Manila Bulletin

APEC summit sets stage for climate action in Paris

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When Typhoon Haiyan slammed into the central Philippine­s two years ago, flattening entire villages and killing thousands, the country became a poster child for the havoc wrought by global warming and increasing­ly extreme weather.

French President Francoise Holland traveled early this year to the devastated town of Guiuan, ground zero of the strongest cyclone ever to make landfall, to show the world the damage and appeal for an ambitious deal at global climate change talks in Paris at the end of this month.

Leaders of the 21-member Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) forum gathered this week in Manila could help set the stage for greater progress in mitigating climate change ahead of the Nov. 30 Paris conference. It was at the summit of APEC leaders in Beijing last November that the world’s top polluters, the United States and China, agreed to more ambitious goals to cap the carbon dioxide emissions blamed for global warming.

That was an important step, but China and the US need to double or triple those efforts, said Saleem Huq, director of the Internatio­nal Center for Climate Change and Developmen­t in Bangladesh and an advisor to least developed countries in the U.N. climate change talks.

“They have to raise the level of their ambition definitely and if they can do that, the rest of the world will follow,” he said. Vulnerable countries such as the Philippine­s need to raise their voices urging them to do that, he said.

APEC host Philippine President Benigno Aquino urged faster and bolder change.

In the Philippine­s each year, 337 days are “heat stress” days, according to the World Health Organizati­on, making the country one of the world’s most vulnerable to climate catastroph­es.

“The message simply put is we all have to do the most that we can because this really is a situation where we are running out of time to be able to stop an irreversib­le situation,” Aquino told a conference of business leaders held on the sidelines of the APEC gathering.

Alan Bollard, executive director of the APEC Secretaria­t, said it is unclear if the leaders will specifical­ly discuss the upcoming Paris talks. But their agenda includes various initiative­s such as energy efficiency, meeting a 2015 deadline to cut tariffs on 54 “green goods” including solar panels and wind turbines to below five percent, and promoting carbon “model cities.”

APEC members are also studying ways to cope better with increasing­ly frequent and severe typhoons, flooding, droughts and other climate changerela­ted disasters.

Senior disaster management officials at a meeting in the central Philippine­s in September introduced a new APEC framework on disaster risk reduction to guide policy coordinati­on within APEC, help prevent disasters and improve preparedne­ss, response, rehabilita­tion and rebuilding.

Natural disasters cost APEC members more than $100 billion over the past decade.

In a study of world cities threatened by natural disasters, risk analysis company Verisk Maplecroft included eight Philippine cities among the 10 most exposed to hazards such as earthquake­s, typhoons, severe storms and landslides. Manila was ranked fourth, behind provincial cities, Tuguegarao, 2nd, and Lucena, 3rd.

Weak capacity to manage, respond and recover from natural disasters is compoundin­g the risks, the report said.

Earthquake­s and volcanoes are beyond human control. Global warming, less so.

Forty-three of the countries most vulnerable to climate change met in Manila last week and urged government­s to commit to keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees centigrade, saying the 2 degree centigrade global goal will would not ensure survival of island nations that may be inundated.

“We recognize the urgency for an ambitious, universal, legally binding, dynamic and durable agreement,” the Climate Vulnerable Forum said in a statement. (AP)

 ??  ?? In this Feb. 27, 2015 file photo, French President Francois Hollande (center in dark suit) looks at the Immaculate Concepcion Church which was damaged by typhoon Haiyan in November, 2013 during his tour of the typhoon-ravaged Guiuan township, in...
In this Feb. 27, 2015 file photo, French President Francois Hollande (center in dark suit) looks at the Immaculate Concepcion Church which was damaged by typhoon Haiyan in November, 2013 during his tour of the typhoon-ravaged Guiuan township, in...

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