You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Vacation - Ferien


Yes, I am still in vacation.
Ja, ich bin immer noch im Urlaub.

Where? Wo?

Of course: in the Philippines!
Natürlich: auf den Philippinen!


Beach, sand, sun, good food, relax...
Strand, Sand, Sonne, gutes Essen, ausruhen...






I will be back soon with a lot of new posts and impressions of my life as an expat in the Philippines.

Ich bin bald wieder zurück mit vielen neuen Artikeln und Impressionen von meinem Leben als Auswanderer auf den Philippinen.

Ralph-Will, Shuvee-Klang, Mika-Brent make final duos of ‘PBB Celebrity Collab Edition’


Singer Klarisse de Guzman (right) and host-actress Shuvee Etrata are the final duo for the 'Pinoy Big Brother Celebrity Collab Edition.' Screenshot from Pinoy Big Brother

Kathleen A. Llemit - Philstar.com

June 8, 2025 | 12:27pm


MANILA, Philippines — "Academic rivals" Ralph de Leon and Shuvee Etrata have chosen their “unexpected” final duos for the upcoming finale of the reality show "Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Collab Edition."

Tagged as “academic rivals” by fans for their consistent competitive streaks and frequent top finishes in house tasks, Ralph and Shuvee were granted the privilege of choosing their final duos for the show's big night.

This edition’s format allows the public to vote for the winning pair, with one star from ABS-CBN and one from GMA-7 emerging as the “big winners.”

It also marks the first time that "Pinoy Big Brother" features GMA-7 talents, as the reality show celebrates its 20th anniversary since premiering on ABS-CBN.

ABS-CBN and Star Magic talent Ralph surprised fans by choosing Will Ashley as his final duo, instead of AZ Martinez, the GMA-7 star widely paired with him in a love team.

“'Di pa nagkakaroon ng opportunity to become a duo with Will. Naka-duo na si AZ before,” Ralph said during his interview with Big Brother or Kuya in the confession room. 

Like the fates of former evictees in past “PBB” editions, Ralph successfully re-entered the house with the help of his fans and online polls after exiting it briefly in May. The other housemates who were evicted but were given a chance to enter the house in past editions included Paco Evangelista and Wendy Valdez. 

GMA-7 and Sparkle artist Shuvee Etrata also surprised fans as she picked her final duo as the Top 2 of the final duo formation task. 

Kiana V’s Falling Out is an honest anthem about self-worth

 






Jerry Donato - The Philippine Star 

June 10, 2025 | 12:00am


Kiana V has released Falling Out, which is about breaking free from a bad cycle and discovering the importance of self-worth. It is based on a personal experience and quiet confessions of those around her. The singer-songwriter says the tune is quite similar to previous releases and still in the R&B space.


Kiana V has recently revealed her latest recording output, titled Falling Out, signaling also the release of other tunes that comprise a forthcoming studio album.


In a virtual group chat, attended by media outlets including The STAR, Kiana talked about the nitty-gritty of Falling Out, from the inspiration for its main theme to the description of the song’s sonic aspect.


“I would say in terms of genre, it is still quite similar, it’s still in the R&B space,” said she, comparing Falling Out to previous releases. “Musically, with the instruments, we had a few more live instruments on this one and in terms of concepts, I don’t know, guys, if you listen to a lot of my music but I’ve found that I like exploring this problem of letting go of a bad cycle.”


The persona in the song, as one may put it, is in a dilemma whether to stay in a challenging relational and romantic situation or walk away from it.


“But I think that I’ve been more honest with this one. I’m speaking directly, like as the singer, I’m speaking directly to whoever, you know, I’m directing the lyrics to and I’m just being honest,” shared she. “Like, let’s look at the situation for what it is, let’s not try to sugarcoat it and just end it here before we make a bigger mess.”


Her voice is a representation of a particular kind of woman who needs some time for introspection.


Kiana said she was inspired by the women portrayed on ‘90s television, encompassing their difference to today’s women.


“If you’re treated poorly and we respect our own boundaries, and we’re out. We’re like, you know what, I don’t have time for this,” said Kiana about the common thread that connects Falling Out to the soon-to-be-released songs on the album. “I’m gonna go but the women in ‘90s movies and television, they’ve kinda stayed a little hopeless (romantic) and like the hopeless romantic side of it.”


