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#RealiTalk Blog Feature

#RealiTalk: International Day of the Girl Child with Pauline De Guzman

This year’s International Day of the Girl Child aims to celebrate adolescent girls who are making waves in the tech and digital world while emphasizing the need to close the gender digital divide.

 
In line with this, this month’s Realitalk features our conversation with Pinoy Climate Reality Leader Pauline De Guzman about the urgent need to provide young Filipino girls, specifically those in low-income areas, equal access to technology, connectivity, and digital skills.
 

Pauline, who works currently works at the United Nations Children’s Fund, delved into how digital connectivity and access to technology could further empower girls to have agency and control in building a brighter future and in participating in climate change adaptation and mitigation initiatives.

How can digital inclusion and literacy widen pathways for adolescent girls to live their full potential?

 

Pauline: Digital technologies have made people more connected than ever before. They allow people to engage in a more in-depth and collective conversation about global issues and crises and they bridge connections across cultures and ideas. When it comes to young women and girls, digital technologies bring them a whole new world of possibilities—from more access to learning and education to improved career opportunities, and even as a political space where they can express their concerns openly and freely.

Girls and young women can leverage digital technology to build networks and relationships, as well as to amplify their voices and advocate for causes that matter to them. It has the potential to become an empowering tool for them to communicate, share ideas, and collaborate on real-world challenges, such as gender inequality and climate change.

Hence, ensuring inclusion of adoloscent young girls in digital literacy and providing them with equal opportunities to develop and improve their digital knowledge and skills is critical. More so, recognizing that they are not simply users of digital technologies but also creators of digital technologies and content opens a world of possibilities for them to realize their full potential.

How can education, powered by digital connectivity and access to technology, address inequalities that increase girls’ vulnerability to climate change?

 

Pauline: Climate change is the greatest threat to our generation and future generations. It affects everyone but it disproportionately affects the most vulnerable people, such as children. Young women and girls are particularly susceptible as a result of the societal, political, and economic inequalities they currently face. There are several strategies for mitigating the effects of climate change, but none of those will suffice if girls and young women are not educated.

Educating children, particularly women and girls, about climate change and the risks they will face is an important step in building a more resilient community. Education is critical for developing the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors essential for girls and young women to adapt to climate change. Education is also crucial for instilling in girls and young women the confidence to participate in and engage in climate policy dialogue, as well as to live a sustainable lifestyle that prioritizes environmental stewardship. By educating girls and young women about the dangers of climate change, we empower them to take action and discover ways to mitigate its impacts. 

 
"The COVID-19 pandemic brings to light the bleak state of the Philippines' digital development and information and communications technology (ICT) infrastructure. My recent fieldwork in the Visayas region has opened my eyes to the vast discrepancy between urban and rural development, especially in relation to digital technology."
PAULINE DE GUZMAN

What can you say about the status of the gender digital divide in the Philippines? How about the status of girls’ education on climate change?

 

Golda: The COVID-19 pandemic brings to light the bleak state of the Philippines’ digital development and information and communications technology (ICT) infrastructure.

My recent fieldwork in the Visayas region has opened my eyes to the vast discrepancy between urban and rural development, especially in relation to digital technology. While urban and city centers have digital technologies readily available, this isn’t the situation in rural areas. Internet and phone signal is limited in remote communities. In some areas, signals in business centers and municipal capitals are also intermittent.

In addition to undeveloped ICT infrastructure, the existing socio-economic inequalities also intensify the digital divide. Even though many low-income families have phones, they aren’t well-equipped to go online. In certain cases, poor families cannot afford to pay for a phone or even load and communication allowances for their children because of their financial situation.

The gender digital divide is significantly more complicated due to the compounded inequalities with which girls and young women face. Boys and men frequently dominate the realm of ICT, rather than women and girls. In many countries, such as the Philippines, men are urged and favored to enroll in computer courses over women. While it’s good to see many programs aimed at educating Filipino girls and young women about digital literacy, more must be done to help and encourage them to take an active role in this domain.

