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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Delikado, Jose Rizal, and the environment

Eleventh Hour: Delikado, Jose Rizal, and the environment

By Roxanne Omega Doron

I

While watching an environmental documentary entitled “Delikado” on the lived realities of forest rangers in Palawan province, I pondered: What if Dr. Jose Rizal was one of us today? Will he be a champion of environmental protection? Will he be executed as an environmentalist as well?

 

Dr. Jose Rizal, one of our national heroes, was killed for speaking up precisely on his desire to free the Philippines from the scourge of Spanish colonialism. He inspired the people to rise and revolt against the established order and the people in power during his time. And on the 30th of December 1896, he was executed by the clerico-fascists for wanting to institute reforms.

“Delikado,” on the other hand, is a powerful documentary dedicated to raising awareness on the most pressing issue humankind should face head-on: environmental degradation. It touches on the heroism of local people, most notably the forest rangers, who are trying to protect the environment and maintain ecological balance. But powerful people deeply entrenched in the social order executed several forest rangers, one of which was a local village chief in Palawan. The film showed us the way and opened our eyes to the country’s environmental issues and the urgent need to protect our environmental defenders.

Dr. Jose Rizal was actually a “forest ranger” during his time. His concern for the environment was well established especially when he was exiled in Dapitan for turning the town green and beautifying their town plaza. Some of the many community health and environmental management projects he instituted were planting numerous trees, providing people with clean water through the construction of aqueducts, and building fish pens.

Due to his undying commitment to freedom, Dr. Jose Rizal was forced into exile in Dapitan. There, he pioneered several environmental measures, public health advocacy, and agricultural sustainability for and because of his love for the people and the natural environment.

Dr. Jose Rizal was always ahead of his time. As a sanitary engineer, environmental planner, and public health champion, he was responsible for the construction of a mountain stream that provided the community in Dapitan with clean access to water. Even the breeding ground of mosquitos was not sparred: he drained the swamps. He used as well coconut oil lamps for his street lighting and to keep the people safe and well-guided during nighttime.

Following the footsteps of our pre-colonial spiritual healers (often referred to as the Babaylan) who took advantage of the abundance of herbs in our communities, Dr. Jose Rizal was a herbalist as well. He documented and studied locally-grown medicinal plants and use them to heal his patients. He was indeed a public and community health champion and took great pride in what our environment has to offer to help solve some medical and health challenges of our people.

A naturalist, Dr. Jose Rizal observed, collected, and studied various plants and animal samples within his environment—be it in the middle of the forest or even in the seashores. He has a collection of various shells which consists of 203 species and documented 38 varieties of fish. To honor his endless contribution to natural history, rare specimens have been named after him, such as a beetle (scientific name Apogonia rizali), a flying dragon (scientific name Draco rizali), and a frog (scientific name Rhacophorous rizali).

Even if Dr. Jose Rizal’s childhood was privileged, he always took note of the important contribution of farmers and farming. He was into farming as well. He nurtured hundreds of trees in Dapitan and one living example is the century-old dao tree that is still standing today in the beautiful town he cared for and nurtured while in exile.

Dr. Jose Rizal was everything when it comes to loving, caring for the environment, and protecting our national patrimony. He was even referred to as everything a human should be to protect the environment: sanitary engineer, agriculturist, zoologist, animal and plant lover, community health champion, and many more.  

Just like his selfless devotion to environmental protection, the dedication of forest rangers featured in the film “Delikado” has made unparalleled contributions to community health, environmental management, and sustainability.

Just like Dr. Jose Rizal, our forest rangers are farmers, herbalists, and community health champions. They know the importance of taking care of the environment and ensuring a sustainable future for the next generation. They are worthy of being emulated.

***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 

Roxanne Omega Doron is a Pinoy Climate Reality Leader and is teaching a course on Rizal at the University of the Philippines Cebu. He is planning to give a special lecture on Dr. Jose Rizal and his contribution to environmental protection.

