geri is the head of the Knowledge Management Office and assistant professor at the Institute for Governance and Rural Development of the College of Public Affairs and Development of the University of the Philippines Los Baños. She also volunteers as a coordinator of our Knowledge and Capacity Development Cluster.
 
Fishing communities are on the front line of climate change. How is the climate crisis affecting small-scale fisherfolk in the Philippines and the communities that depend on it?

Climate change drives poverty incidence in fishing communities even higher for those whose livelihoods are highly dependent on fisheries. Small-scale fisherfolks in the Philippines are among the poorest of the poor in the Philippines and they depend on the fishery resource for subsistence. Fisherfolks catch fish so they could buy rice for their family. With limited financial capital, most of them get loans to buy fuel and ice before heading out to the sea. However, climate change has made the weather unpredictable—too windy, too stormy, too hot—affecting their fishing schedule. If there is a typhoon, they cannot fish for a week as they wait for the waves to calm.

Rising sea surface temperatures also impact the availability of dissolved oxygen and food for underwater species, resulting in limited to zero volume of fish catch. If they cannot go out to fish because of poor weather conditions or catch enough fish for even just a day due to extreme heat, their family will have nothing to eat, the cost of ice will become a sunk cost, and they will become even poorer.

 
How is the climate crisis compounding existing challenges in fishing communities, such as overfishing, marine pollution, and poor coastal infrastructure?

The climate crisis will make it difficult for us to achieve zero poverty and food security. When fisherfolks cannot catch enough fish to feed their families, they may resolve to conduct illegal practices to survive. They will try to catch fish in marine protected areas, use fishing nets with smaller mesh net sizes (so they can catch even juvenile fish), and use chemicals to make it easier to catch fish. While incidences of illegal practices have lowered in recent years as a result of policies and campaigns against illegal fishing, we cannot totally avoid the return of illegal practices plainly because the fisherfolks need to survive.

In addition, if the fisherfolks have no income, they will not have funds to support their children’s basic education and fund their family’s needs for health and well-being. If the climate crisis is not resolved, it will be nearly impossible for the Philippines to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.

Lastly, sea level rise (SLR) has been observed by the fisherfolks. If SLR continues, our fishing communities will have to migrate to safer areas and may end up losing their livelihoods because of migration.

 

How are Filipino fisherfolks adapting to climate change? What are the best practices you’ve encountered? And what should be done to mainstream these practices into other communities, where they are applicable?

A person will only act on what they know. In the study I conducted from 2019 to 2020 for my master’s degree, I found that fisherfolks rarely know about the word “climate change.” But upon asking them about their observations on the weather and their environment, they were able to describe how different these are compared to 10 years ago or even beyond that and they associated these changes mainly with pollution, particularly from the manufacturing industries and vehicles. This, to me, is a surprise because very few know about the term climate change but they know who’s to blame.

To the best of their knowledge, they adapt to climate change by keenly watching or hearing news about the weather, observing the level of the sea, and securing their boats and belongings whenever there are typhoons. Some of the men and women engage in alternative livelihood activities such as tricycle driving, construction work, and selling food and other items to ensure they still have income in the absence of fishery catch. If the day is too hot, they drink water and stay indoors whenever possible. Meanwhile, mitigation is limited to proper waste segregation, minimal use of plastics, recycling, and the planting of trees, potted plants, or shrubs as they believe these help regulate the temperature in their communities. 

Through the help and facilitation of the national and local governments, fishing communities have also become active in coastal clean-ups, protecting marine species (e.g. turtles), and joining mangrove planting activities.

What forms of assistance do fishing communities need from the government, civil society, and the academe to build climate resilience?

In my opinion, the number one assistance fishing communities need is participatory action planning workshops to increase their knowledge about the climate crisis and help them determine ways to respond to it. Secondly, they need to upgrade their fishing vessels from fuel-powered boats to clean energy-powered ones. If we also want them to get out of poverty and diversify the livelihood of fisherfolks, then we have to start integrating them into the fishery value chain, where our fisherfolks will not only rely solely on fishing to get by. They will also be trained to process, market (online marketing in particular), be involved in the logistics of their products, and eventually enter not only the domestic market but also the export market. They may also transform their fishing communities into eco-tourism areas that incorporate nature-based solutions that combat sea level rise and help mitigate climate change.

