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Hisgutanang Klima sa Mindanao

Hisgutanang Klima sa Mindanao: Advancing gender equality and women empowerment

Hisgutanang Klima sa Mindanao: Advancing gender equality and women empowerment

By Marisol Tuso

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According to science, women commonly face higher risks and greater burdens from the impacts of climate change. They suffer from pollution-related health problems, lose income when climate-related disasters strike, experience violence in the aftermath of climate-related disasters, feel the effects of soaring prices on survival basics when disasters hit, endure increased workloads when recuperating from climate-related disasters, and shoulder the increased burden of water and fuel collection as the climate changes, among others.

As the world commemorates International Women’s Day and National Women’s Month in the country, I would like to highlight the work of some Climate Reality Leaders contributing to the advancement of gender equality, women empowerment, and gender-responsive climate actions in Mindanao.

Ma. Isobel Ocao, Dapitan City

Isobel is working with the Gender and Development Office under the Director of Gender and Development of Jose Rizal Memorial State University (JRMSU). She is also the Adviser of the LGBTQIA+ of the university. 

Isobel works at the university’s extension program, delivering capacity development services to women on indoor air quality at the barangay level.

Mark Devon Maitim, Tagum City

Mark is a student-leader from the Mindanao State University- General Santos City Campus, taking up Bachelor’s in Secondary Education, major in Mathematics. He is currently the Co-Chairperson of the UNICEF Young People Action Team for Asia-Pacific Region and a member of the International Conference on Population and Development Asia Pacific Regional Youth Group. 

Mark recently participated in the launching of the Gender Net Youth Camp of the United Nations, which aims to fight gender violence.

He is also part of the Youth Speaks Podcast for Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR), which was launched recently in partnership with United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) by Amaze.org, a  platform that harnesses the power of digital media to provide young adolescents around the globe with medically accurate, age-appropriate, affirming, and honest sex education they can access directly online.

Mark and the group are in the process of completing the modules for podcast stories and will invite women and leaders to discuss the relevance of SRHR, climate change issues, labor, governance, and empowering women for leadership. 

Mark also supports the empowering of young women in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) by working with the group Bai for Bangsa on good governance.

Frances Camille Rivera, Cagayan de Oro City

Camille is the Co-Founder of the Oceanus Conservation. She is also the Community Engagement Officer of the Marine Conservation Philippines.

Camille was recently named as among the 16 Women Restoring the Earth of the Global Landscape Forum (GLF), honoring her work on protecting and replanting mangroves for food security, ocean conservation, typhoon protection, and fighting climate change in Bais, Negros Oriental.

My women empowerment story

As I share the work that our Climate Reality Leaders are currently doing to ensure gender-responsive climate actions in the region, I am also happy to look back at the work that I did as the former Institution and Gender Officer of the Fisheries, Coastal Resources, and Livelihood (FishCORAL) Project of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

The FishCORAL project, which was implemented by the Department of Agriculture- Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (DA-BFAR) in the Caraga region, empowered women in the coastal villages.

Until now, women who participated in the program are able to provide for their family’s basic needs and access capital for their livelihood through the Community Savings Mobilization Club. 

Through the program’s capacity building and community empowerment initiatives, fishers (mostly women) in targeted communities were able to save an accumulated sum of PhP22 Million in three (3) years. It afforded them to support the needs of their children for tuition fees, food, small family projects, and livelihood.

 
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
 

Marisol is the Mindanao Coordinator of The Climate Reality Project Philippines. She has been working in the development sector for 16 years. She is a specialist in training, institution and community development, information, education, and communication (IEC), and gender and social inclusion. Aside from being a broadcast journalist since 1997,  she also served as the Project Coordinator of the Global Fund for Malaria Component Project for 10 years and as Training and IEC Specialist of the Philippine Cold Chain Project. 

ABOUT HISGUTANANG KLIMA SA MINDANAO

Hisgutanang Klima or “Climate Discussions” is a space that aims to amplify the climate stories and initiatives of the more than 100 Pinoy Climate Reality Leaders in Mindanao.

