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Road to COP27: Murals in Iloilo City and Isabela City unveiled to demand urgent climate actions from world leaders

Road to COP27: Murals in Iloilo City and Isabela City unveiled to demand urgent climate actions from world leaders

Murals were unveiled today in Iloilo City in Iloilo and Isabela City in Basilan to demand decisive and transformative actions from world leaders meeting this November during the 27th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27) in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

 

The murals marked the launch of Poets for Climate, a collaborative project among the branches of Climate Reality in the Philippines, Africa, and Canada in support of the When Is Now campaign, a global poetry and arts movement organized by the Climate Vulnerable Forum, Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities, and Agam Agenda.

When Is Now links together poems, visual art, murals, and more forms of creative expression that reflect people’s lived experiences of the climate crisis. 

“To contribute to When Is Now, we will conduct a series of pebble poem workshops that will harness the diverse languages and points of view of climate advocates in Canada, Africa, and the Philippines to generate short but compelling poems that  will amplify the call for world leaders to address the vicious cycle of loss and damage in climate-vulnerable countries,” said Nazrin Castro, Manager of Climate Reality Philippines.

Seasoned poets, including prolific African activist and writer Nnimmo Bassey, will serve as mentors during the workshops scheduled every Friday of August.

“More than ever, we need storytelling, arts, and the humanities to generate new ways of responding to the ecological crisis we all face, and which disproportionately impacts marginalized peoples the most while bearing the least responsibility for climate change. Artists and writers can help us reimagine the ways we act on climate, in solidarity with those who are most vulnerable,” said Padmapani L. Perez, Lead Strategist for Creative Collaboration of the Agam Agenda.

Poems written during the pebble poem workshops will be featured in an exhibit on the sidelines of COP27 in Egypt and simultaneous projections on different sites in the Philippines, Canada, and South Africa. They will also be showcased in When Is Now’s digital exhibition

The mural in Iloilo is located at the Marymart Center-Maryville in Delgado Street, Iloilo City. Contributing muralists are Marrz Capanang, Rey Gico, Sasha Cabais, Zak Bravo, and Stevenson Cordova.

Iloilo City, Iloilo: Lisó (Seed/ Veer)

The Poets for Climate mural located at the Marymart Center-Maryville in Delgado Street, Iloilo City was created by Artivism Iloilo, a collective of artists, social innovators, and unconventional movers working to bring engaging collaborative art to the heart of communities and unlikely locations.

The mural in Iloilo City was a response to the poem “When will we tire of waiting?” by South African-based novelist Yewande Omotoso, as featured in When Is Now’s digital exhibition.

Explaining the concept behind the mural, Kristine Buenavista of Artivism Iloilo said, “The sprout represents our dream–of nourishment, enrichment, and sustenance through the growth and reach of this seed, this consciousness. We used “kintsugi” or golden repair to highlight our yearning for ecological healing.”

The mural in Basilan is located at the Tourism Assistance Center, James Walter Strong Boulevard, Port Area, Isabela de Basilan. Contributing muralists are: Antonio Francisco III, Abdurahman Basri, Ivan Roy Cuevas, Joevan Kali, and Sheilla Mae Gahilomo.

Isabela City, Basilan: “Goyak sin Kasa bannalan” (Waves of Reality) 

In Basilan, the mural was created by art collective PintaGuhit Isabela City. Responding to the poem When Is Now by Nanditha Ram Satagopan, the mural depicts the beauty of the environment until people severed it and took it for granted.

Responding to the poem “When Is Now” by Nanditha Ram Satagopan, the Basilan mural depicts the beauty of the environment until people severed it and took it for granted.

“We must not be stuck in an image that we can relive the memory of the past. We must focus on fixing this present that we’re in and hopefully, we can provide a much better future. But when,” PintaGuhit asked world leaders.

The mural in South Africa is located on the corners of Robert and Empress streets in Kensington, Johannesburg. Contributing muralists are Dionne MacDonald, Ayanda Ogqoyi, Alfredo Gambali, and Bronwyn Krige.

More murals in the lead-up to COP27

Aside from the ones in Iloilo City and Isabela De Basilan, murals were also unveiled in Johannesburg, South Africa and Québec, Canada.
 
Climate Reality will explore partnerships with more local artists in the coming months to produce not just murals but other forms of artistic expression communicating the urgency and solvability of the climate crisis.
 
“A mural in Baguio City is already in the works. We’ve partnered with artist Bong Sanchez to unveil a Poets for Climate mural in the city,” Castro said.
 

