The new year is supposed to renew hope. Filipinos welcome it with family, faith and the belief that beginnings matter. Yet in the first hours of 2026, the country confronted an unwelcome truth: the climate does not honor holidays. Overnight rains triggered flooding in several areas — including in Metro Manila and Boracay — while many communities woke up to streets littered with post-celebration waste, plastics washed into strained drains, and air quality monitors detecting elevated particulate matter before midday.
These scenes appeared briefly in national headlines. But they should now shape our national awareness.
What we witnessed on 1 January was not catastrophe — it was something more unsettling: the normalization of climate stress. Vulnerability is no longer worsened during super typhoons; it now shows itself in the ordinary rhythm of our days. And the year’s early warnings remind us of a difficult truth: our climate risks are shaped not only by storms, but by the choices we make long before any storm forms.
Filipinos do not intend to worsen floods or pollute waterways. Yet the waste that greeted communities on New Year’s morning — scattered plastics, blocked drains, residual contamination — reflected the cumulative impact of millions of routine decisions. Behavior shapes risk. Waste patterns shape resilience. And in one of the world’s most exposed archipelagos, ordinary choices carry extraordinary consequences.
Improperly managed waste clogs waterways, degrades watersheds, disrupts coastal ecosystems, and heightens flood impacts. Landfills generate methane — a greenhouse gas more than 80 times more potent than CO₂ in the short term. Poor air quality worsens heat stress and respiratory illness. These chains, documented by weather agency PAGASA, Department of Environment and Natural Resources-Environment Management Bureau, the Climate Change Commission and the IPCC, are no longer abstract science. They define everyday life in a warming world.
For the Philippines — consistently among the most climate-vulnerable nations — climate change is not distant. It is lived. And every flood teaches the same lesson: rebuilding is not resilience. Prevention is.
Understanding prevention requires recognizing how climate change and waste reinforce each other. The United Nations identifies three planetary crises — climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution — and waste, especially plastics, sits at their intersection. The “take, make, dispose” model produces surges of single-use plastics and food waste that overwhelm local systems during periods of high consumption. Every discarded sachet, wrapper, and container carries an emissions footprint, from extraction to disposal.
This is why Zero Waste is not a lifestyle preference but a climate resilience strategy. Zero Waste month is commemorated in January but must be observed throughout the year. Waste management deals with trash after it exists; Zero Waste prevents unnecessary materials from entering circulation. A circular approach lowers emissions, restores waterways and ecosystems, strengthens local economies, and aligns with our Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC). Resilience does not begin at landfills or during disasters — it begins with what we choose not to throw away.
The past year showed what works. Where local governments partnered with state universities and colleges, adaptation strategies became clearer, risk governance improved, and investments in land use, water systems, and infrastructure aligned with scientific data. Where waste governance strengthened, flood impacts weakened and waterways ran cleaner. Climate-vulnerable municipalities that completed updated assessments accessed more funding and prepared stronger project proposals.
Legislative leadership — led by champions like Senator Loren Legarda and Congressman Rufus Rodriguez — ensured policy coherence and more responsive climate budgeting. And under President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s direction, the rollout of the National Adaptation Plan (NAP) and the NDC Implementation Plan (NDCIP) helped improve coordination, harmonized risk data, and clarified investment priorities for 2026 and beyond.
But the start of this year makes one message unmistakable: Our strategic and integrated development plans must match the new climate reality. Rainfall volumes are higher. Inundation is more frequent. Our assumptions about drainage capacity, land use, water systems, and infrastructure design must shift as well. Resilient cities cannot be built on outdated blueprints.
Beyond engineered solutions, we must scale nature-based solutions — from ridge to reef — that regulate floods, filter water, stabilize soil and protect coasts. Lasting resilience requires natural and built systems working together, not competing.
But ultimately, climate action returns to one constant: behavior. The NAP and NDCIP can provide structure, but outcomes rest on decisions — in homes, workplaces, councils, businesses and national leadership.
If we want fewer flooded streets, plastics must stay out of waterways. If we want cleaner air, emissions must be reduced at their source. If we want safer coasts, natural buffers must be restored. If we want long-term resilience, our systems must make sustainable behavior the easier choice — not the exceptional one.
The Philippines must not be defined by its disasters. We must be defined by the courage of our decisions. Every piece of waste prevented is an emission avoided. Every system strengthened is a safeguard for the next generation. It is high time for us to end the year right with the day-to-day decisions we make. Every choice we make in 2026 and beyond that is grounded in climate reality is a step toward a stronger nation.