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

Categories
Klima Kabisayaan

Klima Kabisayaan: Biodiversity, ecosystem services, and climate

Klima Kabisayaan: Biodiversity, ecosystem services, and climate

By Paula Bernasor

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 Kasabot ka ba kung unsa ang ecosystem services?

Ecosystems, which refer to a community of living (plants, animals, and other organisms) and non-living (rocks, temperature, and humidity) parts interacting with each other in a particular unit of space, provide many of the basic and critical services that sustain life on the planet.

Biodiversity is the foundation of many ecosystem services that benefit humans, including water filtration, pollination, soil fertility, and pest control. When biodiversity declines, these services are also lost, leading to reduced productivity and sustainability of ecosystems. Moreover,  

Protecting biodiversity ensures that essential ecosystem services are available to support human well-being and economic development. Moreover, healthy ecosystems absorb and store carbon, helping to regulate the Earth’s climate. Additionally, biodiversity can help buffer against the impacts of extreme weather events, such as floods and droughts, which are expected to become more frequent and severe due to climate change.
 
Biodiversity, ecosystem services, and climate are all interconnected, and protecting one requires protecting the others. It is critical that we recognize and prioritize their interdependence in our conservation efforts.
 
Financing biodiversity protection 
 
Although environmental awareness is rapidly improving in our contemporary world, ecosystem capital and its flow are still poorly understood.
 
The following are considered the six (6) major methods for valuing ecosystem services in monetary terms: 
 
  1. Avoided cost: Services allow society to avoid costs that would have been incurred in the absence of those services (e.g. waste treatment by wetland habitats avoids health costs)
  2. Replacement cost: Services could be replaced with man-made systems (e.g. restoration of the Catskill Watershed cost less than the construction of a water purification plant)
  3. Factor income: Services provide for the enhancement of incomes (e.g. improved water quality increases the commercial take of a fishery and improves the income of fishers)
  4. Travel cost: Service demand may require travel, whose costs can reflect the implied value of the service (e.g. value of the ecotourism experience is at least what a visitor is willing to pay to get there)
  5. Hedonic pricing: Service demand may be reflected in the prices people will pay for associated goods (e.g. coastal housing prices exceed that of inland homes)
  6. Contingent valuation: Service demand may be elicited by posing hypothetical scenarios that involve some valuation of alternatives (e.g. visitors willing to pay for increased access to national parks)
 
While we can argue that the value of biodiversity is infinite because we can’t live without it, a peer-reviewed study published in 1997 estimated the value of the world’s ecosystem services and natural capital to be between 16 to 54 trillion USD per year, with an average of USD33 trillion per year. 
 
There are tools and methodologies readily available to help the private sector value and assess ecosystem services, including the Corporate Ecosystem Services Review, the Artificial Intelligence for Environment & Sustainability (ARIES), the Natural Value Initiative, and the Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services & Tradeoffs (InVEST).
 
Ecosystem-based adaptation
 
Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) is a strategy for community development and environmental management that seeks to use an ecosystem services framework to help communities adapt to the effects of climate change. The Convention on Biological Diversity defines it as “the use of biodiversity and ecosystem services to help people adapt to the adverse effects of climate change”, which includes the use of “sustainable management, conservation and restoration of ecosystems, as part of an overall adaptation strategy that takes into account the multiple social, economic and cultural co-benefits for local communities.”
 
Visayans, like all individuals and communities, can play an important role in protecting ecosystem services in their region and in deploying EbA interventions. Here are some ways Visayans can contribute:
 
Support local farmers who use sustainable farming practices that promote soil health and biodiversity and reduce chemical use. This helps maintain ecosystem services such as pollination and pest control, as well as support local economies. This is why Climate Reality Leader Elizabeth Lace Viojan is championing sustainable agriculture in Eastern Visayas while Fel Cadiz is empowering marginalized, fisheries-dependent communities in the Asia Pacific region to adapt to climate change.
 
