OPINION

CCC Week 2025: From climate consciousness to action for a resilient Philippines

Resilience should not be about how often we rebuild — it should be about how rarely we are destroyed.

Secretary Robert E.A. Borje

The Philippines is on the front lines of a changing climate — a condition that disrupts our ecosystems, communities, and daily lives. Recent global assessments consistently rank our nation among the most at risk to extreme weather events. This is not a distant projection but a situation we experience year after year.

But these hazards, while real and escalating, do not determine our fate; they simply underscore that nothing is inevitable. The outcome can change, because we can act. We will not be victims of circumstance but victors who prepare, adapt, and shape our own future.

Yet the reality remains: tropical storms and typhoons regularly sweep through our country, inflicting long-lasting devastation. The usual 20 tropical cyclones that hit our islands annually place us in a fragile position. Yet this year, 22 have already struck, with five more weeks of 2025 still remaining.

Many cyclones bring floods and landslides that leave families having to rebuild their homes, farmers to cope with lost harvests, and neighborhoods to restore community life. When recovery takes longer than the interval between disasters, resilience becomes harder to sustain. But resilience should not be about how often we rebuild — it should be about how rarely we are destroyed. True resilience moves us from reaction to lasting reform, from temporary fixes to proactive, unified action.

Climate science is clear: a warming planet intensifies storms, worsens flooding, and heightens threats to lives and livelihoods. In this context, inaction is no longer neutral or an option; delay carries consequences, a cost too high to bear. Our response must rise to the scale and magnitude of the crisis.

This urgency gives deeper meaning to the annual Global Warming and Climate Change Consciousness Week, observed last 19 to 25 November. Now in its 18th year, the CCC Week — themed “Makabagong Kilusan para sa Klima at Kinabukasan” — provides a crucial opportunity for leaders, institutions, and communities to strengthen their commitments to climate action.

The CCC Week initiatives underscore a simple truth: confronting the climate crisis demands a whole-of-society approach. This momentum is no longer abstract; it is strengthened by the growing partnerships, shared commitments, and collective action emerging across all sectors, a clear proof that climate action is now a responsibility we carry together.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. has highlighted the importance of this observance as a vehicle for building a climate-resilient and environmentally sound nation. “This event provides a vital platform for policymakers, scientists, private institutions, and communities to realign our national goals with global climate commitments and the broader agenda of sustainable development.”

However, climate action cannot be confined to a single week. It must be continuous, persistent, and collective. The Climate Change Commission and partner institutions have either pursued or supported efforts to integrate cleaner technologies, promote ecosystem-based adaptation, and expand collaboration among government, private organizations, and communities. These initiatives reflect a growing recognition that climate action demands participation across all sectors of society.

Still, the true measure of climate resilience lies in its impact on ordinary lives. Whether seen in farmers protecting their livelihoods, coastal families adapting to sea level rise, or youth groups restoring degraded watersheds, climate action is grounded in people and communities. Their stories remind us that resilience is lived, earned, and strengthened through dedication, cooperation, and preparedness.

To translate these efforts into lasting impact, the country must turn climate commitments into clear policies, sustained investments and strong local implementation. National strategies and policy frameworks — such as the National Adaptation Plan and the Nationally Determined Contribution Implementation Plan — fulfill their true purpose when they translate into tangible support, protection, and empowerment for those most affected.

When such frameworks are backed by real investments, community-level support, capacity-building, and inclusive governance, they become lifelines for vulnerable populations that need the resources and information to face climate threats head-on.

This approach also requires a culture of collaboration with government, businesses, academic and research institutions, civil society and communities working side by side to ensure that climate solutions are inclusive, transparent, and rooted in genuine partnership.

As 2025 ends, the Philippines stands at a critical juncture. In the months and years ahead, storms will further test us, floods and landslides will continue to challenge us, but the direction we choose today determines the future that our children will inherit. Climate consciousness must rise to climate courage, awareness must turn into action, and policy must lead to implementation.

With science to guide us, policy as our anchor, and unity as our strength, the Philippines can stand firm in a warming world. The choice is clear: Face the future with fear, or shape it with resolve. We choose resolve.