Many things can be done to empower fishing communities. The government and non-government organizations may help fund and facilitate these projects while the academe can help provide evidence-based decision support systems in identifying the best ways to build climate resilience in fishing communities.

Tell us about the work that you do to empower fisherfolks to respond to the climate crisis.

In the past year, I have been working on research projects on Socio-Ecological Production Landscapes and Seascapes and Nature-Based Solutions to help build disaster-resilient and climate-smart communities. Part of my work is to increase awareness of the various impacts of climate change on both production landscapes and seascapes, in a ridge-to-reef fashion, to enable the municipal officers and local communities to first acknowledge that what happens in the upland has impacts on lowland and coastal areas. Through my talks, I share with them the unseen impacts of climate change on the fishery sector as a result of population pressure, deforestation, and the intensive use of chemicals in agriculture. I also help them realize that they can be part of the solution to the climate crisis through the small acts they can do at home and in their communities, such as minimizing the use of plastics, supporting tree planting initiatives, segregating and lessening their waste, and using eco-friendly light bulbs, among others.

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Filipino food threatened by climate change

Eleventh Hour: Filipino food threatened by climate change

By Roxanne Omega Doron

I

Being aware and involved in projects and initiatives tackling the state of the Filipino food industry opened my eyes to the imminent danger of losing delicious Filipino dishes because of the climate crisis.

In celebration of the Filipino Food Month last April, I attended the KAIN Conference (KainCon), a three-day event hosted by Jose Rizal University last April 3 to 5, 2023.

This year’s conference, with the theme “Shaping the Future of Philippine Culinary Heritage and Gastronomy,” brought together Filipino farmers, culinary historians, chefs, researchers from the academe, students, and gastronomic experts to discuss the need for more local food cultivation and food preservation initiatives.

Prior to attending this conference, I contributed to the development of the paper entitled “Making Creativity Count: Operationalizing Statistical Mapping of Four Creative and Cultural Sectors under the Philippine Cultural Statistics Framework” as part of the research team on Philippine gastronomy for Iloilo.

This research project was implemented by De La Salle University Center for Business Research and Development in collaboration with the Creative Economy Council of the Philippines and with kind support from the National Commission for Culture and the Arts.

Back in 2020, I also served as a panelist in the forum “Food for Heroes” hosted by Palm Grass at The Cebu Heritage Hotel, which delved into the food our heroes and pre-colonial ancestors planted, nurtured, and consumed. During the forum, it was revealed that their diet protected them from diseases brought by colonizers.

There is a growing importance to preserve our culinary heritage and the Philippine gastronomy industry, which is closely linked to the state and challenges of our agricultural sector.

But despite its growing popularity as an essential component of our economy, together with tourism, the impacts of the climate crisis in our culinary heritage and food industry, at the same time the food industry’s role in addressing the climate crisis, they all remain at the backburner of national consciousness.

Land and water are essential components of a thriving food industry

Undeniably, climate change can significantly impact soil quality and potable water supply.

During the interviews I conducted with fisherfolk and farmers, they mentioned that the changing climate significantly contributed to and affected their fisheries and agricultural output.

Soil quality is affected by climate change and can lead to changes in temperature, precipitation, and other environmental factors. We are currently experiencing extreme and intolerable heat. This increase in temperature can cause soil to dry out, reducing its fertility and consequently making it vulnerable to erosion, affecting the health of our crops.

Water availability is critical for agriculture to thrive, and climate change can significantly impact the water supply. The loss of water supply affects human consumption and our ecosystems. Like its impact on soil fertility, temperature changes and precipitation patterns threaten our water security.

With some regions in the Philippines now experiencing frequent and severe droughts while others experiencing intense rainfall and flooding, crop yields are affected because water for irrigation is undermined.

The availability of fertile soil and water in our agricultural lands is crucial in harvesting the crops we need to cook our most cherished Filipino dishes.

