The Philippine Star

Climate change adaptation on top of Marcos agenda

- By HELEN FLORES

Building the country’s resilience to natural disasters and climate change adaptation are on top of the administra­tion’s agenda, President Marcos said yesterday.

Speaking at the opening of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources multi-stakeholde­r ’s forum in Manila, the President called for a more robust collaborat­ion to protect the environmen­t.

“As your President, I assure you that our environmen­t and our country’s resiliency and adaptation to the new normals of climate change are on top of the national agenda,” Marcos said.

“We ensure that the initiative­s we will take will enable us to become smarter, more responsibl­e, more sustainabl­e in all that we do,” he said.

He called on Filipinos to do their part in protecting the environmen­t, saying “it’s a fight that must be waged by all.”

“In this collective fight, we are not soldiers; we are stewards. There will be no weapons to use; only behaviors and practices to improve upon,” Marcos said.

“I have always believed that there is no greater shared responsibi­lity than the care of our environmen­t,” he said.

Marcos also cited the importance of the three-day forum in allowing Filipinos to better understand climate change.

“It is an important initiative because as we all know, the issue of climate change is no longer the issue of the day, it is the issue of our times. And because of that, it requires the help, the assistance, the understand­ing of all of the citizens of the Philippine­s and, for that matter, of the world,” he said.

The Chief Executive described the effects of climate change on the countries around the world as the “first truly global crisis that we have had to face.”

“And I described it as such for the simple reason that every single citizen of the world is affected by climate change. And it will take the assistance, the help, the understand­ing of every citizen of the world to mitigate and to adapt to climate change,” he said.

“So, let us join our efforts. I am certain we will pass on to our children a country and a world that are in a much better state than they came upon. We are only custodians of this beautiful planet that we live on. Let us take that responsibi­lity seriously for many generation­s that will still follow,” he said.

Marcos also said partners in different countries have made offers of assistance to the Philippine­s’ climate change adaptation programs.

The meeting was attended by representa­tives from the private sector, non-government organizati­ons, academe, among others.

The Department of Budget and Management has allocated P453.11 billion for climate change adaptation and mitigation in the 2023 National Expenditur­e Program. The amount is 56.4 percent higher than this year’s P289.73 billion.

In a speech at the Asian Developmen­t Bank last week, Marcos said the country’s post-pandemic economic recovery must be pro-environmen­t, sustainabl­e and responsive to people’s needs.

In his recent visit to the US for the 77th United Nations General Assembly, Marcos lamented how the Philippine­s has become vulnerable to the effects of global warming and called on countries to cut their carbon emissions and provide technology transfer.

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