The murals in Canada are located at 3832 rue Wellington, Verdun Québec. They were created by Tsoko and Louis Letters (top left), Sam 19 and Moule (top right), La barquette (bottom left), and Gallium (bottom right).

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Youth-led, community-based climate actions

Eleventh Hour: Youth-led, community-based climate actions

By Keith Sigfred Ancheta

I

Climate change is not fair. It is unjust. Those who contribute the least to this problem suffer the most from its impacts. Case in point: young people whose contributions to climate change are almost negligible but are living through intense typhoons, extreme temperatures, and other climate impacts. That is the reality we’re facing and the reality we need to change.

 

Young people are not sitting idly and letting these things happen to them. Rather, they are actively leading the fight for the present and their future. They are fighting for their survival. They need all the support they can get in their climate journey.

That is why The Climate Reality Project Philippines Youth Cluster and the Rotary Club of Makati San Lorenzo relaunched Project Niche, a program designed to help young change-makers find and claim their place in the climate space. Under this program, youth leaders were mentored to develop their skills in crafting solutions to local climate and environmental problems. They were then tasked to prepare a project proposal that they will pitch in front of a panel of judges.

Last May 28, 2022, 11 groups of budding young climate advocates presented their proposals during the pitching competition of Project Niche 2.0. Out of the 11 competing teams, six stood out.

“Panubliong Lunhaw” aims to further conserve the mangrove ecosystem in the chosen community, recognizing the importance of this ecosystem in the life of those inhabiting the coasts. “Project R&R” tackles the growing problem of marine plastic litter by preventing the transport of these plastic wastes from the river to the sea. Also tackling the plastic problem is “EcoS”, which aims to create bioplastics that can be used as an alternative to single-use plastic products.

On the other hand, “PamaYaman” will help community members establish a sustainable urban garden to address food insecurity. Similarly, “Project AgwaKultura” focuses on solving food insecurity through hydroponics-based urban agriculture using discarded plastic waste as the main material for the system. Lastly, “PuriDrip” aims to design and distribute a portable water filtration system to provide potable water in disaster-stricken communities.

During a roundtable discussion with the winning teams, they shared why they participated in the competition and the story behind their projects. All of them have common motivations in joining Project Niche: (1) to gain experience, as they are just starting their climate journeys; (2) to have their ideas heard; and (3) to help community members who are at the frontline of the problems they aim to solve.

They showed that they have a deep understanding of these local problems, how the community members are affected by these problems, and the possible solutions that can be implemented in the community. It is also evident that the community members are at the heart of their projects. They all made sure that the community would be involved from beginning to the end of implementing their proposed projects.

However, their climate journeys are not without bumps and hurdles. Among the challenges they encountered include the pandemic preventing them from doing on-ground actions, lack of resources to implement their plans, prejudice of adults against young people who are actively involved in societal issues, red-tagging of the youth when voicing out legitimate concerns, comments that they should just focus on studying because they’re still young (“bata pa kayo”), and a lot more. But they are unfazed by these problems. They remained headstrong in their eagerness to help solve the climate and environmental issues faced by the people surrounding them.

These young change-makers are testaments to the famous quote attributed to Dr. Jose Rizal, “Ang kabataan ang pag-asa ng bayan.” Indeed, the youth have the creativity, energy, passion, and heart to solve the problems of our society.

As the youth claim their roles as change-makers, we must stand alongside them, supporting them throughout their climate journey, providing enabling conditions, listening to them, and amplifying their voice. Let these young change-makers and their stories inspire us to drive the societal transformation toward a better reality everyone deserves.

The youth of today is leading the fight for the present and their future. It’s time for everyone to join them in this fight.

***

 

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 
Keith Sigfred Ancheta is a climate wonderer, budding climate communicator, and stubborn optimist. He currently volunteers as Youth Cluster Coordinator of Climate Reality Philippines, leading the Project Niche Campaign. Outside Climate Reality, he is a licensed teacher and a full-time MSc Microbiology student at the University of the Philippines Diliman. His advocacies include transformative climate education, meaningful youth participation, and inclusive climate policymaking
 

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

LGBTQ+ advocates: Pass SOGIE Equality Bill to enable a more inclusive response mechanism to climate disasters

LGBTQ+ advocates: Pass SOGIE Equality Bill to enable a more inclusive response mechanism to climate disasters

Quezon City—The enactment of the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity or Expression (SOGIE) Equality Bill, also known as the Anti-Discrimination Bill, will ensure a more equitable and rights-based response to climate-related disasters. 

