Climate Change & Adaptation — Gaia Discovery

Gaia Discovery

Climate Change Impact on ASEAN Food Security

This NTS Issues Brief is based on the proceedings of the Expert Group Meeting on the Impact of Climate Change on ASEAN Food Security held in June 2013. The Meeting called for higher priority to be given to research on climate shifts at national and local scales, as well as greater focus on agricultural R&D. It also highlighted the need for resource and knowledge inputs from actors throughout food value chains in the region.

Click here to read the NTS Issues Brief

Philippines Needs To Act On Climate Change Now

More storm surges in Metro Manila. Unending flash floods deluge Central Luzon. Devastating landslides bury communities in Compostela Valley and Baguio City.Small islands erase from the map. What next? By Henrylito D. Tacio

Manilla July 8 2013.

The Philippines has been hit harder than most countries in SE Asia by devastating freak weather events

Super typhoons come one after another. Less rice served in the table. Fish is no longer poor man’s source of meat. Are these scenarios farfetched and unlikely?

Not so, according to the newly-released World Bank report, “Getting a Grip on Climate Change in the Philippines."

“The Philippines is the third most vulnerable country to weather-related extreme events, earthquakes, and sea level rise.

The country’s exposure to extreme weather conditions adversely affects people’s lives, especially those in high-risk urban and coastal areas. 

Food security is threatened as land and nursery areas for plant, trees, and fisheries are affected by climate change,” said Secretary Mary Ann Lucille Sering of the Climate Change Commission (CCC). 

Although climate change affects everyone, it is the poor who are generally affected.

“Informal settlers, which account for 45 percent of the Philippines’ urban population, are particularly vulnerable to floods due to less secure infrastructure, reduced access to clean water, and lack of health insurance,” the World Bank report pointed out As disaster-prone country, the Philippines is already feeling the impacts of climate change. 

“By virtue of its location, climate, and topography, the Philippines is exposed to a range of climate-related hazards,” the report said.

“Sixteen of its provinces are among the top 50 most vulnerable regions in Southeast Asia.

Some of the climate-related impacts which are projected to increase in the coming decades: 

  • More intense typhoons, whose storm surges will be superimposed on higher sea levels.  Storm surges are projected to affect about 14 percent of the total population and 42 percent of the coastal population.
  • A 30-centimeter sea level rise by 2040 is expected to reduce rice production in the region’s major rice growing areas by about 2.6 million tons per year.
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  • Warming oceans and ocean acidification affect coral reefs, which serve as important feeding and spawning grounds for many fish species that support the livelihoods of fisher folk.

As the country is vulnerable to the effects of climate change, the report urges the government to implement “the measures needed to protect itself against ever-increasing climate change and variability.

The report cited the current Philippines Development Plan, which aims to accelerate annual economic growth of the country to 7-8 percent.

“Unless it is planned and carried out with accommodation to future climate change in mind, the development plan could be locked into infrastructure development, land use changes and urbanization processes that are more vulnerable to climate risks,” the report explained.

Since the process of developing institutions to implement climate reforms can be lengthy, the report suggested: “The time to start acting is now.

Unregulated clearance is a possible contributor to climate change

Scientists attribute climate change to the rise in global temperature brought about by increased emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. Increased emissions of these gases have been attributed to human activities such as burning of fossil fuels in motor vehicles and power plants, degradation of forests, and change in land use.

Globally, the Philippines is a minor global contributor to climate change. But it is the third most vulnerable country to weather-related extreme events, earthquakes, and sea level rise on a worldwide basis.

“The Philippines’ greenhouse emissions rank in the top 25 percent of low and middle income countries, with significant increases projected in the coming decades,” the report said.

“Emissions from the energy sector are projected to quadruple by 2030, and the transport sector is expected to double its emissions,” the report added.

In the report’s foreword, Sering reiterated: “For the Philippines to reduce poverty, accelerate economic growth, and create jobs, it is therefore necessary to address the country’s vulnerabilities to climate change. This can be accomplished by reducing the exposure and improving the adaptive capacity of communities are risk,” she pointed out. 

Brave Voices: Women Fighting North American Coal

Surface mining that blasts away mountain tops to reveal the underlying coal has turned many small West Virginian communities into ghost towns, literally inverting their eco-systems. Emissions from old coal smokestacks in Chicago create thick layers of dust and are believed to cause asthma. The voices of women in these communities is being brought to the forefront during two Gender and Climate Justice Tribunals, the first in the North America organised by the Feminist Task Force of the Global Call to Action Against Poverty.

Underground Forest (from 300 million years ago) Offers Climate Change Clues

Scientists and coal miners have discovered a huge fossilised forest in the United States that existed tens of millions of years before the dinosaurs. Studying the remains of this ecosystem, which was wiped out by flooding over 300 million years ago, could provide clues about modern climate change.

Dr Balgis Osman-Elasha: Co-Author of Report On How Climate Endangers Forests

There is no doubt Climate Change is changing our weather. But the effects could lead to increasing poverty, starvation, fewer industry jobs, less investment and increased danger from natural Hazards. Our edited extracts from the Global Assessment report: “Adaptation of Forests and People to Climate Change” from Dr. Balgis Osman-Elasha, lead author for International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) help explain the potential problems.

Use the Profit Motive to Fight Climate Change

(An article contributed by the British Prime Minister David Cameron to the Observer on the climate change talks currently taking place in Cancun.)Over the past twelve months we’ve seen the devastation that unchecked climate change could bring – floods in Pakistan, forest fires in Russia, mudslides in China. And yet over the same twelve months we’ve seen a growing despondency about international efforts to protect our planet. Copenhagen was a disappointment for everyone who cares about climate change. Though some important steps were taken, simply not enough progress was made. But today, as the world looks to Cancun, I want to argue that everyone who cares about climate change should take heart – because I believe there are three clear reasons to have hope for the future.

Philippines: A Hotspot for Climate Change

Manila, the country’s capital, is the most vulnerable province when it comes to climate change. That’s according to Dr. Herminia A. Francisco, director of the Singapore-based Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA). “In Southeast Asia, Manila ranks seventh,” Dr. Francisco told the participants of the climate change media workshop convened by the Philippine Network of Environmental Journalists, Inc. In 2009, EEPSEA made a detailed mapping assessment of seven countries in Asia, namely: Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. The assessment studied 590 subnational areas comprising 341 districts in Indonesia, 19 provinces in Cambodia, 17 provinces in Laos, 14 states in Malaysia, 74 provinces in the Philippines, 72 provinces in Thailand, and 53 provinces in Vietnam.