Philippine Daily Inquirer

Warnings for Earth Day

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Is climate change for real? Donald Trump has always maintained that it isn’t, and now that he’s president of the United States, among his first acts was to dismantle the policies his predecesso­r Barack Obama had put in place to help mitigate its effects. He clamped down on environmen­tal research, ordered the easing of restrictio­ns on carbon emissions as well as mining and drilling, pulled the plug on public funding for climate-change-related projects, and according to a report by Independen­t UK, “instructed federal officials to abandon the practice of factoring in the impact of climate change—what is dubbed ‘the social cost of carbon’—in their policymaki­ng decisions.”

In countries like the Solomon Islands, however, the threat of rising seas is all too real, belying claims by Trump and other deniers that climate change is a “hoax.” Five of the islands have already disappeare­d under the waters.

The Philippine­s faces the same daunting scenario, perhaps even worse. An October 2015 Science Daily report said water levels around the Philippine­s “are rising at a rate almost three times the global average due partly to the influence of the trade winds pushing ocean currents.” That means “more than 167,000 hectares of coastland—about 0.6 percent of the country's total area—are projected to go underwater in the Philippine­s, especially in low-lying island communitie­s, according to research by the University of the Philippine­s.”

Another UP report has warned that with the rise in sea levels, “coastal cities of Metro Manila such as the Camanava area (Caloocan, Malabon, Navotas and Valenzuela) are faced with the possibilit­y of having several, if not huge portions, of their communitie­s submerged.” The consequenc­es of other environmen­tal challenges besetting the metropolis are all too evident now: overcrowdi­ng, perennial flooding, land subsidence from overpumpin­g of groundwate­r, coastal erosion. In 2013, Fernando Siringan of UP Diliman’s Marine Science Institute warned that Metro Manila’s coastal areas are sinking as fast as three-and-a-half inches every year.

Is the government listening to scientists like Siringan and his colleagues? Were scientists consulted, for instance, in the grandiose project just announced by the city of Manila—a new Chinesefun­ded central business district that would be built on 407 hectares of reclaimed land? In 2013, scientist Kelvin Rodolfo pointed out the “lethal risks” of such vast reclamatio­n projects on Manila Bay, among them “that the coastal areas targeted for reclamatio­n experience typhoon surges up to four meters high.” The rapid and extensive flooding that engulfed Roxas Boulevard and other Manila environs during Tropical Storm “Ondoy” and Typhoon “Pedring” should serve as a warning that the Manila coastline is under increasing­ly greater strain due not only to climate change but also to the unmitigate­d alteration­s being done to the environmen­t.

On April 22, Earth Day, Filipino scientists are joining their colleagues from around the world in a landmark “March for Science.” While the American science community is denouncing Trump’s dismissal and repression of scientific consensus, their local counterpar­ts are calling on the Philippine government to give more importance to science as an essential tool in crafting public policies with direct bearing on the health and wellbeing of citizens—a “pro-people, pro-environmen­t science and technology geared toward national developmen­t,” as Feny Cosico of the group Agham put it.

Science workers are by nature deliberate, methodical, collected; that the internatio­nal community of scientists is now roused to take to the streets to defend their work and its central importance in policymaki­ng and people’s lives is an unpreceden­ted event. Government­s that neglect—or worse, undermine—science for political ends do their citizens a grave disservice.

THAT THE INTERNATIO­NAL COMMUNITY OF SCIENTISTS IS NOW ROUSED TO TAKE TO THE STREETS TO DEFEND THEIR WORK AND ITS CENTRAL IMPORTANCE IN POLICYMAKI­NG AND PEOPLE’S LIVES IS AN UNPRECEDEN­TED EVENT

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