This was emphasized during the 31st episode of The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ Klimatotohanan webcast series entitled “Coming Out for Environmental Rights and Gender Equality: How LGBTQ+ Activism Intersects with Climate Action.

The SOGIE Equality Bill, which has been languishing in Congress for decades, was recently re-filed by Senator Risa Hontiveros under the 19th Congress. The bill seeks to ensure safe schools, accessible health care, and sufficient livelihood for people of diverse sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics.

The impacts of the prevailing climate crisis exacerbates the marginalization, disenfranchisement, and discrimination currently being experienced by low-income, LGBTQ+, and gender minorities.

“Yung ating environment sustainability movement sobrang heteronormative. Wala tayong enabling infrastructures and laws for gender-inclusive approaches in our climate justice work, ” Joel Chester Pagulayan, Advocacy Officer for Climate Change and Energy Transition at Oxfam Philippines, said during the webcast’s special Pride Month episode.

Atty. Faith Sadicon, OutRight’s Program Officer for Asia and Pacific, added that climate disasters expose the lack of institutional and social support to LGBTQ+ that manifests in the prevailing policies, structures, and lived culture.


Impacts of the climate crisis on LGBTQ+ communities

Introducing Judith Butler’s concept of precariousness and precarity, Atty. Sadicon divulged how the occurrence of climate disasters exposes humans to risks and vulnerabilities (precariousness) while being deprived of protection relative to others (precarity).

For instance, the Social Amelioration Program (SAP) only considers heteronormative families when distributing aid while excluding the queers. She added that LGBTQ+ individuals are either prohibited to enter the shelters as they were considered threats or lacked the freedom to be in shelter spaces they are most comfortable with.

“We want to build a queer-quick reaction that is based on principles that would make a queer-inclusive humanitarian response. It has to be intersectional, community-rooted, community-driven, collaborative, transparent, and transformative. Ito yung pagkilala mo sa multiple layers of oppression that people experience,” Atty. Sadicon emphasized.

Research conducted by Prof. Pierce Docena on the lives of internally displaced LGBTQ+ survivors of Typhoon Haiyan confirmed the marginalization of LGBTQ+ in disaster risk reduction and management responses. Relief and recovery efforts, resettlements, and livelihood programs post-disaster failed to recognize the immediate needs and rights of LGBTQ+ individuals.

“Yung iba sa LGBTQ+ individuals ay may partner at may anak pero hindi sila recognized legally as family. May isang transman living with a female partner at may pinapalaking anak. Hindi sila nabigyan ng priority sa pabahay kasi hindi sila considered as family when in fact nawasak din ng bagyo yung bahay nila,” Prof. Docena said.

“Nakita namin sa mga online spaces na maraming mga bastos o manyak na comments na naka-target sa ating mga kababaihan na gusto lamang pumadyak papunta sa kanilang paroroonan,” Jessica Reyes shared.

Being a cyclist herself, Reyes discussed the apprehensions of women about cycling. For one, catcalling instills fear among women to cycle on roads. She added that objectifying women should stop because each one has an individuality that transcends gender roles set by society.

Queering the climate action

While climate action receives growing traction from activists and advocates, deep impacts on communities are disproportionately seen, Pagulayan observed. 

He criticized the linear and hierarchical approach of development works where advocates shove solutions to communities for their perusal. Realizing its unfruitful impact on the stakeholders, Pagulayan called the need to shift from this dynamic. 

“Tanggalin natin sa isipan natin na tayo yung may dala ng solution sa kanila. Dapat ay sa kanila manggagaling kung paano nila gustong tugunan yung kanilang problema. Hindi na ito bago sa atin, may naririnig tayo na participatory development sa pag-strenghten ng community participation para mabago natin yung ganung system sa development work,” he stated.

Pagulayan is a queer climate activist pushing for climate justice through queer ecology. Queer pertains to the unconventional and not-so-traditional approaches to which the climate movement should start adapting to address the intersectional issues of marginalized communities, including LGBTQ+ groups. 

He suggested the concept of decolonization relative to queer ecology. This requires a shift from Global North-centered innovations to indigenous practices, knowledge, and system in solving the climate crisis. 

Atty. Sadicon agreed, saying that the climate movement needs queering, which fosters constant interrogating and stabilizing consciousnesses of practices.