Climate change education is gaining traction in the Philippines as a result of the Department of Education’s initiative to incorporate it into the school curriculum. The difficulty, however, is that not everyone has access to quality education, especially now that we are facing the COVID-19 pandemic. Children are now compelled to attend school online due to the shift in delivery methods from face-to-face to online or modular. They are lagging, however, since they lack access to cutting-edge digital technologies and high-speed internet connections. Young women and girls are disproportionately affected, as they are less engaged in digital literacy and are discouraged from developing digitals skills prior to the pandemic.

Additionally, a gap must be bridged between what children learn in school and their climate activities. While women and girls are becoming more educated about climate change, they need opportunities and platforms to do climate action in their communities. This includes offering a seat at the decision-making table for girls and young women, as well as a safe space for them to speak up and discuss climate solutions.

"We should inspire more young girls and women to participate and influence climate policy dialogue by creating digital materials and content that emphasize the efforts of women climate leaders from local to international scale."
PAULINE DE GUZMAN

How can we give young Filipino girls, specifically those in low-income areas, equal access to technology, connectivity, and digital skills? How can we further empower them to have agency and control to build a brighter future?

 

Pauline: To provide equal access to technology, connectivity, and digital skills for young Filipino girls, we must first create and enhance ICT infrastructure in places with no phone service and slow internet connections. Improving our ICT infrastructure would address not only the gender digital divide but also the socioeconomic inequalities between affluent and poor.

Improving ICT infrastructure also entails ensuring the safety of girls and young women when using digital technologies and the internet. Sufficient cybersecurity precautions should be in place to safeguard young women and girls against online harassment and bullying. 

Additionally, we should continue to push for and support girls’ participation in ICT. We need to dispel the misconception that boys are more adept at computer and digital technology than girls. Boys and girls are equal in this domain, and as such, should have equal access to and use of digital knowledge and abilities.

We should consequently promote the participation of girls and young women in digital literacy training and capacity building and empower them to influence the development of digital technologies and digital content. We should acknowledge, recognize, and celebrate them as creators of digital technologies and information, not just as end-users. 

What can we do to deepen young girls’ understanding of and gain skills related to climate change adaptation and sustainability using the power of technology and digital platforms?

 

Pauline: In addition to continued capacity building and training on digital technologies for young women and girls, girls’ involvement and participation in climate change solutions through the use of digital technology will increase their understanding of climate change and their role in it. Encouraging them to innovate and create climate change solutions through the use of digital technology would help them develop new skills and maximize their potential.

Bringing the conversation online and providing opportunities for young women and girls to be at the forefront of the conversation will also boost their confidence to speak up and take climate action. We should inspire more young girls and women to participate and influence climate policy dialogue by creating digital materials and content that emphasize the efforts of women climate leaders from local to international scale.

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Development and environment protection are not mutually exclusive

Eleventh Hour: Development and environment protection are not mutually exclusive

By Aprille Roselle Vince Juanillo

For the past four months, the City of Gentle People has been getting more media attention than usual because of the controversial 174-hectare reclamation project that was dubbed as a “monumental ecological disaster.”

It gained media coverage on July 11, 2021 after a local news outlet reported that the Dumaguete City Council had already passed a resolution granting the city mayor authority to sign the venture agreement with the contractor—giving the P23-billion project a green light. Since then, the project has gained opposition from scientists, experts, professionals, fisherfolk, and even ordinary citizens.

On Sept. 10, Dumaguete City Mayor Ipe Remollo withdrew his request to the City Council to grant him authority to sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with E.M. Cuerpo, the winning bidder of the controversial project. He noted, however, that the request is without prejudice “to pursue the city’s applications for pertinent permits with the Philippine Reclamation Authority and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources relative to the Smart City project at the proper time.”

To date, the #NoTo174 silent protests every Friday are still religiously attended by people from all walks of life.