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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Stories of loss, resilience, and restoration delivered at #COP27

Stories of loss, resilience, and restoration delivered at #COP27

Indonesia and CVF-V20 host Poems for Climate roadshow 

Sharm El Sheikh—Creating spaces for culture and the arts in the decision-making arena for climate action, Poets for Climate opened two (2) exhibits on the sidelines of the ongoing 27th Conference of Parties (COP27) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Sharm El Sheik, Egypt.

 
[From L to R] Phyllis Cuttino (President and CEO, The Climate Reality Project), Nazrin Castro (Climate Reality Philippine Branch Manager), Lia Zakiyyah (Graduate Research Assistant at George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication), Alue Dohong (Indonesia Vice Minister of Environment and Forestry), Amanda Katili Niode (Climate Reality Indonesia Branch Manager), Silverius Oscar Unggul, (Vice Chair for Environment and Forestry of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry) posed during the talk show, where the book "Menjalin Ikhtiar Merawat Bumi” was also launched.
Poets For Climate is a collaborative project between the Climate Reality Project branches in Africa, Canada, and the Philippines that aims to harness humanities and the arts in amplifying the vicious cycle of loss and damage experienced by vulnerable communities. It is a response to When Is Now, a global poetry and art movement initiated by the Agam Agenda with 58 vulnerable countries of the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF).
 
The Poets for Climate Digital Exhibit, which is hosted by the Government of Indonesia in its COP27 pavilion, was launched on November 7 during the talk show entitled “Narrating Endeavors to Tend the Earth.”
 
“Both the Global North and the Global South are starting to see the limits to adaptation and how the climate crisis is compounding the risks for communities with limited resources and access to social safety nets. Poets and other artists, especially from the youth sector, play a crucial role in opening up the conversation on the realities of climate change on the ground and the urgency of real systemic changes needed,” Nazrin Castro, Climate Reality Philippines Branch Manager, said during the launch of the digital exhibit at the Indonesian Pavilion. 
 
 
The Poets For Climate exhibit at the CVF-V20 Pavilion featured poems by Nnimmo Bassey (Nigeria), April Mae Evangelista (Philippines), Aditi Garg (Canada), and Ewi Lamma (Cameroon).

The second exhibit, hosted by the CVF and the Vulnerable Twenty (V20) Group of Ministers of Finance, was launched on November 11 with the title “The Making and Unmaking of Places: Stories of Loss, Resilience and Restoration Using Poetry and Art.”

“Science and policymaking are essential to the climate change [movement]. But science and policymaking are also insufficient. We need more of the humanities. We need more of the arts. What we’re doing today is nothing less than calling for a global poetry rebellion so that the public has more ways to contribute, to link arms, and to hold hands to drive world leaders to do what they have to do,” Renato Redentor Constantino, CVF-V20 Advisor and Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities Executive Director, said as he thanked the Climate Reality branches of Africa, Canada, and the Philippines for the support of Poets for Climate to the When Is Now campaign.

Launched in July this year, Poets for Climate has conducted five (5) virtual Pebble Poem Workshops and has generated more than 100 poems for When Is Now from around 75 youth leaders, climate advocates, and poets from Cameroon, Canada, Kenya, Nigeria, Philippines, Sierra Leone, South Africa, and Zambia. It has also unveiled murals in the cities of Johannesburg in South Africa, Montreal in Canada, and Iloilo and Isabela in the Philippines.

Bridging the gap between the Global North and the Global South

“In engaging in these [Pebble Poem] Workshops with the Philippines and Canada Branches, it was a privilege and an experience of a lifetime bringing Climate Reality Leaders and activists together,” Amy Giliam-Thorp, African Climate Reality Project Branch Manager, said.

“What we realize is that the power of the When Is Now campaign lies in its use of climartivism (climate, arts, and activism). That powerful combination of arts, poetry, and activism enabled people to showcase and tell their stories, their lived experiences, as a way of creating meaningful spaces that bring more people into the conversation,” she added.

The Poets for Climate roadshow at COP27 aims to create connections and solidarity between the Global North and Global South by integrating stories of loss, damage, and resilience into policymaking and decision-making spaces.

“Canada is an economy that relies so extensively on fossil fuels while also exploiting people around the planet, as well as indigenous people [in Canada]. We have this history and we have the responsibility,” said Andre-Yanne Parent, Climate Reality Canada Branch Manager, during the CVF-V20 event.