Meanwhile, Alisandra Abadia, Program and Communications Associate of Just Associates Southeast Asia, highlighted the importance of queer feminism in forging stronger communities and bringing change to the marginalized and the oppressed.

“Queer feminism understands that the full emancipation of women and LGBTQ+ can only be achieved with the full emancipation of people from systemic violence. There needs to be a grounding in understanding that climate injustice is not born out of our individual actions. Climate injustice is about the historical and contemporary actions that are born from the economic, political, and social systems currently in place,” she explained.  

Advocating more LGBTQ+ related policies and programs

Policies in many jurisdictions continue to criminalize, stigmatize, and disregard LGBTQ+ communities. Atty. Sadicon highlighted how national laws and policies fail to address the specific needs and positions of LGBTQ+ individuals. For one, disaster risk reduction mandates lack specific provisions for LGBTQ+ communities. 

In turn, Abadia demanded inclusion and centering of conversation around women and queer people in policy making. 

“They always assume that people who are from rural communities, indigenous communities, from urban poor communities are unaware of system oppression but this is their lived reality. The theories we learn in school are the lived realities of people. Let us always come in a place of empathy,” Abadia said. 

Prof. Docena shared that LGBTQ+ disaster survivors recommended the passage of more LGBTQ-related policies and programs to the administration such as the SOGIE Equality Bill.

“Kapag wala tayong ganitong polisiya [SOGIE Equality Bill], mas lalong mama-marginalized yung mga sectors. Kasi hindi lang siya usapin ng kasarian, pero usapin sya ng karapatan at pagpapakatao,” Pagulayan added. 

The fight against climate change and alongside LGBTQ+ communities continue regardless of the administration in position. Atty. Sadicon heightened the need for movement-driven engagement with the new administration. “Ang tagumpay ay hindi ibibigay sa administrasyon kundi sa naging lakas at pagsusumikap ng mga kilusan,” she pointed. 

***

Categories
Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Mangrove restoration as a nature-based solution to climate change

Eleventh Hour: Mangrove restoration as a nature-based solution to climate change

By Camille Rivera and Angela Mariz Obsina

I

The Covid-19 pandemic has affected every aspect of life—from health and livelihood to education, mobility, food systems, and many more. Society, however, became more inattentive to environmental and climate-related issues.

 

To bring the focus back to addressing the intersectional problems we face concerning our environment and the prevailing climate crisis, we established Oceanus Conservation (Oceanus), a non-profit environmental organization that aims to reintroduce the importance of ecosystem restoration and protection of our marine habitats. 

 

Advocating for nature-based solutions to mitigate climate change, Oceanus strives to promote the conservation and restoration of blue carbon habitats, which refer to ecosystems that store carbon, such as mangroves, seagrass, and marshlands.

Mangroves, in particular, are considered one of the most valuable ecosystems in the world as they have extremely high carbon storage and these ecosystems have a great capacity to take up and store carbon from the atmosphere. They are four times more effective carbon sink compared to terrestrial forests, which is an additional way to reduce reaching 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Aside from its benefits to the planet, it also provides many ecosystem benefits to wildlife and the communities such as the provision of a nursery for fisheries, protection from storms, reduced coastal erosion, and ecotourism livelihood.

Our team at Oceanus follows a multi-faceted approach to restoring degraded blue carbon forests, such as mangroves. From a technical process, we map out restoration areas and collect baseline data, which includes conducting a biophysical assessment of a project site before providing ecosystem-based restoration training for the local communities.

For social action, we build trust and relationships with the partner communities and the respective local government unit (LGU) for institutional support, as well as enhance the participation of the public, most especially students and youth organizations. Furthermore, we ensure that the communities we work with are benefiting from the economic aspect of our restoration initiatives by providing incentives for planting and establishing nursery sites for mangrove restoration. The mutualistic relationship of restoration and livelihood for the communities is one of the values we uphold at Oceanus.

Our current project sites are Looc, Salay, Northern Mindanao, and Aringay, La Union. We have partnered with and assisted them for the past year with the planting, monitoring, and restoration of mangrove species in their area. Since we started the mangrove restoration project in September 2021, we have planted a total of 4,689 saplings at these project sites.

The mangrove area in Barangay Looc in Salay, which was located just a few kilometers near the road, was degraded due to several typhoons that battered the area in the past months. The restoration site in Barangay Aringay in La Union, on the other hand, is within an enclosed area of an abandoned fishpond.

 

Through our experiences in working on these sites, we realized that there is truly no one-size-fits-all approach to mangrove restoration. This is why each project site needs prior biophysical assessment and community training.