  • Participate in reforestation activities or support organizations working to conserve forests and other natural areas. This helps maintain biodiversity, regulate water cycles, and mitigate climate change. Visayas Climate Reality Leader Katreen Castillo founded a women-led regenerative land use movement in Northern Samar. Dr. Rebecca Tandug continues to lead the conservation of the Northwest Panay Peninsula Natural Park in Northern Panay Island while Lisa Digdigan, Daphne Marie Siega, and Jessryn Marie Lim are leading various marine conservation projects across Central Visayas.
  • Practice proper waste disposal, recycling, and reducing the use of single-use plastics. This helps keep ecosystems healthy and reduce harm to wildlife and humans.  Climate Reality Leaders Dave Albao, Victor Rufo, and Carolyn Kay Mante are pioneering circular economies in Western and Eastern Visayas while Mitzi Solitana-Penaflorida and Elizar Sabinay, Jr. are working on strengthening policies to curb plastic waste use and improve solid waste management in Iloilo and Cebu Province.
  • Promote responsible tourism that minimizes the impact on local ecosystems, supports the local economy, and supports the regeneration of ecosystems. This can be done by supporting locally-owned businesses, avoiding activities that harm wildlife or damage ecosystems, and respecting local cultures and customs. Visayas Climate Reality leaders have also joined Pamumuno Lab-Cebu to create a regenerative Cebu. 
  • Join community initiatives that promote sustainable development, conservation, and environmental education. This helps build awareness and support for protecting ecosystem services and ensures that these efforts are sustainable and impactful. Climate Reality Leader Hermogenes Gacho is also actively sharing indigenous knowledge, especially in Ethnobotany across the Panay Peninsula. Whether in West, Central, or East Visayas, Climate Reality Leaders are continuously working on engaging local communities and promoting better environmental stewardship. We still continue to host several Klima Eskwela and Poets for Climate: Pebble Poetry Workshops and community screenings of the documentary film entitled “Delikado” across various locations in the Visayas.
 
Overall, protecting ecosystem services requires a collective effort from individuals, communities, and organizations.
 
Visayans can play a critical role in protecting the natural resources that support their lives and livelihoods.
 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
 

Paula Bernasor is the Visayas Coordinator of The Climate Reality Project Philippines. She is a Climate Reality Philippines Leader and Mentor, Chapter Director for Startup Grind Cebu, and a volunteer for Project Sharklink and Thresher Shark Research and Conservation Project. She previously worked as an Associate for Partnerships for Rare Organisation’s Fish Forever in the Philippines. She started Project Library in the Philippines, a grassroots movement that helps underprivileged communities in remote areas gain access to books and reading materials, as well as Ocean Love Philippines, which uses social media to spread awareness on pressing environmental issues and to promote a sustainable lifestyle and the circular economy. 

ABOUT KLIMA KABISAYAAN

Klima Kabisayaan is a space that aims to amplify the climate stories and initiatives of the more than 300 Pinoy Climate Reality Leaders in Visayas.

It is one of the monthly 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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Ang Kalusunan Columns

Ang Kalusunan: Defending our land defenders

Ang Kalusunan: Defending our land defenders

By Aimee Oliveros

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I have always enjoyed watching documentaries, I remember the first ones I probably watched were Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 and Al Gore’s Inconvenient Truth. From films about World War II to cult followings, to veganism, animal welfare, and environmental films, to biopics, LGBTQ and human rights, culture, food, and just about anything else, watching has always been a way for me to learn about the world, a way to balance and see things at different perspectives. It’s entertaining and thought-provoking, it’s heartbreaking yet still hopeful, and it’s clear but also ambiguous.

Looking back at the countless films that I have watched, I always resonated with stories about struggle and oppression, mainly because I have experienced my fair share of struggles, of being discriminated based on race, age, sexuality, and gender. Watching my same story being told by another is just freeing and creates this level of connection and the feeling that I am not alone. Aside from stories about struggles, I also connect with stories about resilience and hope. It inspires me to use the space and platform that I have to also speak for others, and actively take part in making a change and difference. 