Economic viability and sustainability of Filipino food 

The Philippine food industry is a significant contributor to our local economy. However, climate change is threatening the economic viability and sustainability of the country’s food production system, which may lead to economic losses and productivity disruptions in our farms.

For one, climate change is posing a significant threat to rice production across the country. Rising temperatures and changes in precipitation patterns will reduce crop yield and diminish food quality. Increased frequency of extreme weather events like typhoons, floods, and droughts due to climate change can lead to crop losses and agriculture-related infrastructure damages.

It is now timely and urgent to develop climate-resilient food systems that can adapt to the various impacts of changing weather patterns with the crucial participation of affected communities. The promotion of sustainable agriculture practices and agroforestry, as well as alternative food sources which are more resilient to the impacts of climate change, is critical now more than ever.

Food culture of indigenous people

Filipino indigenous food culture is also vital in protecting Filipino food against the threat of climate change. It has an irreplaceable role in the knowledge of local and traditional food sources, including the traditional food preservation methods that can help sustainably manage our food.

We can learn so much from their existing century-old traditional knowledge and practices on food production. Only by engaging with indigenous communities and valuing their vast knowledge and practices can we live up to this year’s Filipino Food Month theme “Pagkaing Sariling Atin, Mahalin at Pagyamanin.”

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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: Eight simple ways to invest in our planet

Eleventh Hour: Eight simple ways to invest in our planet

By Branch

I

For many years now, the scientific community has painted a grim scenario of what the future holds if the world fails to act with the urgency and scale needed to address the climate crisis.

To ensure a livable future, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said that global emissions must fall by 43 percent by 2030 compared to 2019 levels.

While individual actions matter, what will ultimately save our only home, the Earth, from deterioration are systemic changes across the energy, transport, forestry, and other sectors, and the adoption of low-emission or zero-carbon pathways.

This is why we need to band together to demand our leaders and decision-makers both in the public and the private sector to shift from the current extractive, carbon-intensive, and exploitative economic system to a sustainable and low-carbon economic system.

But everyone has to start somewhere somehow. And to jumpstart your journey of being an environmental and climate warrior, here are a few tips:

First, if you can, shift to reusable and eco-friendly products.

Expand your list of reusable and eco-friendly home items from eco-bags, tumblers, and bamboo straws to shampoo bars, all-natural tooth powder, and refillable beauty and care products. Imagine the tonnage of waste, especially plastics, that can be avoided by shifting away from single-use and investing in more sustainable home items.

Second, if you can find a space, grow your own food.

Start saving the seeds of your favorite fruit and vegetable, and plant them in your backyard, pocket or vertical garden, or even in small containers or pots. Adding edible plants to your home jungle can help protect the health of your soil, reduce your own carbon footprint, and live more self-sufficiently.

Third, use active and renewable transport.

Cycling to work, to school, or to run errands is good for your heart and health. The world we live in today will never be the same in the future because of climate change. While we still have the time, cycle going to local cafes and shops, in parks, or in places that bring childhood memories.

Both the government and private sector must work together to invest in end-of-trip facilities and bicycle-friendly infrastructure like safe bicycle lanes and public parking spaces to encourage more Filipinos to cycle and walk.

Fourth, join the call for a renewable energy transition.

We need to view renewable energy development not just from an environmental or climate standpoint, but from an economic standpoint as well. Many studies and experts are saying that renewable makes good economic sense here in the Philippines, where most electricity is sourced from dirty, expensive, and imported fossil fuels.

Renewable energy will bring down our electricity rates, allow for grid stability and fewer brownouts, provide energy access for all Filipinos, especially those living in communities not connected to the grid; create more jobs, and ultimately result in healthier for the people and planet.

Fifth, share the reality of climate change and the urgency of acting now with your family, friends, and colleagues.

Change starts at home. It starts with planting a seed of information that everyone can be part of the solution — may it be changing our own personal lifestyle to be more mindful consumers, writing to your local government leader to support a policy banning single-use plastics, or discussing with a private business owner the opportunities of installing solar panels.

Sixth, protect your mental health.

The impacts of climate change and the anxiety of climate inaction from our leaders are putting a strain on people’s mental health. When everything feels overwhelming, breathe and reconnect with nature by hiking, swimming in rivers and lakes, walking in the park, or tending to your edible home garden.