Development vs. environment 

In a pandemic-stricken economy, the officials of the third-class city explored the reclamation project as a means of economic advancement. Remollo mentioned in a television interview that the project will be “sustainable and a solution to the poverty of the people of Dumaguete and Negros Oriental.”

The reclamation, referred to as the “Smart City,” will be 5G-ready with a coastal wastewater treatment facility, shoreline, slope and water protection, esplanade, marina, modern ferry port, and open area for sports facility, hospital, and a city administration hub. 

Remollo reiterated in his information drives that the project will provide job opportunities for the Dumagueteños. He also mentioned that the project will decongest the city, ease the traffic, and the wastewater treatment facility will address the toxic boulevard waters. 

All these, however, are at the expense of the environment—especially the city’s marine life. Primarily a coastal university town, Dumaguete has established four marine protected areas in barangays Bantayan, Lo-oc, Mangnao, and Banilad—all of which will be affected by the reclamation. 

STEWARDS, a marine conservation organization in the city, did a simulated overlay of the marine habitats in Dumaguete’s coast in contrast with the magnitude of the destruction of the proposed reclamation. They found that the city’s coast houses 57.80 ha of seagrass, 59.76 ha of corals, and 38.10 ha of mangroves. The reclamation will cause the loss of 62.5 percent of seagrass (equivalent to 36.15 ha), and 60.58 percent of corals (36.20 ha).

This projected loss is significant, especially to the 994 Dumagueteñon fisherfolk and the 38,342 residents of the eight coastal barangays in the city who depend on fish for sustenance and livelihood.

Remollo’s city development plan

Remollo’s master plan for Dumaguete in 2017 was to expand the development of the city upland with the construction of a double highway from the city’s civic center to encourage inclusive barangay development and create a one-stop-shop for efficiency and sharing of amenities.

 

He also planned for economic sustainability and equitable distribution of wealth among the people. In this regard, the city will transfer the central market to a “more spacious, better-parking location, and traversing the new diversion road, in Brgy. Batinguel.” Moreover, the  present public market will be “converted into a central market mall, with a convention venue on the second floor.” 

For environmental viability, the administration initiated a materials recovery facility (MRF) for waste segregation and economic recycling of reusable and disposed items.

The 174-ha reclamation project is nowhere in these plans. Precisely because it came as an unsolicited proposal to the city local government. 

Globally acclaimed urban Planner Architect Paulo Alcazaren, who was responsible for Iloilo’s esplanade, even questioned the project. He asked, “What happened to that [2017] plan? Why are we focusing on the reclamation that is more expensive?”

“It’s cheaper to improve Internet [capabilities] than to reclaim land and pay the price [of environmental degradation],” he said.

For a university town, a cradle of academics and scientists, the city had a lot of opportunities to consult experts on the matter. However, as displayed in the case when STEWARDS presented themselves to observe the environmental survey conducted by EnviComm, the organization tapped by the city to survey the state of the marine life in the city, the local government showed very little to no cooperation nor appreciation to the measures of its constituents. 

Politics of it all

Remollo is seeking re-election this 2022. With this element added into the mix, we are in for a roller coaster ride for the next 200 days or so. As local journalist Raffy Cabristante would have it, “So the mayoral race in Dumaguete is, in a way, a referendum on the 174 [project]. Whoever wins as mayor also reflects the people’s sentiment on 174.”

As elections draw near, it’s important to scrutinize leaders and determine their values and non-negotiables. Especially in this time when we are in a race to curb the effects of the climate crisis, we have no room to impose more environmental damage than we already have. 

As the case for now, the 174-ha project remains to be a potential disaster waiting to threaten the livelihood of Dumagueteños, wreak havoc on the marine ecosystems, and ultimately cause irreversible environmental damage that will backfire to the people.

The cry of the people who oppose the project is simple: anti-urbanization, especially one that is unsolicited, is not anti-development. You cannot put the environment against development because there is no true development that is not environmentally sound. Genuine sustainable development is reliant on making the environment more livable for everybody—and any true leader would understand this. 

