QUEZON CITY, Philippines (1 March 2022) – Greenpeace Philippines today renewed the call for urgent climate action following yesterday’s release of the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The Working Group II report of the IPCC is the most comprehensive assessment to date regarding climate impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability. The report lays out, in sobering detail, how severe the impacts of climate change already are, causing widespread losses and damages to people and ecosystems around the world, projected to escalate with every bit of further warming.

Since the previous assessment, climate risks are appearing faster and will get more severe sooner. The report finds that mortality from floods, drought, and storms was a staggering 15 times higher in highly vulnerable regions during the last decade, compared to regions with very low vulnerability. The report also acknowledges the crucial importance of fighting the interconnected climate and nature crisis together. 

“Inaction, or even half-hearted action, is no longer an option for the next president of the Philippines,” Greenpeace Campaigner Virginia Benosa-Llorin said. “The report says that the risks are far greater than originally thought. And the reality is that, even as we have tried to cope, we are still not prepared.”

“We need to start asking our future leaders what they plan to do during the six years allotted to them at this crucial juncture when the climate crisis urgently needs to be addressed. Without urgency, and without a bold, coherent plan of action, Filipinos stand to lose more loved ones, homes, and livelihoods,” she added.

In Asia, IPCC identified key risks as: 

  • Urban infrastructure damage and impacts on human well-being and health due to flooding, especially in coastal cities and settlements
  • Biodiversity loss and habitat shifts as well as associated disruptions in dependent human systems across freshwater, land, and ocean ecosystems
  • More frequent, extensive coral bleaching and subsequent coral mortality induced by ocean warming and acidification, sea-level rise, marine heatwaves and resource extraction
  • Decline in coastal fishery resources due to sea-level rise, decrease in precipitation in some parts and increase in temperature
  • Risk to food and water security due to increased temperature extremes, rainfall variability and drought

The report also affirms that while the climate crisis will affect everyone, it will disproportionately impact those who are already vulnerable and marginalized. Greenpeace maintains that this is a sign of deep injustices that need to be urgently fixed, both at the local and global levels. Those who have caused this problem the most must be held accountable for the damage they have caused, and for preventing any future harm, loss and damage to those in vulnerable conditions.

“Climate justice needs to be front and center of the policy agenda of the next administration, especially as the report is telling us that we need to prepare for the worst. We need to ensure robust, inclusive, sufficiently resourced plans on adaptation and climate-resilient development that meet the needs of the most vulnerable, as well as ambitious mitigation action plans that would keep us within 1.5C, and save lives and our planet’s health.” said Llorin.

As the IPCC concludes: 

“The cumulative scientific evidence is unequivocal: Climate change is a threat to human well-being and planetary health. Any further delay in concerted anticipatory global action on adaptation and mitigation will miss a brief and rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a liveable and sustainable future for all. (very high confidence)”

See our independent briefing with Key Takeaways from the IPCC WGII report on Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability (AR6 WG2). 

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[1] Greenpeace Philippines is renewing its calls for the current and future administration to: 

  • Hold fossil fuel companies accountable for the climate crisis and call on other countries to do the same. As one of the most vulnerable to adverse climate impacts, the Philippines should be at the forefront of this call for climate justice.
  • Ensure rapid transition to renewable energy. The Philippines must urgently revise the Philippine Energy Plan and include a phase-out of fossil fuels. The Philippine government must target 50% of RE in the energy mix by 2030, and block expansion to fossil gas and stop plans to adopt dangerous nuclear energy. 
  • Ratchet up the country’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC). At the moment, the country has promised a 75% carbon emissions reduction from 2020 to 2030, but the unconditional target is only at 2.72%. 
  • Ensure the climate emergency declaration is followed through with a coherent climate plan. A year after the House of Representatives adopted resolutions declaring climate emergency, we still do not have a coherent, national-level solution to the climate crisis. The government needs to make this the central policy of the state as Filipinos’ lives are at stake as trajectory shows that we will overshoot the 1.5°C red line. Without a whole-of-society approach to address the climate emergency, future damages will be more extreme than what we are experiencing today. This also means ensuring coherence between government agencies and stronger coordination with civil society. 

[2] The Working Group II contribution to the IPCC Sixth Assessment will be followed by the contribution of the Working Group III in April, which will assess ways to mitigate climate change. The full story of the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report will then be brought together by the Synthesis Report in October.

Media contact: 

Angeli Cantillana

Communications Campaigner, Greenpeace Southeast Asia – Philippines 

[email protected] | +63 998 595 9733