We have set plans to broaden our restoration sites and include mangrove areas in Mindanao, namely Cagwait, Surigao del Sur, and Alicia, Zamboanga Sibugay. Our goal is to restore 10 hectares of degraded mangrove forests by planting diverse mangrove species to increase ecosystem benefits and working together with the local communities all over the country and share best practices of restoration.

Another initiative we have is the Project Smart Buoy for Coral Reef Monitoring (SCORE). Through this project, we have deployed the first-ever smart buoy in the Philippines to collect sea surface temperature data in real-time and correlate it with biological data, such as coral reef health.

Moreover, we also promote ocean education and awareness among kids in coastal areas through our Ocean Literacy Project. We create ocean bilingual storybooks that focus on the importance of marine habitats and the actions we can do to protect them from the impacts of climate change. Our two storybooks are distributed all around the country. They were translated into Icelandic and are now available in Iceland.

We at Oceanus endeavor to increase the awareness, knowledge, and participation of the youth and the local community in ecosystem restoration and education. By fostering the involvement of our communities on ocean and climate-related issues and solutions, we hope to pave the way for healthier marine biodiversity, increased climate resilience for coastal areas, and thriving communities across the country.

Let us work together for a sustainable future. Follow us on our Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn accounts to know more about how you can take part in our initiatives.

 

***

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHORS
 
Keith Sigfred Ancheta is a climate wonderer, budding climate communicator, and stubborn optimist. He currently volunteers as Youth Cluster Coordinator of Climate Reality Philippines, leading the Project Niche Campaign. Outside Climate Reality, he is a licensed teacher and a full-time MSc Microbiology student at the University of the Philippines Diliman. His advocacies include transformative climate education, meaningful youth participation, and inclusive climate policymaking
 

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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Hisgutanang Klima sa Mindanao

Hisgutanang Klima sa Mindanao: Youth in climate action

Hisgutanang Klima sa Mindanao: Youth in climate action

By Marisol Tuso

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I am so inspired after talking to some young Climate Reality Leaders in Mindanao during this month’s Regional Hangout. Young as they are, they are already contributing a lot to advancing climate action in the region.

  

In Mindanao, more than 70% of the Climate Reality Leaders belong to the youth sector. They form part of different organizations and are driving actions in their respective schools and communities, including but not limited to clean-up drives, tree planting activities, waste segregation campaigns, youth parliament conferences, and campaigns for climate-related policies.

Climate policy and governance

The Sangguniang Panlungsod of General Santos City is tackling adopting a resolution from the GenSan Youth Parliament urging all the government offices and barangay halls to utilize solar energy for regular operations.

Authored by Climate Reality Leader Roxanne Kythe Fado (Roxanne) of Kimba, Sarangani, the resolution aims to call on government offices to “utilize or switch to solar energy on regular operations by installing solar panels on their establishment as the latter provides reliable power supply, fuel diversification and helps conserve the state’s natural resources.”

This is an encouraging action to amplify the call for a just energy transition to renewable energy for cheaper, reliable, resilient, and clean energy.

On the other hand, Climate Reality Leader Antonio Regis, Jr. (Tony) was among the country’s youth from across the world who attended the Stockholm +50 in Sweden and presented a policy paper to world leaders calling for an “urgent need for actions to achieve a healthy planet and prosperity.” 

The youth called on governments, among others, to “protect and restore all ecosystems by halting deforestation, banning bottom trawling, unsustainable mining, and other environmentally destructive practices” and emphasized that “the best solution to many of our environmental problems lies in letting nature heal itself.” They also pushed for the introduction of large-scale environmental destruction, known as ecocide, as a crime in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, “as a means to hold governments and corporations accountable for their damage to our common plant, submit strengthened nationally determined contributions (NDCs), financing commitments and long-term strategies in 2022 to halve global Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions by 2030.”

Learnings, aspirations, and challenges

Kem participated in the Circular Agriculture Workshop and Innovation Challenge 2022, where he learned more comprehensively about food systems, climate change, innovation, circular economy, and entrepreneurship.

Climate Reality Leader Maria Elvy Dominicata (Elvy), on the other hand, recently started using solar lights overnight at home and consciously adopting waste segregation at home. 

Elvy was once an advocate for “Bayang Walang Basura” during her engagement with the Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement (PRRM). She is currently a Project Officer of the Movement Against Malaria and would like to bring climate change awareness to rural communities.