***

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 

Aprille Roselle Vince Juanillo is a Climate Reality Leader trained in 2020. She is an active community leader and communications practitioner with rich experience in organizational development, program management, legislation, and formal and non-formal writing. She has been with the Association of Young Environmental Journalists (AYEJ) since its inception and served as the pioneering vice-president. Straight out of college, she worked with AYEJ as a training specialist for environmental writing education focused on climate change resilience and adaptation. She presently serves as the organization’s program officer. 

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

Slow food and plant-based advocates push for sustainable PH food systems

Slow food and plant-based advocates push for sustainable PH food systems

Quezon City – The food sector contributes one-third of total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions even though hunger rates remain high in certain parts of the world—a sign of an inefficient global food system that is harming the planet while failing to feed more than 800 million people across the globe.

 

This was the topic of discussion during the 19th episode of The Climate Reality Project Philippines’ Klimatotohanan episode entitled “Healthy People, Healthy Planet: What Does Food Have to Do with the Climate Crisis?” 

“Using 83% of all farmlands produces 60% of agricultural [GHG] emissions. It provides only 18% of calories and 37% of protein that humans consume. Where does the 82% of calories and 63% protein come from? It comes from plants. So why are we using 80% of all farmlands to produce very little? It just doesn’t make sense,” Climate Reality Leader Shiela R. Castillo explained during the webcast.

Shifting to a more plant-based diet

Castillo, a vegan and initiator of several online communities on veganism, underscored the need for a global shift towards a more plant-based diet to help curb emissions and to maximize the health and the environmental benefits of easing out meat from the daily diet.

“Meat is a powerful driver of climate change,” Castillo said. “Meat production produces—in the most conservative studies—more GHG than all transport sector combined,” he added.

Castillo also noted that even the lowest-impact meat and dairy products still cause much more environmental harm than the least-sustainable vegetable and cereal growing that directly feeds people.

“If the world changed its diet and went completely vegan, emissions would drop by 7.8 GT,” she said.

Patronizing local foods and food mapping

Chef Jam Melchor, Founder of Slow Food Youth Network Philippines, supported Castillo’s call for transforming food systems, underscoring the need to utilize heirloom indigenous agricultural products that are grown and sourced within the country.

In line with this, Melchor shared that his group has been pushing Congress to provide local government units funds for food mapping, which includes creating an inventory of heirloom dishes, food produce, and gastronomic cultural bearers. 

Adding that food mapping also helps in calamities by providing data on where we can source food, Melchor said that their group has already finished food mapping in Cordillera, Pampanga, and Bulacan and is currently implementing the initiative in the Negros area.

“Mindfulness is the key. Always. Patronizing local foods that have been produced ethically and sustainably makes a difference to people’s livelihoods, to the environment, and economies,” Melchor said.

Melody Melo-Rjik, Project Manager of WWF Philippines’ The Sustainable Diner Project, agreed with Melchor. She noted the abundance of heirloom indigenous agricultural products in the countries.

“Why is it important to promote and use them? Number one, it’s easy to grow them since they’ve been growing here ever since. Second, it lessens our imports when it comes to the vegetables we need. Third, they are very climate-resilient. They can survive the impacts of climate change,” Melo-Rjik explained.

Enabling policies for food sustainability and support for local establishments 

Sharing the success of The Sustainable Diner Project, Melo-Rjik said that there is a need to influence national and local governments for them to include, incorporate, and consider promoting, mainstreaming food sustainability in national and local policies. She added that policies are drivers for businesses and consumers to embrace the sustainability journey.

“For the food sector, we try to help them transition from business-as-usual to a more sustainable business model,” she said, adding that local businesses must be provided with capacity development services and technical support.

Making urban gardens as common as sari-sari stores

Climate Reality Leaders Carissa Pobre and Karla Rey, meanwhile, shared the work that they do for Slow Food Sari-Sari, a coalition of small farmers, urban growers, community organizers, activists, and advocates for food justice and the urban poor.