“So, I’m quite intrigued by how they’re always so consumed by like this man and then the next man, and who is the next man and all of this. So, I think that’s really what is going to keep, like what connects all the other tracks on this album,” added she.


Since she’s married, this story that she has been pursuing “may shift over the next two years,” said the artist, and a new one will come into view that reflects bits and pieces of her life and those who surround her.


“That’s kind of really the vibe that I wanna go far,” said Kiana of the Falling Out chilling road trip feel during the press conference. “I wanted this to mirror that feeling of when you’re hanging out with all your friends and you’re just talking and you’re sharing stories because a lot of my friends are still single, and they’re dating and there was a point when we were all, you know, making tsika and making tsismis and they were talking about situations of theirs that mirrored something that I had gone through in the past, like almost exactly the same and I found that so interesting and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, we’re all in different phases of our lives now, and it’s so crazy that we shared this story even if it’s with different people.’”


“So, that’s what really inspired me and that’s when it hit me that just this group of girls, we’ve all been through the same thing and I felt like I had to write a song about that moment, and with that realization.”


Aside from the fact that it should get the attention of a listener, a lead single sets the tone or feel of an album and this piece of information from her publicity team may somehow hint at what to anticipate from it.


They say that Falling Out is “rooted in personal experience and quiet confessions from those around her” and it “offers a raw and honest reflection on the cycles we often find ourselves in when self-worth is neglected. It’s a poignant introduction to what promises to be Kiana’s most introspective and evolved body of work yet.”


The creative life of singer-songwriters like Kiana is also enriched in doing collaborations with fellow artists.


For her, there’s a long list of artists she would love to work with in Manila. “No. 1, of course, would be Kyla. I grew up listening to her music and I used to copy all of her runs and I always make a joke that she’s like one of my vocal coaches just because of how much I listened to her,” said she.


“Moira, she’s a very good friend of mine and I love her songwriting and there’s also Denise Julia, whom I love her music, Jason Dhakal, Juan Karlos, there’s so many. Manila is like booming and that makes me so happy, but just to name a few,” concluded she.


(Please listen to Falling Out on Spotify, Apple Music, deezer and Amazon Music.)

„Hitzeintermezzo“ deutet sich in Bayern an: Ab diesem Tag sind 30 Grad drin


Regnerisch starteten die Pfingstferien in Bayern vielerorts. Die Temperaturen wurden dem Juni am ersten Wochenende nicht gerecht. Jetzt steht die Wetterwende kurz bevor.

München – Die Pfingstferien in Bayern starteten nass und alles andere als sommerlich. Mit Höchstwerten von nur bis zu 20 Grad präsentierte sich das Wetter in Bayern deutlich kühler als im langjährigen Mittel, wie der Deutsche Wetterdienst mitteilte. Immer wieder zogen Regenwolken über den Freistaat, die regional sogar Gewitter mit sich brachten.  

Wetterwende in Bayern steht kurz bevor: Sommerliche 30 Grad kommen

Das soll allerdings nicht die ganzen Ferien so bleiben. Sommerfans können sich auf eine Wetterwende freuen. Am Sonntag traf die Wüstenluft bereits Spanien und sorgte dort im Süden des Landes für Temperaturen über 40 Grad. Mit im Gepäck: Saharastaub. Die Staubwolke breitet sich im Laufe der Woche weiter aus, wie Meteorologe Jan Schenk von The Weather Channel in seiner neuesten Prognose erklärt. „Richtig starke, richtig heiße Sahara-Luft kommt zu uns“, ist sich Schenk sicher. Diese sorge für Hitzewellen bereits ab Donnerstag. 

Die Wüstenluft, die nach Bayern kommt, hat Saharastaub im Gepäck.
Die Wüstenluft, die nach Bayern kommt, hat Saharastaub im Gepäck. © IMAGO/Zooner/DWD

Auch der DWD sagt ab Donnerstag Temperaturen zwischen 25 und 30 Grad für Bayern voraus. Das „sommerliche Niveau“ scheint sich endlich durchzusetzen. „Nur an den östlichen Mittelgebirgen bleibt es noch etwas kühler“, so die Experten.