“[Through Poets for Climate], we are able to give a space for Canadian Climate Reality Leaders to connect and build relationships so that they could come from a place of empathy, compassion, and understanding of other people’s reality and also understand what they share in common,” Parent added.

Noting that the COP27 roadshow is just the beginning, Parent announced during the CVF-V20 event that Poets For Climate will also be at the  15th  Meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP15) to the Convention on Biological Diversity happening in Canada in December. A series of light projections featuring  Poets For Climate poems across Montreal and Canada are in the works to demand urgent action from world leaders and decision-makers.

 

Andre-Yanne Parent, Climate Reality Canada Branch Manager, during the Poets for Climate roadshow at the CVF-V20 pavilion, which brought together Climate Reality Leaders and youth climate activists from all over the world attending the two-week climate change conference.

The youth’s message to world leaders

Nakeeyat Dramani Sam, CVF Global Young Peace Ambassador, also graced the launch of the CVF-V20 exhibit to deliver a message from the youth to world leaders and decision-makers.

Highlighting the impacts of climate change in vulnerable developing countries, Sam urged the leaders of developed world to step up. “When we talk about When Is Now, the answer is the time is now,” she said. “Please, let us come together as one people,” she added.

Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner, Marshall Islands Climate Envoy and CVF Ambassador for Culture, highlighted the need to provide spaces for the youth within climate movements. “Highlighting unique youth perspective through art work has been a valuable part of the When Is Now initiative,” Jetñil-Kijiner said.

Aside from messages from Sam and Jetñil-Kijiner, the CVF-V20 event featured poetry reading by Ewi Stephanie Lamma, Climate Reality Leader from Cameroon and recipient of the UN Agora Award for Climate Action; Jefferson Estela, Youth 4 Climate Strike Philippines Co-Founder; Nabiha Shahab, Climate Reality Leader from Indonesia and Harvest Moon Contributor; Enoch Anyane, Climate Reality Leader from Ghana and Strategic Youth Network for Development Campaigns and Organizing Coordinator; and Nikka Gerona, Climate Reality Leader from the Philippines and delegate to the UN Climate Change Conference of Youth 17. 

***

 

 

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: The future is vegan

Eleventh Hour: The future is vegan

By Peachie Dioquino-Valera

I

Yes, you heard me right. Some of you may scoff, choke a little bit, or raise an eyebrow, but I’d wish for you to read on first.

 

As many vegans tout this—potentially from the fact there has been a rise in health consciousness and environmental awareness—unfortunately, the change of heart will not be the reason for the collective conversion but because the worsening effects of climate change will dictate so. 

The Philippines is no stranger to the climate crisis—having always ranked as part of the top five most vulnerable to climate change according to the Global Climate Risk Index. We already racked up trillions of pesos worth of damage since 2010. Having experienced a climate catastrophe yet again through Typhoon Paeng, I need not elaborate on the grave loss of lives and money.

The top contributor to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, deforestation, and biodiversity loss is the animal agriculture industry. The sector’s emission is more than that of planes, trains, ships, buses, cars, and all manner of vehicles combined.

Based on a new model developed by scientists from Stanford and the University of California, Berkeley, and published in the open-access journal PLoS Climate: a 68 percent reduction of carbon dioxide emissions effect can be achieved —through the year 2100— if animal agriculture is to be phased out over the next 15 years. Based on that computation, imagine our chance in reversing the trajectory of climate change.

The livestock sector alone is said to be the largest source of water pollution due to animal wastes, fertilizers, and pesticides. This contributes to eutrophication, health problems, and the emergence of antibiotic resistance. United Nations Environment Programme predicted there will be fishless oceans by 2050 because of climate change, microplastics, toxic waste dumps, and the seafood industry. This industry even decimates non-seafood creatures—mostly endangered— through their bykill or bycatch.

 

Peachie with Mandala (daughter) and Pilar (mother) in a march to fight climate change.

In terms of social repercussions, it is documented that slaughterhouses cause post-traumatic stress disorder and psychosis in their workers. This does not include the prolific unfair wages and illegal practices that happen under butchery and animal husbandry.