A movement borne out of the pandemic, Slow Food Sari-Sari is founded on the idea of building collective power and understanding the systems of power in place that are disenfranchising a lot of people. It has been empowering urban communities through the Food Today, Food Tomorrow initiative.

“The Food Today side is for community kitchens contributing fresh organic produce sourced from smallholder farmers to communities in and around Metro Manila. The other side of it is Food Tomorrow—this is the urban gardening side,” Pobre said.

Rey added that the Food Tomorrow part supports urban poor communities—those who are always in danger of being displaced from their homes—grow their own food through agrobiodiverse gardens. “What makes this project really different is that every person we work with wants to overcome their problems. They don’t want to be helpless. They actively participate,” she shared.

Pobre shared that they have also introduced a Community of Practice Toolkit on urban gardening, which is publicly available for free at their website. She also invited people to pre-order Makisawsaw Recipes x Ideas: Community Gardens Editions, a collection of over 70 plant-based recipes from various chefs and urban growers in the country. All proceeds of the cookbook sales will go into supporting the Food Today, Food Tomorrow initiative.

***

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From Our Partner

Media Release from OML Center: International climate science and reporting experts share knowledge with Filipino communicators

Media Release from OML Center: International climate science and reporting experts share knowledge with Filipino communicators

A series of exclusive webinars featured a roster of international experts who shared knowledge and tips that will help participants become better climate communicators and advocates. 

 

During the twice-weekly sessions that lasted for one and a half months, climatologists, oceanographers, visual storytellers, and researchers shared their insights that benefitted fellows of the Climate Media Labs. 

Subsumed under the Balangay Project of the Oscar M. Lopez Center, the Labs have featured 22 experts based both here and abroad. 

Among these experts include Lourdes Tibig, lead author of the Intergovernmental Panel (IPCC) on Climate Change Special Report on the Ocean and the Cryosphere in a Changing Climate; Dr. Laura David, the first Filipina among the Philippines’ six oceanographers; Dr. Anthony Leiserowitz, the founder and director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, Chris Wright, the founder and managing director of Climate Tracker, and others. 

During the Labs’ first session held early September, an expert talked about the importance of holding meaningful conversations with communities affected by impacts of climate change. 

“Sometimes, it’s very tempting to go to a community and lecture them all about climate change,” said Dr. Laurice Jamero, a contributing author of the recently released Working Group I contribution to the Sixth Assessment Reporter of the IPCC. “But first of all, you have to look at their past disaster experiences, their existing development problems, and their existing coping capacities.”

Using this approach, Dr. Jamero said that she started with a community’s “experiences and actual observations” when introducing the concept of climate change and its impacts. 

She once conducted research on an island in Bohol that experienced tidal flooding for the first time owing to land subsidence in the aftermath of an earthquake in 2013. 

“Although this was an event that was triggered by land subsidence, our study tried to use it as an analogy for what the future might look like for other small islands around the world that are projected to be affected by sea level rise,” Dr. Jamero said.

The lecture of Dr. Jamero was preceded by the one from Ms. Tibig, who gave participants a brief refresher course on the basics of climate science. 

The participants, belonging to ten groups located across the Philippines, are all recipients of the Umalohokan Fellowships that entitled them to attend the two-hour, twice-weekly Climate Media Labs. 

While the ten groups were all considered fellows, eight were further qualified to receive P35,000 each as part of the OML Center’s Umalohokan Grants, which is named after the town criers that spread the news in pre-colonial Philippines. 

The seed grant was intended to help teams “conduct a climate communications study on the knowledge, perceptions, values, behavior, and other meaning-making factors to sway public opinion and inspire climate action,” the OML Center said on its website about the project. 

Climate story pitches submitted by the fellows range from narrating the stories of a women’s group working to protect coral reefs in Camiguin Island in Mindanao to the stories of residents living in small islands currently threatened by rising sea levels.