The month of March celebrates stories of the struggles and resilience of women and transgenders through different observances, March 8 is International Women’s Day, and March 31 is International Transgender Day of Visibility. This month was also a critical moment to highlight important social issues that challenge equity and justice, not just across genders, but also the intersection with environmental and political issues. It was only fitting to end the month honoring our land defenders, indigenous communities, and environmental advocates in the preservation of our natural home, through a community screening of one of the most inspiring documentary films that I have seen, “Delikado” by director Karl Malakunas. Special thanks to Climate Reality Leader Rommel Miles Corro for his efforts to bring this film to the administrators, faculty members, and students of St. Alphonsus Liguori Integrated School in Cavite.

Delikado is a film that follows the incredible story of ex-Mayor Nieves Rosento, Atty. Bobby Chan, and the para-enforcers of the Palawan NGO Network Inc. in El Nido, Palawan, as they fight to protect their home and natural resources. 

Delikado is a film that highlights one of the many battles we face in a world full of injustice, inequality, and fear. It offers an incredible story of strength and resilience and the power of humanity and solidarity.

Delikado challenges how we can, as a community, defend our defenders, and start being defenders ourselves. 

My love for documentary films will always be there—a good one opens the mind and trigger emotions, but a great one, such as Delikado, challenges our thinking and inspires us to action. 

The Do’s and Dont’s 

As we recognize the important work of land defenders and environmental advocates as highlighted in the film Delikado, here are a few ways how we can support them:

  1. Self-education is the first and most vital step to support and amplify the voices of our land defenders and environmental advocates. Through awareness, we learn about the experiences of those on the ground, dig deeper into their struggles, and hopefully create a pathway of support and action.
  2. We need to create opportunities to bring visibility to the issues on the preservation of land and natural resources, as well as the challenges our land defenders are facing. By bringing them to light, we can start meaningful conversations to ignite action.
  3. The Philippines is one of the most dangerous countries for environmental advocates and land defenders so every action towards protecting their rights and their networks is important. 

 

To know more about the Delikado film and how you can support it, please visit https://www.delikadofilm.com/.

The Climate Reality Project Philippines is actively promoting the community screening of the film Delikado, particularly to schools across the Philippines, if you are interested then please contact us by emailing philippines@climatereality.com.ph.

 

 

The Highs and Lows 

This month, we continued with our regional hang-out with Climate Reality Leaders from National Capital Regions. Rey Sario is active in climate education, particularly on ecological conversion and preservation, while Theo Viray is currently working as a substitute teacher in Los Baños and actively driving school-based environmental-related initiatives (curriculum and instruction). Both are inspiring their communities, and creating particularly for their students, to apply their learning into climate actions.

We asked our Climate Reality Leaders what they consider as top climate issues within their localities and there’s consistency on pollution, waste management, and rapid urbanization leading to biodiversity loss and flooding, but it was also common that a lot of the local government units in Metro Manila do not have the necessary awareness and campaigns about climate and environmental conservation. It’s interesting to see how the next hang-out sessions would bring about more connections and collaborations.

Watch this space and connect with us! 

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 monthly 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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#RealiTalk Blog Feature

#RealiTalk: Gender-responsive climate actions with Climate Reality Leader Danica Marie Supnet

#RealiTalk: Gender-responsive climate actions with Climate Reality Leader Danica Marie Supnet

In celebration of National Women’s Month, we talked to Pinoy Climate Reality Leader Danica Marie Supnet about making climate change adaptation actions responsive to the needs and interests of women.

 
Danica is the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities’ Senior Analyst for Climate Governance. She leads the coordination with academic institutions, scientists, and other experts on the climate science research agenda to support the institution’s work with local governments and communities on policy development. A fellow of the Asian consortium Women and Earth Initiative (WORTH) and the Academy for Political Management (APM), she is in charge of mainstreaming the gender and development agenda for climate planning. 
 
What is the role of gender and development (GAD), including the advancement of sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), in climate change adaptation? What are its benefits to climate action? 

Gender and development (GAD), including the advancement of sexual and reproductive health and rights, are important aspects of climate action as it puts emphasis on the social determinants of health and socioeconomic-related impacts of climate change on women and girls. These are commonly indirect impacts of climate change.