Seventh, find local climate and environmental causes to support.

Be involved in your community. Learn about the climate and environmental issues in your city or municipality. Find local organizations supporting environmental protection and climate action in your city or municipality. Whenever possible, volunteer your time and talent to help make the local climate and environmental initiatives a success.

Lastly, join a climate change / environmental group.

Find a community or group that will support your climate and sustainability journey and will help you become a better advocate.

Fighting for our planet is not something you should do alone. You are not alone. We cannot work in silos. We should come together and create dynamic synergies in climate action so that we can build replicable, scalable, and sustainable projects, programs, and practices.

Collectively, our voice is stronger. You have many roles to play — from grassroots mobilizers, educators and influencers, to policymakers and project implementers in your own right.

***

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

REalTalk reveals more cases of power savings from renewables, strengthens movement on just energy transition

REalTalk reveals more cases of power savings from renewables, strengthens movement on just energy transition

Quezon City— Harnessing power from renewable energy (RE) through the Green Energy Option Program (GEOP) reduces at least 10% of electricity costs and advances the sustainability goals of businesses, according to entities like Globe Telecom, Inc. and Arthaland during the virtual sessions of “REalTalk: A Movement Building Workshop on Renewable Energy” held in March. 

 

“As of March 2023, we have 12 sites registered under GEOP with a target additional of seven (7) sites by the fourth quarter of 2023. This provided Globe Telecom, Inc. with at least 10% savings versus the distribution utility’s all-in cost,” said Raymond Aguilar, Vice President for Enterprise Risk and Corporate Property Management of Globe Telecom Inc. 

The GEOP is a mechanism that allows end-users with a monthly average peak demand of 100 kilowatts and above the choice to switch from a distribution utility to source 100% of ower directly from a renewable energy supplier. Monica Tagalag from the Independent Electricity Market Operator of the Philippines (IEMOP), which facilitates the registration and switching process of participants, reported that a total of 233 GEOP switchers and 17 RE suppliers are participating in the program. 

“With GEOP, the cost of electricity is lower than market rates, yielding operational savings. It encourages higher occupancy rates as the building becomes more attractive to tenants. GEOP also helps businesses achieve net zero by 2030,” said Kristina Samantha Pobre, Sustainability Manager of Arthaland, which developed Arya Residences, an RE-powered condominium in Taguig registered in GEOP.

 

Gina David-Camacho (upper left) of Aboitiz, Monica Tagalag (upper right) of IEMOP, Kristina Samantha Pobre (lower right) of Arthaland, and Raymond Aguilar (lower right) of Globe Telecom, Inc. talked about the gains and opportunities of GEOP to business entities.

Renewable energy lowers electricity rates

The baseload power paradigm continues to dominate the energy sector, prioritizing coal power plants to meet the minimum daily power demand of consumers. However, its inflexibility requires support from peaking power plants (mostly diesel) to respond to sudden load demand changes. 

Global market price volatility and expensive importation costs of fossil fuels, like coal and diesel, are additional  costs shouldered by consumers. Engr. Alberto Dalusung III, Energy Transition Advisor of the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC), said that generation cost is the largest component of our electricity bill, which includes the weighted average costs of electricity sold by suppliers to the distribution utility. 

“Find out exactly how much we are paying, and why are we paying so much by understanding who the electricity suppliers of our distribution utility are. As consumers, we have the right to demand the generation cost breakdown from the distribution utility,” said Engr. Dalusung. 

Jephraim Manansala, ICSC’s Chief Data Scientist, recommended shifting to a variable generation paradigm sourcing power from renewable energy, such as solar and wind, which incurs zero marginal costs and the cheapest generating cost. 

Jephraim Manansala (lower left) and Engr. Albert Dalusung III (lower right) of the Institute of Climate and Sustainable Cities pushed for the discontinuation of the automatic fuel pass-through or the pasaload system because it allows power generation entities to pass the burden of fossil fuel price volatility to consumers.

