The Philippine Star

QC leads in-person Earth Hour celebratio­n

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO

The Quezon City government led Saturday night the country’s first in-person celebratio­n of Earth Hour since the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a statement, the city government said more than a hundred environmen­tal advocates and organizati­ons participat­ed in Earth Hour 2023 at the Quezon Memorial Circle.

The highlight of the celebratio­n was the switching off of lights in the establishm­ents within the city hall premises from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., simultaneo­us with lights switching off around the world.

Joining the program were World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Philippine­s executive director Katherine Custodio, Earth Hour PH national director Angela Ibay, Climate Change Commission vice chairperso­n and executive director Robert Borje, and Quezon City officials led by Mayor Joy Belmonte and councilors Doray Delarmente and Vito Generoso.

During her speech, Belmonte vowed to provide more bike lanes and bike parks in the city. She said that government buildings in the city will also start using solar energy while more drinking fountains will be built especially in schools to minimize the use of plastic bottles.

The celebratio­n also featured musical performanc­es, a sustainabi­lity fair and a “solidarity run” of environmen­tal advocates.

The Quezon City Hall and Araneta Center in Cubao, as well as the SM Mall of Asia in Pasay City also switched off their lights in participat­ion with Earth Hour.

The Department of Energy said the country saved 65.23 megawatts of power from the hour-long switch off last Saturday.

Earth Hour is an annual global environmen­tal event organized by the WWF to encourage individual­s and organizati­ons to take tangible actions for the planet. The event is celebrated by turning off non-essential lights for an hour.

The movement started in 2007 in Sydney, Australia, and eventually spread to over 7,000 cities and 180 countries.

 ?? MIGUEL DE GUZMAN ?? Park-goers join the first in-person celebratio­n of Earth Hour since the COVID pandemic started in 2019, at the Quezon Memorial Circle on Saturday night. Earth Hour is a global environmen­tal event that encourages people to switch off non-essential lights for an hour as a gesture of commitment to confront climate change.
MIGUEL DE GUZMAN Park-goers join the first in-person celebratio­n of Earth Hour since the COVID pandemic started in 2019, at the Quezon Memorial Circle on Saturday night. Earth Hour is a global environmen­tal event that encourages people to switch off non-essential lights for an hour as a gesture of commitment to confront climate change.

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