Another injustice is the diversion of global grains and plant produce used to feed food animals, especially cattle, yet the industry only provides 18 percent of the world’s calories. These feeds could have fed the world’s starving 14 times over. There is no food shortage—only food injustice, which is an automatic consequence of our addiction to meat and animal by-products.

Indigenous tribes, earth’s biggest ecosystem defenders, are being oppressed and massacred by animal industry moguls who are grabbing their lands left and right. Acres of the Amazon Rainforest are cleared every second for cattle ranches.

The biggest challenge is that humans being humans, our overriding “need” and “cravings” to consume animals, supersedes our cognition of scientific evidence. This is why we are failing in the climate arena, and the unanimity to put forward a bold and solid global plan.

Speaking of plans, the group Vegans of Manila took on a grassroots plan by establishing Vegfest Pilipinas.

Peachie Keen & Green! talks about the link between the animal industry and the climate crisis during the 2019 Vegfest Pilipinas.

VegFest is an international celebration wherein the vegan lifestyle and philosophy are promoted via food, speakers, performances, film-showing, and merchandise. The very first VegFest was created by Toronto Vegetarian Association back in 1985.

The first year of VegFest Pilipinas was 2016, and it was just a pocket space with a few numbers of merchants in Eastwood. Through the years, it has greatly evolved. More people participating, more volunteers, more beneficiaries, and more eye-opening talks; thus, more people becoming aware of the advocacy. No wonder VegFest Pilipinas still holds the record for the biggest vegan festival in the whole of Asia!

The year 2020 was a special international online event with renowned figures Greenpeace and Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Capt. Paul Watson, international animal activist Milo Runkle, and the Golden Vegan Athlete Fiona Oakes as our keynote speakers.

In 2021, a zero-waste vegan community outreach in 10 Metro Manila barangays was held.

In 2022, we’ll be back again in a face-to-face celebration with the usual cooking demos, film showing, live performances, games, and raffles.

As always, 100 percent of the profits of  VegFest will go directly to beneficiaries. This year, the beneficiaries are the Philippine Pet Birth Control Center (PPBCC) Foundation and SIFCare Foundation. The venue for the two-day festival of VegFest Pilipinas 2022 on Nov. 19 and 20 is The Spine in Blue Bay Walk.

The theme this year is “Intersectional Veganism” where the anti-speciesism movement is linked to different fights against oppression and abuse. There’ll be speakers who are members of the LGBTQIA+ community and human and environmental rights activists.

There will also be a film showing of the documentary film Delikado, which follows the deadly struggle of indigenous land defenders in Palawan.

I will also be presenting my piece entitled “Mitakuye Oyasin: We are all connected,” which is focused on the recognition of interbeing and empathy as fundamental to solving ecological problems.

As Greta Thunberg emphasized, we already have the technological and technical solutions to climate change. This is not an environmental issue anymore. It is rather a spiritual and ethical one already. We have forgotten that we are connected to the natural world and whatever we do to even just one species we do unto ourselves.

We hope that you can join us this year. To learn more about the festival and its updates, tune in to the social media accounts of VegFest Pilipinas, Vegans of Manila, and Peachie Keen & Green!

***  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 

Peachie Dioquino-Valera is a Filipina Climate Reality Leader and a volunteer Renewable Energy and Food Security Cluster member of The Climate Reality Project. She is also known as Peachie Keen & Green!, a social media platform of hers where she shares her environmental and social justice activism, citizen science, and conservation works. The other hats that Peachie wears are the talent, spirit science researcher and counsel, and the futures thinking/foresight trainer hat.

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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Nine years after Haiyan: Guiuan leads in stronger climate action

Nine years after Haiyan: Guiuan leads in stronger climate action

GUIUAN, EASTERN SAMAR–In commemoration of the ninth anniversary of Typhoon Haiyan, the local government of Guiuan in Eastern Samar, the first municipality battered by the super typhoon in 2013, gathered together youth groups, teachers, and civil society organizations, to deepen their understanding of climate science and adaptation, empowering Guiuananon citizens to do their part in making the community more resilient.