“We want to tap into renewable energy because they are cheaper than fossil fuel and are available endlessly. With lower dependence on fossil fuels, there will be lower carbon emissions and it saves a lot on our electricity expenses,” Atty. Jose Layug, Jr., President of the Developers of Renewable Energy for AdvanceMent, Inc. (DREAM), explained.  

Towards just renewable energy transition
 
As energy and transport account for 72% of the total Philippine carbon emissions, Jonas Marie Dumdum, Co-Founder of Sustainarumble!, strengthened the case of RE transition as an urgent and effective climate action for the country and the world.
 
“The switch to renewable energy sources is deemed vital to reduce temperature change below 1.5C degrees. Renewable energy is a cleaner energy source that has very little to no emissions generated when being used,” Dumdum noted.
 
Philline Donggay, the Co-Founder of Greenergy Solar PH, also acknowledged the potential of RE to accelerate the electrification of poor communities in Mindanao. Greenergy Solar PH has been active in the promotion and development of RE power generation in the Mindanao region since 2008. 
 
“Access to modern energy services should be considered a basic human right when many sustainable development goals are anchored on it. With advances in solar PV technology and energy storage, energy poverty now has a real and practical solution that has co-benefits in climate resiliency and energy independence,” Donggay added. 
Atty. Jose Layug, Jr. of Dream (upper left), Philline Donggay of Greenergy Solar PH (upper right), and Jonas Marie Dumdum (lower middle) emphasized how just renewable energy transition is vital in addressing the climate crisis and in empowering communities.

A movement building on GEOP

Atty. Layug deemed GEOP as one of the mechanisms vital in pursuing just RE transition in the country and in increasing the share of renewables in the generation mix to 35% by 2030 and 50% by 2040.

“GEOP contributes to the growth of the RE industry in the country and advocates for a cleaner and more sustainable environment. GEOP is also viable in supporting the national and global decarbonization goals,” stated Gina Lyn Camacho-David of Aboitiz Energy Solutions, one of the registered RE suppliers under GEOP. 

REalTalk was launched last year as part of The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ RE Energize PH program, which is supported by the Tara Climate Foundation. This year’s workshop focused on raising energy literacy and building a movement on just RE transition with a special focus on GEOP. 

Regional workshops, organized in partnership with AktivAsia, are scheduled for the year to  train and mobilize REalTalk participants in engaging and influencing more entities to switch to 100% RE through GEOP. 

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Loss and damage in the context of the climate crisis

Eleventh Hour: Loss and damage in the context of the climate crisis

By Kristine Galang

I

In climate negotiations and beyond, “loss and damage” generally refers to the impacts of the climate crisis that transpire despite, or in the absence, of either (1) climate change adaptation, mitigation, and disaster risk reduction and management solutions, or (2) the resources of communities to access them.

Loss and damage can result from both rapid-onset climate change impacts (such as typhoons, droughts, and heatwaves), as well as slow-onset changes such as sea level rise, desertification, glacial retreat, land degradation, ocean acidification, and salinization. It pertains to both economic and non-economic losses, including permanent and irreversible losses of lives, properties, livelihoods, culture, and biodiversity, among others.

A recent report estimated that 54 of the world’s climate-vulnerable developing and least-developed countries, which are emitting around five percent of the global greenhouse gas emissions, have lost approximately US$ 525 billion in aggregate dollar terms in the past two decades (2000-2019) because of the climate crisis — about 20 percent of their collective Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Commissioned by the Vulnerable Twenty (V20), a group of finance ministers from the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF), the report showed that these countries would be twice as wealthy today were it not for climate change. 

For some, these are merely economic numbers, but for us in the Global South, this means catalogs of more casualties and deaths, of more homeless and jobless people, of more families going back to poverty or falling down the poverty line after every calamity.

Loss and damage can result from both rapid-onset climate change impacts (such as typhoons, droughts, and heatwaves), as well as slow-onset changes such as sea level rise, desertification, glacial retreat, land degradation, ocean acidification, and salinization. It pertains to both economic and non-economic losses, including permanent and irreversible losses of lives, properties, livelihoods, culture, and biodiversity, among others.