Hitzewelle trifft Bayern am Wochenende

Reicht es für eine Hitzewelle? „Zum Wochenende verlagert sich der Hochdruckschwerpunkt voraussichtlich etwas weiter nach Osten. Damit nimmt auch allmählich die Gewittergefahr wieder zu“, so DWD-Meteorologe Nico Bauer. „Vor allem am Freitag und Samstag häufig schweißtreibende Höchstwerte von über 30 Grad zu erwarten.“ Im Südwesten sogar bis 36 Grad. 

Danach würden erneut Unwetter über Süddeutschland ziehen. Dadurch gehen die Temperaturen zum Montag wieder zurück, das „Hitzeintermezzo“ scheint laut Bauer demnach nur von kurzer Dauer zu sein.

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Low pressure area enters PAR, may strengthen into first storm of 2025—PAGASA


 

(PHOTO: PAGASA FACEBOOK PAGE)


By Jel Santos

Published Jun 6, 2025 11:25 am

 | 

Updated Jun 6, 2025 02:08 pm

A low pressure area (LPA) entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) early Friday morning, June 6, and may develop into the first tropical cyclone of 2025 within the next 24 hours, state weather bureau Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said.

“Nakapasok na po ng Philippine Area of Responsibility yung ating mino-monitor na low pressure area dito sa may Pacific Ocean as of 2 a.m. (The low pressure area we’ve been monitoring over the Pacific Ocean entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility as of 2 a.m.),” PAGASA weather specialist Benison Estareja reported.

As of 3 a.m., the agency said the system was spotted 945 kilometers east of the Visayas. 

Etareja noted that the chance of it intensifying into a tropical depression is now “moderate.”


“Base sa ating latest analysis po, kung kahapon ay mababa pa ‘yung tyansa na ito ay maging isang ganap na bagyo, ngayon ay moderate na po yung tyansa o katamtamang tyansa (Based on our latest analysis, if yesterday the chance of it becoming a full-fledged storm was low, today the chance is moderate),” he said.


Should the system develop into a tropical depression by Saturday or Sunday, it will be named “Auring”—the first named storm of both June and the year 2025.


Rain expected in multiple regions


Estareja said the LPA is expected to move closer to the Bicol Region and Eastern Visayas on Friday, and approach land by the weekend.


“So possible pang mabago ang scenario na nakikita natin for this weather disturbance pero ang sure tayo magpapaulan ito in many areas of Bicol Region, Visayas, and CARAGA Region (The scenario for this disturbance may still change, but what’s certain is that it will bring rain to many areas in the Bicol Region, Visayas, and CARAGA Region),” the weather specialist said.


He added that as the system moves closer to land, it will enhance the southwest monsoon or habagat, bringing rains not just to Luzon but also to western portions of the Visayas and Mindanao.


Monsoon rains in Metro Manila, Luzon


“Ngayong araw po, dahil sa epekto ng southwest monsoon at trough of the low pressure area, mataas ang tyansa ng ulan sa Metro Manila, CALABARZON, Bicol Region at MIMAROPA (Today, due to the effects of the southwest monsoon and the LPA’s trough, there is a high chance of rain in Metro Manila, CALABARZON, Bicol Region, and MIMAROPA),” Estareja said.


PAGASA said light to moderate rains, occasionally heavy, are expected especially in Oriental Mindoro and Occidental Mindoro, where residents are warned to be alert for possible flooding and landslides.


Meanwhile, the bureau said Northern and Central Luzon will experience partly cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated thunderstorms.


“May tyansa pa rin po ng mga pulo-pulong pag-ulan at pagkidlat, paglukog dulot po iyan ng habagat at wala namang kinalaman sa low pressure area (There’s still a chance of isolated rain and thunderstorms due to the southwest monsoon, and these are not related to the low pressure area),” the weather specialist clarified.

Muslims celebrate Eid'l Adha in Zamboanga City


 

MUSLIMS gather at the Joaquin Enriquez Memorial Sports Complex in Zamboanga City for their congregational prayers in celebration of Eid’l Adha or the Feast of Sacrifice on June 6.  (City Hall PIO)

By Liza Jocson

Published Jun 6, 2025 03:04 pm


ZAMBOANGA CITY – Thousands of Muslim residents celebrated Eid’l Adha or the Feast of Sacrifice by participating in community prayers and visiting family and relatives here on Friday, June 6.