“We survived as a community. We were aided by many and we progressed continually in the aftermath. This year, let us look into the past, not only to grieve or to be proud of how far we have gone since that fateful day, but let us look at the past to inspire our future,” said Guiuan Mayor Annaliza Gonzales-Kwan in a speech yesterday.

This year marks the first Golden Cowrie Climate Action Awards provided by the municipality, which was named after a threatened shell (Cypraea aurantium) found in Philippine coastal waters. The LGU launched the award to recognize climate action efforts of individuals and local groups in Guiuan, covering the areas of research, community empowerment and education, ecosystem and wildlife conservation, and sustainable development.

“Today is a wonderful opportunity to meet the heroes of Guiuan. You have shown the world after Haiyan that you are a resilient community, a testimony of courage and spirit. It should inspire other local governments in the Philippines,” said Filipina climate scientist and Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC) climate science advisor Lourdes Tibig in a message of solidarity.

As governments and international organizations gather in Egypt from November 6 to 18 for the 27th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27), Tibig said “the leadership shown by Guiuan to adapt to the worsening impacts of climate change are truly worth honoring at the global level.” Adaptation and financing for loss and damage brought by climate change to vulnerable countries are at the center of debates raging in COP27.

The Guiuan awards were given as part of the two-day event “Rig-on (resilient in Waray): Klima Eskwela,” a knowledge exchange organized by ICSC, The Climate Reality Project Philippines, and Agam Agenda in partnership with the local government. The event gave participants insights about the latest climate science in Southeast Asia and the implications of slow-onset events, particularly rising seas in their town. The rate of sea level rise on the eastern seaboard is thrice that of the global average.

Youth representatives from high schools in Guiuan wrote pieces for the global poetry and arts campaign “When Is Now” of the Climate Vulnerable Forum, ICSC, and the Agam Agenda, highlighting the importance of arts and the humanities in climate action. Artists from Guiuan also began a mural today near the shores of the town as part of the Poets for Climate project of the branches of Climate Reality in the Philippines, Africa, and Canada.

“Climate action will not be possible without leadership from key actors in the international, national, and local levels, especially the youth,” said ICSC senior climate governance analyst Danica Marie Supnet.

“Even if you are not a scientist, a policymaker, or a development worker, you still have a story to share and it needs to be told. Climate change knows no boundaries and we are all in this together. We are using poetry, we are telling our stories, and we are using art to bridge connections and break down any existing boundaries in action,” said Padmapani Perez, lead strategist of the Agam Agenda.

###


This article was written and originally published by ICSC.


NOTES TO THE EDITOR

 

[1] The Guiuan Development Foundation Inc., who leads the research and development of the town’s marine protected areas, is featured at the COP27 Virtual Ocean Pavilion. To register, visit https://cop27oceanpavilion.vfairs.com.

 

[2] Guiuan is also working on making their long-term development plans more gender-responsive. The Guiuan Recovery and Sustainable Development Group for Resilience (GRSDGR), in partnership with ICSC, led several capacity-building workshops to integrate gender in the LGU’s climate adaptation plan and comprehensive land use plan.

 

[3] Poets for Climate supports the global poetry and arts campaign “When Is Now.” To date, it has generated more than 60 poems from around 40 climate advocates across the globe and unveiled murals in the cities of Johannesburg in South Africa, Montreal in Canada, and Iloilo and Isabela in the Philippines to demand for urgent action among global leaders in COP27. Read more here


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Press Releases

Climate and disaster risk assessments critical in resilience building

Climate and disaster risk assessments critical in resilience building

Quezon City—Understanding the underlying drivers of risks is a crucial first step in disaster risk reduction and management (DRRM) and climate change adaptation and mitigation (CCAM) planning of local government units (LGUs).

The 33rd episode of The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ Klimatotohanan webcast series entitled “Resilience from Below: Local Governments at the Forefront of Climate Disasters” underscored this in celebration of the International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction.

“We have to understand the risks and the underlying drivers of risks. The city government highlighted the importance of comprehensive climate and disaster risk assessments. Through these assessments, we understand what our hazards are, what our vulnerabilities are, our exposure, our coping capacities,” Maria Bianca Perez, Research and Planning Chief of the Quezon City Disaster and Risk Reduction and Management Office, said during the webcast.