Critical to gender-responsive adaptation is that we not only recognize these realities but there are appropriate actions implemented to address the underlying gender inequalities that worsen the vulnerabilities of women and girls across different backgrounds, ethnolinguistic groups, and communities.

Photovoice and Photogally activity in Guiuan, Eastern Samar with the local development planners and civil society representatives, as part of the inception sessions of the gender and sexual and reproductive health and rights mainstreaming in climate adaptation planning. (Photos by AC Dimatatac, Glinly Alvero, Elainne Lopez, and Orland Quesada/ICSC)
Are there any provisions in the National Climate Change Action Plan (NCCAP) and in the Official Guidelines on the Formulation of Local Climate Change Action Plans (LCCAPs) on integrating GAD in climate change planning? If yes, are they sufficient to guide local adaptation planning?

Gender lens in the NCCAP and LCCAP guidelines is often justified through sex-disaggregated data or a quantitative representation of the most exposed groups to climate-related impacts. 

Our call is to encourage a gender-responsive climate strategy, especially at the local level, that should go beyond the mandatory documentary requirements. If we really want to understand the gender-specific impacts of climate change, analysis of climate impacts should be simultaneous with gender analysis. And to do so would also require tackling other components such as health where SRHR comes in.


How can relevant stakeholders make resilience-building responsive to specific gender needs, and supportive of the sexual, reproductive, and health rights of women and girls?

Integrating important elements of gender, health, SRHR, as well as access to livelihood, energy, mobility, social services, climate finance, and risk insurance, among others, would give far greater information about the realities on the ground while we proactively work on key issues including violence on women and children, and the burden of unpaid care work. Science and evidence-based data are needed in climate action, but how we make data meaningful for women and girls to compel communities to act needs to be continuously communicated.

Strengthening the multi-actor partnerships through research and capacity-building is important. This is to allow more diverse representation to fill gaps in the gendered analysis in climate assessments and to implement gender-responsive climate risk management strategies and action plans.

 

Call for gender-responsive climate action in celebration of the World International Women’s Month. (Photos by AC Dimatatac, Glinly Alvero, Elainne Lopez, and Orland Quesada/ICSC)
What tools are readily available for government agencies and/or local planners to gather necessary data that will make climate change adaptation projects, activities, and programs more gender-responsive?

In our project, we had to innovate and create a community-driven data gathering using existing tools that would capture the nexus. For one, conducting a climate impact chain analysis can provide a basis for developing better and contextualized climate adaptation strategies and plans.  We are used to analyzing the direct impacts but often generalize the indirect impacts such as the socioeconomic aspects, aggravated issues on gender inequalities, and even sexual reproductive health and rights.

We don’t have to create a new tool for this matter. Tools such as the Rapid Care Analysis (RCA) and the Adaptive Social Protection (ASP) analysis are publicly available and are widely practiced by different organizations. Integrating important elements of gender, health, SRHR, unpaid care work, as well as access to social services, climate finance, and risk insurance, among others, would give far greater information about the realities on the ground. 

How can government agencies and local government units leverage existing funds, including the GAD Fund, to ensure gender-responsive climate action within their respective jurisdiction and for their constituents?

Adaptation finance must flow with urgency, which means looking at possible resources that can be blended, in this case, the use of the local government’s GAD fund to implement gender-responsive adaptation programs. Resources must become accessible to the communities in order to truly address vulnerabilities that impact women and girls the most.

Categories
Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Each strand of climate action really counts, even here in the Philippines

Eleventh Hour: Each strand of climate action really counts, even here in the Philippines

By Jonas Marie Dumdum

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Early this week, scientists from the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) released the synthesis report of the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6). This contains the consolidated and summarized findings of previous reports that describe the recent state of the world in terms of climate-related impacts. For a more detailed understanding of the findings, one can look at these on the IPCC website.

 

For those who have read the previous reports, and those who follow news related to climate action, the impression would be that the message is still the same: climate change is real, it is happening now, and we need to do something to limit the temperature rise of 1.5 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels (1850-1900).