A big group trooped to the Joaquin Enriquez Memorial Sports Complex in the morning to participate in congregational prayers.

Similar gatherings were held in hundreds of mosques all over the city.

In his message, Mayor John Dalipe asked all Muslims to also honor the diverse traditions being celebrated in Zamboanga City as they mark this significant occasion in the Muslim religious calendar.

“May this occasion bring peace, prosperity, and unity to our beloved city,” Dalipe said.

Republic Act 9849 declares the 10th day of Zhul Hijja, the 12th month of the Islamic calendar, a national holiday for the observance of Eid’l Adha.

Siquijor under state of calamity due to power crisis

 


SIQUIJOR Gov. Jake Villa discusses the power crisis in the province during a press conference at the Provincial Capitol on Thursday, June 5. (Calvin Cordova)

By Calvin Cordova

Published Jun 5, 2025 08:20 pm


CEBU CITY — A state of calamity has been declared in Siquijor due to the power crisis that the province is currently experiencing.

Gov. Jake Villa announced that the declaration of state of calamity was unanimously approved during the regular session of the provincial board on Tuesday, June 3.

“We want the public to know, especially the Siquijodnons, that the challenge has become unbearable. We have been experiencing daily blackouts for almost a month already,” Villa said in a press conference at the Siquijor Provincial Capitol on Thursday, June 5.

Villa lamented that for the past month, the province has been experiencing blackouts from four to six hours a day.

He said among the reasons for the power supply problem in the province was the malfunctioning six generators of Siquijor Island Power Corp. (SIPCOR).

SIPCOR, the island’s power provider, is under the Prime Asia Venture Inc. (PAVI) and joined Siquijor in 2015 through a 20-year deal with the Province of Siquijor Electric Cooperative (Prosielco).

Villa said some generators need overhaul.

With some generators not functioning, the province is experiencing two megawatts short of their total demand of 9.4 megawatts of power supply.

These generators are diesel-operated, independent, and are not connected to the grid, which means that other provinces cannot augment their power deficits.

“We are off-grid, we are dependent on the generator itself,” Villa said.

With the declaration of the state of calamity, the province will be able to release calamity fund to address the power crisis

The province has a calamity fund of P14 million.

Villa explained that the immediate measure that the province could take following the state of calamity declaration is the rental of two generators from Cebu.

The province needs to shell out P2.8 million to rent to generators for two months.

The two generators have a capacity of two megawatts, enough to address the province’s power crisis, said Villa.

The governor’s press briefing was interrupted by a blackout.

Prosielco has purchased a generator with a capacity of two megawatts from Palawan.

Villa said the state of calamity will be lifted once the power supply becomes stable.

As a long-term solution, Villa said Prosielco will conduct a competitive selection process by inviting more power players to the province.

A solar power plant is being constructed in the town of Maria that is expected to augment additional power supplies in the coming years.

Fortunately, Villa said, the province’s hospital is not affected by the power crisis as it has its own generator and solar panels.

Villa explained that the power crisis has to be addressed immediately as it might affect the province's economy, especially tourism.

Tourism has been a vital player in the province’s economy.

“Last year, our tourist arrivals hit 1.3 million,” Villa said. “If we lose our tourists because they are not satisfied with the services of the establishments, this would interrupt and disrupt our economy. It is tantamount to economic sabotage.”

Without elaborating further on economic sabotage, Villa said that the province is looking into the possibility of taking legal action against SIPCOR.

The power crisis may also affect the province’s peace and order situation, Villa said.

The governor said he is being unfairly blamed for the province’s unstable power supply.

“People are blaming me. In fact, I have been receiving threats through text messages because the power crisis is being blamed on me,” said Villa.

Unprotected sex, online porn, dating apps driving HIV cases among youth — DOH chief


 

By Jel Santos


The rise in Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) cases among young Filipinos is driven by high-risk sexual behavior, including unprotected sex, online pornography, and dating apps, Department of Health (DOH) Secretary Teodoro Herbosa said Thursday, June 5.

As of the first quarter of 2025, the health department has recorded an average of 57 new HIV cases per day.