Climate and disaster risk assessment, as espoused by then Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB) in the 2014 Supplemental Guidelines on Mainstreaming Climate and Disaster Risks in the Comprehensive Land Use Plan, is the process of studying risks and vulnerabilities of exposed elements namely, the people, urban areas, agriculture, forestry and fishery production areas, critical point facilities, lifelines and other infrastructure associated with natural hazards and climate change. 

In 2017, the Department of the Interior and Local Government-Local Government Academy’s Enhanced LGU Guidebook on the Formulation of Local Climate Change Action Plan (LCCAP) adopted the HLURB’s Climate and Disaster Risk Assessment (CDRA) process but recommended some enhancements to capture the multi-sectoral context of LCCAPs.

 
Rapid urbanization as a key driver of disaster risk
 

Perez noted during the webcast that rapid urbanization is a major driver of risk for Quezon City and therefore must be a factor in DRRM planning.

“The biggest challenge is rapid urbanization that we are facing right now and the problems associated with the growth of the city… With population growth, there’s more exposure to hazards. There is also inadequate open spaces (more houses, infrastructure), pollution, creation of slums, congestion, and poverty,” Perez explained.

Donna Magno, Chief of the Iloilo City Disaster Risk Reduction Management Office, also cited urbanization as a challenge to her city, along with multiple hazards including earthquakes, subsidence, and water scarcity.

“Iloilo City is the center for commerce, trade, and education. You could just imagine the number of people flocking into the city. This increases the demand for housing, livelihood, and water. For local leaders, they have to consider that whenever we talk about the Comprehensive Development Plan, Comprehensive Land Use Planning, and our strategic planning [processes],” Magno said.

Establishing early warning systems and capacity building 
 

Acknowledging that there are hazards that the city could not fully mitigate, Perez shared that Quezon City has established early warning systems and is working on strengthening the capacities of frontliners.

“We make sure that they are empowered to build their own resilience, that they can also cascade their understanding of risk to the barangays through early warning systems and preemptive evacuation,” Perez said.

Lyndon Leovic Ancajas, Chief of Administration and Training of the Davao City Disaster and Risk Reduction Management Office, also highlighted their efforts on early warning systems and information dissemination.

“One of our best practices is how we spread the information of disaster preparedness and resilience to the public. We have 182 barangays. We have the mobile library bus for disaster mobile education. Pumupunta ito sa schools at barangays,” Ancajas shared.

Integrating climate change adaptation and mitigation in local development plans 

Aside from rapid urbanization and natural hazards, human-induced climate change is another key driver of disaster risk. This compels local governments not just to strengthen DRRM mechanisms but also to mainstream CCAM in local development planning and processes.
 
According to Perez, Quezon City’s climate change mitigation programs include 
“monitoring for air quality management programs, managing our carbon footprints, plastic bag ordinances, and single-use plastic prohibition across the city.”
 
“We’re also amending our Green Building ordinance wherein we’re providing incentives to the private sector who will be building safer and greener infrastructure,” she added.
 
Magno, on the other hand, noted that Iloilo City has been promoting energy efficiency to contribute to climate change mitigation. She cited the city’s Lamp Retrofitting Program and its promotion of renewable energy for the use of large enterprises in the city (such as SM City, Robinson’s Place, and John B. Lacson Foundation University). 
 
For climate change adaptation, Magno said that Iloilo is at the forefront of mangrove restoration and protection.
 
“Our mangroves consist of an area of 172 hectares –now a primary climate change adaptation program. We have also tied this project with our City Tourism Office in partnership with UPV (University of the Philippines Visayas) and CHED (Commission on Higher Education). They’re trying to put up an ecotourism learning hub. The intention is to educate Ilonggos, especially students, of the importance of mangroves,” Magno shared during the webcast.
 
A robust partnership between the private and public sectors
 
Joseph Pilapil, Resilience Council Coordinator of the City Government of Ormoc, underscored the importance of convergence between local governments and the private business sector.
 