Climate Reality Leaders in SOCCSKSARGEN, meanwhile, underscored the importance of simplifying climate change concepts to help different stakeholders understand them better. This remains a challenge, but our leaders are committed to pushing further not just in communicating the climate crisis but also in mobilizing climate solutions to communities.

 

***

 

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.

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Klima Kabisayaan

Klima Kabisayaan: Building grit to sustain climate activism

Klima Kabisayaan: Building grit to sustain climate activism

By Paula Bernasor

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Halfway through the year! Are you still inspired? If you don’t feel motivated, your inspiration is just gone, if your excitement for work is just not what it used to be, it is all fine! Whatever your job is, this is bound to happen. Pulling yourself out is never particularly easy. 

Have you ever had an extremely challenging experience before a great victory? Then you have had a grit-building moment. Grit is mental, physical, and emotional resilience. A combination of passion and perseverance towards long-term goals. It mixes resilience, ambition, and self-control in the pursuit of goals that take months, years, or even decades.

As environmentalists and activists, we often face challenges. The current political and policy changes in the Philippines are proving to be another giant hurdle for us to overcome. It is easy to get depressed with the current state of our planet on top of the constant harassment and red-tagging of environmental activists. Why do we continue to do what we do for the Earth? 

Even the most triumphant among us occasionally fails. What they don’t do is quit. How can environmentalists become more resilient? Is grit something we can control or develop?

There are four (4) things Angela Duckworth explains that make up the formula to developing more grit:

First is time.

Give yourself time to practice and learn and stay in the game. Having the time to do things is crucial to improving.

Second is practice.

Every time you fail, think of it as just having been another practice attempt. How do the Climate Reality Leaders practice? Here are some of the Acts of Leadership that our Visayas Climate Reality Leaders have done over the months:

  • Mainstreaming biodiversity conservation and protection among youths;
  • Joining youth cluster and actively campaigning against single-use plastics;
  • Taking part in Climate Science Olympiad;
  • Being part of the communications team of YOUNGO;
  • Volunteering in the Climate Reality Philippines Youth Cluster’s Mag-ASUP Tayo;
  • Promoting white roofs to reduce residential cooling costs;
  • Writing articles about the climate movement in the school publication;
  • Actively participating in the community of several organizations that have the same climate-related advocacies;
  • Promoting DRR Preparedness Activity through Theater;
  • Joining relief operations;
  • Creating awareness campaigns;
  • Talking to youth organizations and the Sangguniang Kabataan about environmental issues;
  • Serving as the Partnerships Head of Rethink Plastic, an NGO dedicated to understanding the world’s plastic addiction, promoting new material innovations, and acting against plastic waste and we are currently preparing for our Internship Program which will immerse and orient participants in the usual operational tasks of a non-profit organization focused on the environment and plastics;
  • Drafting of the People Survival Fund and Resilient and Green Recovery Plan for Ormoc City; and
  • Organizing coastal and community clean-ups and initiated environmental competitions at school.
 

Even the smallest act has an impact and oftentimes this is just a stepping stone toward bigger projects.

Third is purpose

Practice is useless if what you’re practicing is something you don’t feel purposeful about or can be highly interested in. As humans, we tend to be compelled by reasons for doing something, and need that intrinsic motivation. In a personal development or career sense, this “why” stands for a sense of purpose. 

"Fulfillment is not born of the dream. Fulfillment is born of the journey."

During the June Regional Hangout, the Climate Reality Leaders in Visayas and I asked ourselves about our individual purpose. One of our leaders said that whenever he is feeling demotivated he just reminds himself, “What if the next innovator of the Philippines is coming from an underserved community?” For most, the dream of a sustainable and climate-resilient future for their families and communities is what keeps them going. 

Last is hope.

Learn that it’s alright to fail as long as you don’t give up or quit. In a community like The Climate Reality Project Philippines, you always feel a sense of hope. The culture we live in and identify with powerfully shapes just about every aspect of our being. If you want to be grittier and hopeful, you need to find a community with such a culture and join it. Every time you connect with a fellow Climate Reality Leader, you always discover new ways, approaches, and perspectives on an environmental and climate issue.

Though the Philippines is now the deadliest country for environmental activists, according to a report from the watchdog group Global Witness, environmentalists continue their fight despite being vilified and red-tagged. We have to continue working every day in order to achieve the changes and the protection of the environment that we have all collectively worked on. When hope seems bleak, we have to stay motivated, passionate, and grittier.

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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.