However, the report that came out gave an even clearer picture of where we are now in terms of our efforts in addressing climate change, with the inclusion of what is perhaps the first-time picture of how we are now impacted by it.

Let us first consider the facts that are highlighted by the report:

First, human-induced impacts on global climate have reached an average global surface temperature that is about to reach 1.1 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels, with greenhouse gas emissions continuing to increase despite the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. Most of the emissions come from stationary (e.g., electricity use) and mobile (e.g., private transport) sources of energy, land use and land use change (e.g., land conversion of forests agricultural or urban use), and the unsustainable consumption and production practices of humans across the world.

 

Source: IPCC AR6 Synthesis Report Summary for Policymakers

Even though we have yet to hit the 1.5-degree mark, it has led to many physical calamities that lead to mental and even transitional (e.g., financing, legal, and technological) issues.

The results of climate-related impacts have led to damaged lives and properties, with communities that are considered the least contributing, but most vulnerable to climate-related impacts affected the most. These include issues on food safety and security through decreased agricultural yields, freshwater supply, the rise of even more infectious diseases, long-lasting infrastructure and economic damage, and the loss and possible extinction of certain species on land, sea, and air.

Source: IPCC AR6 Synthesis Report Summary for Policymakers

Even though we have yet to hit the 1.5-degree mark, it has led to many physical calamities that lead to mental and even transitional (e.g., financing, legal, and technological) issues.

The results of climate-related impacts have led to damaged lives and properties, with communities that are considered the least contributing, but most vulnerable to climate-related impacts affected the most. These include issues on food safety and security through decreased agricultural yields, freshwater supply, the rise of even more infectious diseases, long-lasting infrastructure and economic damage, and the loss and possible extinction of certain species on land, sea, and air.

Source: IPCC AR6 Synthesis Report Summary for Policymakers

The question would therefore be: What’s in it for us in the Philippines?

For many Filipinos, climate change and sustainable development have been buzzwords to the point that some do not see where we can contribute to solve our issues.

Previous studies have shown that our country is one of the most vulnerable (if not the most vulnerable) to physical climate risks. The most recent example happened last year in the Visayas and Mindanao, particularly in places like in Misamis Occidental, where for the first time in many years, towns were flooded on the day after Christmas with devastating results, both physically and mentally.

There are some that contend that because we contribute less than one percent to the global greenhouse gas emissions each year, we should not be too aggressive on climate action and seek more help from more developed countries that contribute to more greenhouse gases and have more resources to address the climate problem.

However, doing little on climate action now will come to bite us back in the future, and we need to get serious about addressing this problem now more than ever.

According to data from international scientists last year, more than 50 percent of our national emissions come from electricity generation, with another 21 percent coming from transportation. We need to address these two challenges by switching to cleaner, more renewable sources of energy faster than current efforts if we can achieve a low-carbon transition that requires the support of the government, the private sector, and civil society.

Our government is highly urged to step up its efforts to address climate-related issues not just because it is an international commitment issue, but also an issue in the progress of the nation itself.

In 2021, the Department of Finance reported that national economic losses to our economy reached US$ 10 billion, or P506.1 billion over 10 years. A report by the World Bank predicts that the damage may reach 7.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2030 and 13.6 percent of GDP by 2040 in a business-as-usual scenario. It will impact sectors that are highly susceptible to climate change – agriculture and manufacturing. This means that we may have an even bigger food crisis if we do not adapt and mitigate now, which will lead to even more hardship for our farmers and fisherfolk that already need our help now.

For businesses, it is highly encouraged to determine where their carbon footprints are and become more innovative in finding better products and services that not only support a low-carbon transition but also a just transition. This means finding ways to empower our micro, small, and medium enterprises to develop new products that are environmentally friendly but still cost-effective and supported by the larger companies as their suppliers, for example.

Another is to consider transitioning from old business practices that may have financial sense but not in terms of the environment and society to ones that incorporate economic, environmental, and social value.

Our financial institutions should also continue to develop new ways to do transition, sustainability, and climate financing for those who really want to venture into this stream and create their own impact. Although only publicly listed companies and banking institutions are required to disclose their contributions to the environment and society through sustainability reporting, the expansion of identifying, assessing, monitoring, and implementing climate impacts to businesses regardless of size should be encouraged.