Once the Climate Media Labs are finished, the OML Center, through the Balangay Media Project, will release an additional P70,000 to five teams with the best media blitz plan to implement their campaigns. The two teams which failed to receive the initial seed grants can still catch up to be part of the five, according to Perpi A. Tiongson, Associate Director of the OML Center. 

Another final grant of P150,000 awaits the team with the most creative and successful media blitz, the OMLC said. 

The Climate Media Labs, the Umalohokan Fellowships and the Umalohokan Grants are all subsumed under the Balangay Media Project, which seeks to create an ecosystem of journalists, communicators, and advocates to cover underreported climate issues on the ground. 

***

This is a media release from the Oscar M. Lopez Center for Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Management Foundation, Inc. (OML Center).

The Climate Reality Project Philippines is a media partner for the OML Center’s Balangay Media Project.

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Eleventh Hour at the Manila Bulletin

Eleventh Hour: Amadeo Coffee farmers fighting a lesser-known enemy

Eleventh Hour: Amadeo Coffee farmers fighting a lesser-known enemy

By Justin Paolo Interno

Farmers in the coffee capital may be fighting an enemy they never knew.

Amid the rising demand for artisan coffee and other coffee products in the Metro, most of the coffee beans available to us are those coming from as far as Davao. What really happened to the country’s coffee capital—Amadeo, Cavite—that is, geographically speaking, 24 times closer? I’ve had the rare opportunity to get a grasp of the situation from the coffee farmers in Amadeo while working as a research assistant in the quaint town last year.

The biggest problem coffee farmers had in Amadeo was that plants had become unproductive despite meaningful interventions, and so they had to adapt by cultivating other cash crops for livelihood.

Amadeo farmers used to be very proud of their harvest and boast about producing great quality coffee beans back in the ’90s. In recent years though, coffee farmers were frustrated and helpless as their cropping patterns were almost always disrupted by sudden bursts in temperature. In fact, one season, upon celebrating their trees finally reproducing, the temperature spiked leaving the flowers burnt! A year’s worth of harvest, gone, just like that.

In our conversations, they admit that the town’s coffee industry is dying and that a mural in Amadeo’s entry point would be the best way to remember the once glorious coffee industry in their town. These coffee farmers would point fingers at ageing shrubs, worsening acidity, land conversion, government aid mismatch, or decrease in younger workforce. They did not, however, explicitly mention any blame associated with climate change.

I was surprised, although I honestly have expected this scenario. In the past years, climate change still remains a buzzword for some Filipinos, more so in rural areas and remote communities. A number would even think that it is as simple as changing weather conditions day by day. What’s more saddening is that some still do not believe it exists at all.  

The concept of climate change remained out of Amadeo farmers’ common interests; they somehow know how to adapt to its varying circumstances. They may tend to intercrop some other species like bananas or coconut with their coffee to control their farms’ microclimate or put planks against their trees to anticipate unexpectedly strong typhoons and pray while the winds destroy them. But they can only do so much. Indeed, they may be fighting an enemy they never knew.

It was climate change that disrupted their cropping patterns.

It was climate change that burnt their potential harvests.

It was climate change that was threatening the coffee industry in Amadeo.

And maybe, just maybe, they would’ve fought better if they knew.

Is there really nothing else that could be done? I know there is. It is in our hands.

***

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Justin Paolo Interno is a Climate Reality Leader trained during the 2020 Global Training. He is currently an information officer at the Agricultural Training Institute. He also serves as the executive director of ANAHAW Laguna, a youth-led organization advocating for agriculture and environmentalism for community development in the province of Laguna. A licensed agriculturist and an extension practitioner, he creates digital content highlighting the agricultural industry, including its environmental aspect.

ABOUT ELEVENTH HOUR

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

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

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aprille Roselle Vince Juanillo is a Climate Reality Leader trained in 2020. She is an active community leader and communications practitioner with rich experience in organizational development, program management, legislation, and formal and non-formal writing. She has been with the Association of Young Environmental Journalists (AYEJ) since its inception and served as the pioneering vice-president. Straight out of college, she worked with AYEJ as a training specialist for environmental writing education focused on climate change resilience and adaptation. She presently serves as the organization’s program officer. 