“One of the city’s best practices is its openness to partnerships with the private sector. We are trying to build our resilience using the tool we call the Disaster Resilience Scorecard,” Pilapil said, referring to the scorecard developed by the National Resilience Council (NRC) as a guide for LGUs to determine their preparedness, adaptation, and transformation towards resiliency.
 
The NRC is a science and technology-based and evidence-informed public-private partnership working towards a more disaster-resilient Philippines. 
***
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From Our Partner Press Releases

Climate Vulnerability Monitor: Climate change causes loss and damage, unequally impacts vulnerable nations and indiscriminately creates global crises

Climate Vulnerability Monitor: Climate change causes loss and damage, unequally impacts vulnerable nations and indiscriminately creates global crises

Accra, Ghana, 2 November 2022 – A flagship report entitled “Climate Vulnerability Monitor, 3rd edition: A Planet on Fire”, commissioned by the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) and the Vulnerable Twenty (V20) Group of Ministers of Finance of the CVF presented stark proof that climate change impacts generate loss and damage, globally creating crises for society, human health and development. Disclosing comprehensive new data on the impact of climate change, the report also highlighted the asymmetric consequences for society which deepen global inequalities with poorer and more vulnerable nations the hardest hit.

 

The third edition of the Climate Vulnerability Monitor (CVM3), a research program into the impact of climate change publicly released today, is the product of a multi-year research program involving a multi-organization science consortium led by the Global Center on Adaptation, Climate Analytics, the Lancet Countdown and finres, as well as 14 regional partner organizations. 

The Monitor consolidates the latest research from the scientific literature on the attribution of climate change in 32 distinct indicators of socio-economic and environmental change and impact phenomena. The Monitor projects and compares how, for a wide range of countries, these impacts evolve throughout the 21st century under a climate and socio-economic scenario that limits warming to 1.5°C, versus a below 2°C scenario, and a high emissions scenario without climate action to reduce emissions or mobilize additional adaptation efforts. The CVM3 findings illustrate the significant extent to which limiting warming to 1.5ºC could contain otherwise enormous losses and damage for the world this century. 

The CVM3 and its scenarios and modeling are informed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) latest Sixth Assessment Report.

The 32 individual climate impact indicators for the time periods of 2030, 2050 and 2090, are as follows:

  • 19 indicators of the impact of climate change in biophysical terms including temperature changes, drought, precipitation and runoff/discharge, windspeed, soil moisture and crop yields.
  • 10 indicators of the impact of climate change on human health, including through infectious disease and exposure to risks like heat, wildfires and food insecurity.
  • 3 indicators of the economic impact of climate change on GDP per capita growth, inflation and interest rates.

 

Ken Ofori-Atta, Ghana Minister for Finance and Economic Planning and V20 chairman: “Climate-fueled risks have driven up the cost of capital and debt to unsustainable levels, especially across climate vulnerable economies, worsening already horrific financial protection gaps. Safeguarding the 1.5 degrees centigrade safety limit of the Paris Agreement is critical as with the doubling of adaptation finance and the availability of pre-arranged finance through the G7-V20 Global Shield, to disburse quickly and reliably before or right after disasters take place, significantly expanding instruments of adaptation and financial protection for governments, communities, businesses, and households. Such measures can lower the impact of climate change, make vulnerable country economies more resilient, safeguard sustainable development, and protect the lives and livelihoods of poor and vulnerable people.”

Key findings of the CVM3 report include that:

  • Annual global heat deaths among vulnerable groups could reach 3.35 million by end of century if insufficient climate action is taken: 91% of the increase in heat deaths could be avoided if global warming is limited to 1.5ºC
  • As much as over 10% of economic growth lost every single year in the long-term for key world regions: Africa, Asia, Europe
  • Fast-growing cumulative economic losses are already lowering incomes worldwide and raising inflation and interest rates across all regions in a negative impact that would more than double if warming exceeded 1.5ºC and reached 2ºC
  • 20-year extreme drought events will increase 4-8 fold during the decade ahead (at 1.5°C) and 8-12 times under a below 2.0°C scenario
  • Extreme wildfire risk to increase by 8.5% in the coming decade (at 1.5ºC) and to triple by end-of-century under a no climate action scenario
  • Decreases in staple crop yields could reach 30-40% by end of century, but could be reduced to 5-10% if global warming is limited to 1.5ºC


Ban Ki-moon, Chairman of the Board of Global Center on Adaptation and 8th UN secretary-general: “With this third edition “CVM” we see clearly just how much humanity finds itself at the crossroads. Sadly, we have become a “Planet on Fire”, as the report’s title highlights. If we do not act now, by the end of the century, millions of lives would be lost every single year because of scorching heat.”