“Tumaas ang risky behavior. So, number one, easy access to pornography online; number two, mga dating apps; number three, hindi gumagamit ng protection, unprotected sex (Risky behavior has increased. First, easy access to online pornography; second, dating apps; third, lack of protection, unprotected sex),” Herbosa said during a media briefing, when asked about the reasons behind the rise in HIV cases.

Such behavior, he noted, makes testing and prevention more difficult, especially among adolescents.

Per Herbosa, the youngest reported HIV case is a 12-year-old child from Palawan who is already sexually active.

The DOH chief also raised concerns about the impact of social stigma on testing uptake.

“Napansin ko, tumataas iyong HIV kasi mataas pa rin ang stigma sa atin (I’ve noticed HIV cases are rising largely because of the stigma),” said Herbosa.

To improve access, he said the DOH has lowered the age of consent for HIV testing to 16. 

However, Herbosa pointed out that treatment still requires parental consent, which remains a barrier for minors who test positive.

“Ang problema, kailangan din namin ng parental consent ng start of treatment, so, that’s another legislation na kailangan namin (The problem is we still need parental consent to begin treatment, so that’s another law we n

According to Herbosa, addressing the rise in youth infections will require not just medical services, but legislative reforms, funding, and public education.

“Kita ninyo na to battle HIV ay kailangan ko ang legislation, kailangan ko ang funding, kailangan ko ng information campaign (You can see that to battle HIV, I need legislation, I need funding, and I need an information campaign),” he said.

Meanwhile, Herbosa emphasized that HIV is no longer a death sentence and can be managed like any chronic condition if diagnosed early and treated consistently.

“Hindi na po death sentence ang HIV sa panahon ngayon… Maintenance lang ang kailangan po, katapat niyan para na lang siyang high blood or diabetes (HIV is no longer a death sentence nowadays… It only requires maintenance, like hypertension or diabetes),” he noted.

The DOH chief said they have already intensified efforts to expand access to free anti-retroviral (ARV) medication and streamline patient services in public hospitals.


Thursday, June 5, 2025

PHL Faces Record Cyclones But Leads in Climate Resilience

 

PHL Faces Record Cyclones But Leads in Climate Resilience

By Francis Allan L. Angelo

The Philippines experienced a historic onslaught of tropical cyclones in 2024, a stark indicator of the escalating climate crisis that is reshaping life across the South-West Pacific, according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization.

The “State of the Climate in the South-West Pacific 2024” report, released Thursday in Geneva, warned that the region endured its hottest year on record, with sea levels rising faster than the global average and marine heatwaves affecting an oceanic area the size of Asia.

Nowhere was the dual reality of vulnerability and resilience more visible than in the Philippines.

From September to November 2024, the country faced 12 tropical cyclones—more than double its seasonal average—impacting 13 million people and displacing more than 1.4 million across 17 of its 18 regions.

Typhoons Trami, Kong-rey, and Man-yi brought torrential rains, flash floods, and storm surges that battered infrastructure, homes, and farmlands.


Preliminary estimates place total damage at $430 million (roughly PHP 25 billion), affecting thousands of households and straining emergency services.

Yet amid the destruction, the Philippines demonstrated a critical edge: preparedness.

The report cited the country’s early warning systems and anticipatory action protocols as instrumental in saving lives and securing livelihoods. 


In one highlighted case, coastal communities received emergency cash and warnings in time to evacuate and protect fishing boats ahead of Super Typhoon Man-yi’s landfall in November.

“This anticipatory action is not just about speed. It’s about dignity, community empowerment, and resilience,” said a spokesperson from the Food and Agriculture Organization, which coordinated relief operations with local agencies. sh transfers and mobilize coastal evacuations, demonstrating the value of proactive climate response models.

The initiative aligns with the Philippines’ National Adaptation Plan, submitted in 2024, which forecasts fewer storms in future decades, but warns that those that do form will be significantly more intense.

The WMO’s findings underscore how climate change is amplifying weather extremes in the South-West Pacific, home to some of the world’s most climate-vulnerable populations.

Driven in part by the lingering 2023–2024 El Niño, average land temperatures in the region rose 0.48 degrees Celsius above the 1991–2020 average.

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The Philippines, Brunei, and Singapore recorded their hottest years on record.

