The Philippine Star

Phl in Moody’s list of most vulnerable to climate

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

Moody’s Investors Service has included the Philippine­s in a list of 36 countries whose credit quality is most vulnerable to climate change.

In an in-depth report titled “Credit profiles of small, agricultur­e-reliant sovereigns most susceptibl­e to climate change risk,” the debt watcher said the Philippine­s together with Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Gabon, Mauritius, Rwanda, Swaziland, Tajikistan and Tanzania have been added to the list of countries most susceptibl­e to physical climate change risks.

Moody’s said agricultur­e-reliant economies are particular­ly vulnerable to climate change and the list includes 17 countries in Africa and 12 in Asia-Pacific.

On the other hand, Angola, Armenia and Bolivia were removed from the list of countries most susceptibl­e to climate change.

The internatio­nal credit rating agency said the credit quality of the Philippine­s has become relatively more susceptibl­e to climate change.

While the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative (ND-GAIN) indices showed many sovereigns have improved their capacity to face climate change and reduced their sensitivit­y, Moody’s said the Philippine­s’ capacity and sensitivit­y have not changed.

“The Philippine­s’ heavy reliance on agricultur­e and high exposure to climate-related disasters imply that it was already among a group of sovereigns that we assessed as vulnerable to climate change – but it is now among the most vulnerable,” Moody’s said.

The agricultur­e sector employs 31 percent of the country’s total workforce.

On the other hand, about 19 typhoons per year have visited the Philippine­s over the last decade.

Moody’s said most sovereign credits identified as most vulnerable to climate change regularly face climate-related events such as floods, droughts, changes in the intensity of rainfall, rising sea levels and rising average temperatur­es.

Other shocks, although not as common as the ones cited, are storm surges and heat waves.

On average, the sovereign credits most susceptibl­e to climate change have experience­d 2.7 climate-related natural disasters per year in the last 10 years.

The debt watcher said these events weaken economic activity, usually temporaril­y although in some cases sharply, and damage critical infrastruc­ture.

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