Henry Kokofu, Executive Director of the Environmental Protection Agency and Special Envoy of the CVF Presidency of Ghana: “The vulnerable nations have been working all year towards a decisive outcome from COP27 on loss and damage. With this landmark CVM3 report, we are reminded of the scale and breadth of the climate calamities being visited upon poorer and vulnerable nations that lack responsibility for the climate crisis. I hope all delegations to COP27 will study the findings of the CVM3 and that the rich, powerful and responsible nations will be convinced to extend necessary support for addressing the stark injustice of loss and damage.”

Prof. Dr. Patrick V. Verkooijen, CEO of Global Center on Adaptation: “This report reaffirms that the impact of climate change is asymmetric, particularly today, particularly with respect to health, jobs, food and development for poor and vulnerable communities in developing countries. The shocking finding of this global assessment is that some of the world’s richest and most powerful economies will also see their economic growth compromised throughout the 21st century, not just lowering incomes but also increasing inflation and interest rates. It is now crystal clear that every economy, every government, and every community must take action to analyse, monitor and respond to these risks.”

Prof. Dr. Saleemul Huq, Chair of the CVF Expert Advisory Group: “The Climate Vulnerability Monitor provides us with the anatomy of the loss and damage the world now lives with because of decades of insufficient climate inaction by rich, powerful and responsible countries. The detailed impact data and evidence presented by the CVM3 provides sobering reading on just how bad the situation already is, and how much worse it will become with fast rising global health risks, extreme heat events, and economic shocks, to name a few. Loss and damage has become the biggest risk to global prosperity in the present age. The international community must act and support those worst affected and least responsible with funding and solutions. COP27 must make good on this agenda.”

The CVM3’s full online data set with global coverage at national level portal will be released via a dedicated portal on 10 November 2022 at UNFCCC COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. 

*** 

About CVM


The Climate Vulnerability Monitor (“the Monitor” or “CVM”) is a unique global assessment at the national level of present and potential future climate change impacts on the environment, economy and public health. The Monitor consolidates the latest research from the scientific literature on the attribution of climate change in 32 distinct indicators of socio-economic and environmental change and impact phenomena. The Monitor projects and compares how, for a wide range of countries, these impacts evolve throughout the 21st century under a climate and socio-economic scenario that limits warming to 1.5°C, versus a below 2°C scenario, and a high emissions scenario without climate action to reduce emissions or mobilize additional adaptation efforts. The CVM3 and its scenarios and modeling are informed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) latest Sixth Assessment Report.


The Monitor is commissioned by the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) and V20. Climate Analytics, finres, the Lancet Countdown, and the CVF and V20 secretariat, hosted at the Global Center on Adaptation in partnership with Aroha, formed the Consortium of organizations contributing to the CVM3 as supported by dedicated expert panels and regional partners.


The last Climate Vulnerability Monitor (2nd edition, CVM2) was published in 2012.


ABOUT V-20 Group:


Formed in 2015, the V20 Group of Finance Ministers is a dedicated cooperation of economies systematically vulnerable to climate change. Currently chaired by the Republic of Ghana, V20 Group members are also states of the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF). The V20 membership stands at 58 economies representing some 1.5 billion people including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Barbados, Benin, Bhutan, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Chad, Colombia, Comoros, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Dominican Republic, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Fiji, The Gambia, Ghana, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Kenya, Kiribati, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Mongolia, Morocco, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Palau, Palestine**, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Senegal, South Sudan, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Tanzania, Timor-Leste, Tunisia, Tuvalu, Uganda, Vanuatu, Viet Nam and Yemen.


**As a UN non-member observer state



MEDIA CONTACT: 

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