In April 2024, Metro Manila hit 38.8 degrees Celsius—its highest temperature ever—fanning fears of a heat-related public health crisis and exposing gaps in urban heat resilience.

The record-breaking heat was mirrored beneath the waves.

Ocean heat content in the South-West Pacific reached near-record levels, tying with 2021 and 2023 and just behind the record set in 2022.

Sea surface temperatures also broke historical records.

Marine heatwaves stretched across 40 million square kilometers—more than 10% of the global ocean—impacting biodiversity, fisheries, and food security.

“2024 was the warmest year on record in the South-West Pacific region,” said WMO Secretary-General Prof. Celeste Saulo. “Ocean heat and acidification combined to inflict long-lasting damage to marine ecosystems and economies. Sea-level rise is an existential threat to entire island nations.”

For Pacific island states, sea-level rise has become a slow-moving catastrophe.

The report documented that the region’s sea level is rising faster than the global average, pushing low-lying communities toward relocation.

In Fiji’s Serua Island, two decades of erosion and flooding have made parts of the village uninhabitable.

In 2024 alone, seawater breached homes, destroyed crops, and inundated graveyards.

“On two separate occasions, the island experienced such extreme flooding that it was possible to cross it entirely by boat,” the report noted.

Despite government offers of relocation, many residents resist leaving Serua due to the Indigenous Fijian concept of vanua—a deeply spiritual bond with ancestral land.

Elsewhere, environmental changes are transforming once-stable ecosystems.

Indonesia’s last tropical glacier in Papua continued its rapid retreat in 2024, losing 30–50% of its area since 2022.

Scientists project the glacier will disappear entirely by 2026, if current melting rates persist.

The disappearance of such glaciers removes a crucial source of freshwater and disrupts regional climate patterns, according to WMO experts.

The region also saw major flooding and landslides in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

Meanwhile, drought conditions plagued southern Australia and northern New Zealand, and rainfall was erratic across the rest of the Pacific.

In the Philippines, weather disruptions extended beyond typhoons.

Northern provinces recorded extreme precipitation, while other areas suffered flash floods due to oversaturated soils and urban drainage failures.

The WMO report frames these extremes as symptomatic of a deepening global climate emergency, but also highlights avenues for adaptation and resilience.

It praised the Early Warnings for All (EW4All) initiative as a “tangible, effective measure that can save lives now.”

The Philippines’ case study is central to that argument.

By using risk-informed early warnings and integrating climate data into community-level action plans, the country minimized fatalities during one of its worst storm seasons in history.

The success is also rooted in longstanding international collaboration.

Through support from the Green Climate Fund, the Philippines has expanded its disaster forecasting network, trained local emergency responders, and upgraded critical communications infrastructure.

“These investments pay off,” said Clare Nullis, WMO media officer. “This is what adaptation looks like in practice. It’s not abstract—it’s boots on the ground, alerts sent out, boats moved, money in hand before the storm.”

Still, the report cautioned that the gap between climate risk and response remains dangerously wide across much of the South-West Pacific.

Island nations face mounting pressure to decide between staying and relocating, between cultural preservation and physical survival.

The United Nations estimates that 50,000 people across the Pacific face displacement every year due to climate-related threats.

“The sea is not just rising—it is claiming lives, economies, and identities,” said UN Secretary-General António Guterres during a 2024 Pacific tour that included a visit to Tonga. “This region is on the frontlines of the climate crisis. It is also on the frontlines of humanity’s moral responsibility.”

With over half the South-West Pacific population living within 500 meters of the coast, the consequences of inaction could be catastrophic.

The WMO called for major investments in mangrove restoration, integrated coastal management, and the inclusion of Indigenous knowledge in adaptation planning.

In the Philippines, local governments are beginning to respond.

Several coastal barangays in Quezon, Leyte, and Bicol have begun piloting “green dike” projects that use vegetation buffers and natural barriers to reduce storm surge impact.

In Eastern Samar, where Typhoon Man-yi made landfall, some municipalities are experimenting with community-based relocation programs that keep cultural practices intact while reducing exposure.

“Building resilience is not just a technical project—it’s a social contract,” said the Climate Change Commission of the Philippines in a statement accompanying the release of the WMO report. “Our adaptation strategies must be rooted in local realities, supported by science, and empowered by the people.”

If you truly love nature, ...