Lastly, the ordinary Juan or Juana should be eager to know and share more about what is happening to his or her community in terms of climate change and its impact on the surrounding environment and their neighbors. There should be more discussions on looking for new ideas on how to solve these problems, especially in areas that live near environmentally vulnerable areas. Knowledge from our indigenous peoples would also be highly valuable in addressing climate impacts, for they may have tested solutions that can be modernized and adapted to bigger areas with a possible minimal cost.

In situations like this, one can turn to the author Nick Joaquin who in 1988 wrote, “Have our capacities been so diminished by the small efforts we are becoming incapable even to the small things? Our present problems are surely not what might be called colossal or insurmountable – yet we stand helpless before them. As the population swells, those problems will expand and multiply. If they daunt us now, will they crush us then? The prospect is terrifying.”

Each and every strand of effort counts in the fight for climate action. Every global citizen, including the Filipino, will be needed to help. All we need is to firm up the things that we can do to achieve a greener, better Philippines.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 

Jonas Marie Dumdum is a sustainability science and policy advocate. As a Climate Reality Leader, he volunteers as coordinator for the Energy SubCluster of The Climate Reality Project Philippines. He also hosts SUSTAINARUMBLE! Podcast, the first podcast that explores critical issues on sustainable development in the Philippines. He volunteers as well as corporate secretary to Sustainable PH, an NGO promoting the causes of sustainability in the country. He also works as a consultant under the Industry Solutions Consulting Sector of Nomura Research Institute Singapore Pte Ltd Manila Branch.

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

Climate Reality PH’s REalTalk to raise energy literacy, support GEOP

Climate Reality PH’s REalTalk to raise energy literacy, support GEOP

Quezon City— The Climate Reality Project Philippines is set to hold this year’s “REalTalk: A Movement Building Workshop on Renewable Energy,” which aims to engage and capacitate more Filipino Climate Reality Leaders and energy advocates to communicate the benefits and opportunities of renewable energy.

In support of the country’s goal of increasing the share of renewables in the power generation mix to 35% by 2030 and 50% by 2040, REalTalk mobilizes campaigners to influence more companies and entities to transition to renewable energy through the Green Energy Option Program (GEOP).

“While GEOP is still in its infancy stage, we can see that the program works and is indeed generating significant savings for many of its users. There are many more who wish to source power from cleaner sources while saving on costs but are not aware of the program or the switching process. Stronger implementation of GEOP is needed to fully unlock its potential and provide more entities the power of choice,” Nazrin Castro, Branch Manager of The Climate Reality Project Philippines, explained. 

As fossil fuels continue to dominate the power mix in the Philippines, REalTalk recognizes the potential of GEOP to accelerate just energy transition by engaging the private sector to source power from renewable energy. The workshop supports the country’s roadmap of providing reliable, accessible, and affordable energy for all while reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. 

With more than 280 registrants, REalTalk will tackle key energy issues and topics, with a special focus on GEOP as a tangible pathway for entities to transition to renewable energy without capital costs. The workshop commences with a series of virtual workshops on March 23, 28, and 30 followed by in-person regional workshops in Luzon (May 18-21), Visayas (July 20-23), and Mindanao (September 21-24). 

“For this year, we put the spotlight on GEOP by sharing stories and insights from participating companies and offices, as well as from renewable energy suppliers. As we cater to a bigger batch of participants this year, it is also important to show how GEOP situates in our power landscape and how it can help achieve our national targets on renewable energy,” said Christian Soqueño, the organization’s RE Energy PH Program Lead. 

REalTalk was launched last year as part of Climate Reality Philippines’ “RE Energize PH” initiative, which is supported by the Tara Climate Foundation. A campaign plan was developed with the participants who committed to engaging companies, schools, hospitals, and other entities and convincing them to switch to renewable energy through GEOP. For this year, the regional workshops, organized in partnership with AktivAsia, will focus on bringing the GEOP campaign to a wider audience in Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. 

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