The Philippines stands at a critical juncture in its fight against climate change. As one of the most climate-vulnerable countries in the world, it receives billions in climate finance pledges from international institutions, development partners, and domestic public–private partnerships (PPPs). Yet, despite the flow of funds, the country’s resilience remains fragile. The challenge is no longer access to financing, but how to govern it transparently, distribute it equitably, and deploy it effectively.
Climate finance must be a centerpiece of the Philippines’ national development strategy. From the Green Climate Fund (GCF) to the Asian Development Bank’s (ADB) green infrastructure loans and domestic efforts through the People’s Survival Fund, resources are expanding. The Marcos administration has also announced its intent to mobilize green bonds and foreign grants for flood control, renewable energy, and disaster resilience.
However, the credibility of these efforts hinges on governance. Too often, climate funds are trapped in bureaucratic layers or diverted by inefficiency and corruption. The flood control controversies that have dominated national headlines underscore this danger. When adaptation projects become procurement opportunities rather than resilience investments, the very purpose of climate finance collapses.
What the Philippines needs is a governance framework that matches ambition with accountability — where transparency is built into every peso of green funding, from donor negotiation to barangay level.
Green infrastructure — projects that integrate environmental sustainability into public works — has become the preferred vehicle for climate mitigation and adaptation. Metro Manila’s flood management systems, renewable energy corridors in Northern Luzon, and the coastal defense initiatives in the Visayas are all examples of this emerging agenda.
Yet governance gaps persist. Many infrastructure programs are still designed under old models of public procurement, where environmental safeguards are secondary and project monitoring is opaque. Local communities rarely have access to project impact assessments, and audit results often arrive years after funds have been spent.
Green infrastructure must therefore evolve beyond the “project-based” mindset toward a systemic approach that integrates data transparency, citizen participation, and digital monitoring. If climate resilience is to be credible, people must see — not just be told — where their taxes and international funds are going.
The private sector plays an increasingly central role in climate finance. Major conglomerates are now investing in renewable energy, waste-to-value industries, and low-carbon transportation. However, while these projects are marketed as sustainable, the transparency of PPP agreements remains limited.
Many climate-related PPPs, such as flood control and reclamation projects, operate under confidential financial arrangements. This lack of disclosure invites suspicion and undermines public trust. If the private sector wishes to be recognized as a true partner in climate governance, it must embrace climate transparency as a competitive advantage.
For starters, conglomerates should adhere to the globally accepted framework of environmental marketing espoused by the International Chamber of Commerce where their environmental claims are honest, truthful, clear, substantiated, and well disseminated to conform to international standards.
Government, for its part, must institutionalize disclosure standards for PPPs that involve climate-related infrastructure. Contracts, feasibility studies, and environmental assessments should be made publicly available. Credibility should be established by requiring third-party sustainability audits and integrating environmental performance indicators into project evaluations.
Profit and planet can coexist, but only when accountability ensures that private gain does not come at public expense.
No national climate strategy can succeed without the active participation of local government units (LGUs). Mayors, governors, and down to barangay officials are often the first responders to climate-related disasters, yet they remain the last in line for funding access.
Programs like the People’s Survival Fund are designed to correct this imbalance, but the process remains slow and technically demanding. LGUs that lack climate expertise or data struggle to prepare viable project proposals, effectively sidelining smaller and poorer municipalities from green financing.
To correct this, the Department of Finance, the Climate Change Commission, and the Development Bank of the Philippines can jointly establish a Climate Resilience Financing Facility that streamlines access for LGUs. Capacity-building, simplified application procedures, and technical support for project monitoring should be institutionalized.
LGUs must also be empowered to issue local green bonds — an initiative already explored by Quezon City — to finance renewable energy, waste management, and flood mitigation projects. When local governments own their financing tools, climate governance becomes participatory rather than merely administrative.
Transparency must be the backbone of every climate fund. The Philippines can take three major steps forward, namely, Institutionalize Climate Finance Audits–where the Commission on Audit (CoA) creates a dedicated climate finance audit unit to track fund allocation, project outcomes, and compliance with environmental laws;
Standardize Green Bond Regulation with the Securities and Exchange Commission and Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas requiring climate bonds and sustainability-linked loans to meet internationally verified disclosure standards; and establish a National Climate Accountability Dashboard — where public online portal detailing approved projects, funding sources, and implementation status is set up to allow citizens, media, and researchers to scrutinize performance in real time.
These reforms would signal to international donors and investors that the Philippines takes climate governance seriously — not as a matter of compliance, but of credibility.
The Philippines’ climate future depends not only on how much money it secures, but on how wisely and transparently it is used. The country’s geography may make it disaster-prone, but its governance can determine whether it remains disaster-ready or disaster-resigned.
Climate finance, when governed with transparency and foresight, can be more than a shield against calamity — it can be a foundation for inclusive, sustainable growth. The nation’s challenge is not merely to attract funds but to earn the world’s confidence in how it uses them.
The path forward is clear: build trust, ensure transparency, and align governance with genuine resilience. Only then can the Philippines transform vulnerability into value — and financing into a future worth sustaining.