A recent report estimated that 54 of the world’s climate-vulnerable developing and least-developed countries, which are emitting around five percent of the global greenhouse gas emissions, have lost approximately US$ 525 billion in aggregate dollar terms in the past two decades (2000-2019) because of the climate crisis — about 20 percent of their collective Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Commissioned by the Vulnerable Twenty (V20), a group of finance ministers from the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF), the report showed that these countries would be twice as wealthy today were it not for climate change. 

For some, these are merely economic numbers, but for us in the Global South, this means catalogs of more casualties and deaths, of more homeless and jobless people, of more families going back to poverty or falling down the poverty line after every calamity.

The Philippines has been a poster child of severe loss and damage in the past decade.

The 2021 Global Climate Risk Index has ranked the Philippines fourth among countries most affected by climate change from 2000 to 2019. 

In 2013, the world witnessed the unprecedented devastation caused by Supertyphoon Haiyan. At least 6,300 lives were lost and more than P89 billion worth of damages to public and private infrastructure and lands were recorded.

In the years before that, Tropical Storm Ketsana (2009), Parma (2009), Washi (2011), and Bopha (2012) collectively claimed over 3,000 lives in the country, affected more than 10 million Filipinos, and caused economic losses of as much as US$ 5.7 billion.

This vicious cycle of loss and damage is still a reality for the Philippines in recent years. 

Just late last year in September, Supertyphoon Noru affected more than 1.5 million people across the country and caused the biggest damage to our agriculture sector — estimated to be at US$ 55 million.

While extreme weather events like these are often reported in mainstream media, climate change impacts that occur without the visual drama of calamities — such as ocean acidification, changes in hydrology, and sea level rise — are slowly bleeding our economies and affecting the livelihoods of our people. They worsen already difficult conditions with our food security, and the management of agriculture, fisheries, and ecosystems. 

Given that global warming is set to increase to 1.5ºC above pre-industrial levels within the decade regardless of greater mitigation actions and more intensified adaptation interventions, our communities stand to bear greater loss and damage in the next few decades.

In countries like the Philippines, the climate crisis translates to a debt crisis, as loss and damage continue to drive up the cost of capital and debt to unsustainable levels.

Our government is already allocating alarmingly significant and growing proportions of our public budgets to cover rapidly growing loss and damage costs. These include the budget needed to rebuild homes, hospitals, and other infrastructure after a supertyphoon ravages the country, to provide shelter, food, and other essential supplies for those who need to be relocated during and after the storm, to distribute emergency cash transfers for communities affected by flooding, drought, and other calamities, and to move people away from inundating coastal communities. 

Financing loss and damage diminishes our already scarce resources intended to support our critical economic and development strategies in education, public health, nutrition, energy access, and job creation.

Existing climate finance mechanisms, such as the Adaptation Fund, Green Climate Fund (GCF), Least Developed Countries Fund, and Special Climate Change Fund, are focused on climate change adaptation (building resilience against current and future climate change impacts) and mitigation actions (emissions reductions) and do not address the loss and damage finance needs of vulnerable communities.

Addressing loss and damage requires financing beyond developed nations’ current commitments to support emissions reductions and adaptation in developing countries. Failing to do so would mean facing an ever-worsening spiral of further loss and damage, which will impede much-needed investments in climate resilience and low-carbon development.

At the heart of this discourse is climate justice. There is no more blatant display of injustice than making climate-vulnerable countries foot the bill for a problem not of their own making, consequently hindering them to focus on the pursuit of low-carbon development.

This is why countries from the Global South are fighting tooth and nail for the establishment of a distinct funding mechanism that will provide protection against climate risks for as many poor and vulnerable people as possible.

Thankfully, just a few months ago, during the 27th Conference of the Parties (COP27) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), parties agreed to operationalize a loss and damage fund. This is a big win for us, but we know that it will be a long way to go.

The most contentious issue that would have to be settled before this fund is determining who pays for the funds, how much, and what will be the basis for access, reporting, and financing mechanisms.

While debating on the nitty-gritty of this fund in COP28 later this year, we need to remember that losses and damages are already happening, and they are projected to worsen in the coming years. Loss and damage finance is critical and urgent. Lives are at risk. The future of many communities is at stake.

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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.