President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. took the spotlight at the 2025 Solidarity Night, the grand finale of the 18th Global Warming and Climate Change Consciousness Week, with a message that cut straight to the heart of the nation’s climate challenge. He emphasized that addressing climate change is not just about policies or programs — it’s about protecting the land, safeguarding communities, and ensuring a future where every Filipino can thrive.
“Let us uphold climate governance, protecting the beauty and bounty of our land, while seeking effective ways to ensure the welfare of generations to come,” Marcos said. “Together, let us nurture a nation that leads with foresight and thrives with purpose — resilient, future-ready, and responsive to the needs of both people and the planet.”
The President highlighted ongoing efforts under the National Adaptation Plan, the Nationally Determined Contribution Implementation Plan (NDCIP), and initiatives in renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, and climate finance as essential building blocks for a future “that leaves no Filipino behind.”
Department of Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Raphael Lotilla, representing the President at the event, echoed the message of resilience. “Building climate resilience is more than rules and programs,” he said. “It’s about compassion, collaboration, and empowering local innovations. It’s about transforming development into something sustainable, inclusive, and just.”
The event brought together voices from government, the private sector, civil society, and local communities. CCC vice chairperson Robert Borje urged attendees to remember the most vulnerable. “Our challenge is to work for the last, the least, the lost, and the most vulnerable. In doing so, we can become the change our country and the world need,” he said.
Private and public sector leaders shared how they’re turning commitments into action. ACEN president Eric Francia highlighted the need for measurable mitigation amid rapid industrial growth, while UN Women Philippines’ Vanessa Pallarco-Yu stressed gender-responsive climate action as a critical part of effective solutions.
Tebtebba executive director Helen Biangalen-Magata reminded the audience that Indigenous Peoples are among the most climate-vulnerable, and supporting their knowledge and rights strengthens everyone’s ability to adapt. Local leaders like Siargao Mayor Alfredo Coro II emphasized that most climate impacts are felt locally, making empowered, well-supported local governments essential to meaningful solutions.
The event concluded on a symbolic and hopeful note, with guests signing a collaborative artwork made from indigenous fabrics — an emblem of unity, cultural preservation, and shared responsibility for the climate challenge.
Solidarity Night, first launched in 2024, has become more than a ceremonial event. It is a statement: climate leadership in the Philippines is a shared responsibility, strengthened by partnership, grounded in evidence, and driven by collective action.
As Marcos and other leaders stressed, meeting the country’s climate goals requires collaboration across government, communities, businesses, academia, and civil society, working together toward a low-carbon, climate-resilient, and sustainable future for all Filipinos.