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. 

Categories
Press Releases

Open call for creative expression for climate action: When Is Now?

Open call for creative expression for climate action: When Is Now?

Quezon City – Calling established and emerging poets, seasoned or aspiring climate advocates, or anyone willing to write about time, the planet, and diverse forms of life! 

Join When Is Now?—an open, evolving call for creative expression to demand urgent climate action! It is an open collaboration that seeks to create interweaving lines of poetry into a web that stretches across the planet, asking “When?” and demanding “Now.”

Organized by the Agam Agenda, the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF), and the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC), with support from The Climate Reality Project Philippines, this global creative movement aims to ramp up action in the upcoming 26th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP26) and beyond. The initiative is steered by poet, climate envoy for the Marshall Islands, and CVF Ambassador for Culture Kathy Jetn̄il-Kijiner.

Who can join When Is Now?

Anyone can join When Is Now! It’s an open, evolving call for creative expression and collaboration to demand for urgent climate action. All you need is a seed of an idea, a string of words, and your willingness to share your experience as well as acknowledge and respond to others’ experiences of the climate crisis. Everyone is encouraged to tend to the poem seeds of people living in other parts of the world.

How can I participate in When Is Now?

Visit whenisnow.org to submit your poems and seeds of creative climate action in many different forms. Prompts and submission guidelines may be found on the Submission Form.

You may also respond to poems that have already been exhibited. From the exhibition space,  choose a poem or image that moves you, and then create your response. You may include lines from other contributions in your own poem or visual creations. All together, we will be interweaving lines of poetry into a web that stretches across the planet, asking “When?”, and demanding, “Now.”

How can I submit my work?

Go to the When Is Now Submission Form and upload your files to contribute. The team will confirm receipt of your work and notify you once your contribution has been accepted and published on the website.

Where will my work appear and will I be credited for it?

Your work will appear on whenisnow.org and may appear on the social media platforms of the CVF and Agam Agenda. Because When Is Now is an open collaboration built through linked poetry, your lines of poetry/ imagery/ prose may appear in the work of other contributing writers and artists. The organizers will guarantee proper attribution of your work when exhibited on When Is Now, Agam Agenda, and CVF platforms. While you retain copyright of your work, please be aware that contributing to When Is Now will mean making your submitted works available for anyone else to freely share and adapt your work.

Share these seeds of creative climate action! Tag us @agamagenda on social media. Use the hashtag #WhenIsNow.

I create art in different forms and modes of expression, such as painting, music, and performance. How can I contribute?

While When Is Now highlights poetry as an accessible and moving form of expression, other forms of artistic expression can be submitted. Feel free to respond to the call through music, visual arts, performance art, and more!

How will my participation contribute to climate action?

Your participation will help widen the conversation on climate change through poetry and art and amplify the demands of those who are most vulnerable to the climate crisis. Together, poems, murals, and other seeds of creative climate action will urge world leaders to act on the ecological emergency before us. The more people speak out on the climate crisis in creative ways, the more we can demand systemic changes. Beyond this, your contribution may be the seed that accompanies another person in another place on the difficult terrain of discovering new ways to survive and thrive in our beloved home.

***

About Agam Agenda

The Agam Agenda is a dynamic, shape-shifting platform for creative, trans-disciplinary collaboration designed to grow and contribute to fluid networks of climate-aware writers, artists, scientists, youth, and campaigners.

About Climate Vulnerable Forum

The Climate Vulnerable Forum is an international partnership of countries highly vulnerable to a warming planet. The Forum serves as a South-South cooperation platform for participating governments to act together to deal with global climate change.

About Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities

The Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities is an international non-government group advancing fair climate policy and low carbon, climate-resilient development. Based in the Philippines, it is engaged with the wider international climate and energy policy arena, particularly in Asia. It is recognized for its role in helping advance effective global climate action and the Paris climate agreement.