BELÉM, Brazil sits at the center of the world this week, hosting leaders who will—yet again—promise to save a burningBELÉM, Brazil sits at the center of the world this week, hosting leaders who will—yet again—promise to save a burning

Why Climate Action Still Fails the People on the Frontlines

2025/11/26 09:03

BELÉM, Brazil sits at the center of the world this week, hosting leaders who will—yet again—promise to save a burning planet. And somewhere between the plenary halls and the press briefings, the Philippines appears in a slideshow: another “medium-performing” country in the latest Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI), dropping twelve places. A polite way of saying: we’re slipping, but others are slipping faster.

Analysts tried to cushion the blow: our greenhouse gas emissions are low, our per-person energy use is modest, and our historical responsibility is tiny. But the comfort ends there. Our renewable energy performance is weak. Our climate policy is even weaker. And the drop in rankings tells us what we already know: while the world talks about climate transformation, most of us are stuck performing resilience rather than living it.

This is the paradox of our era. We have mastered the language of climate action—the metrics, the frameworks, the declarations. But in a country fractured by floods and stretched thin by disaster fatigue, it is painfully clear that the performance of sustainability is being mistaken for its substance.

Because what does a ranking really mean to the family whose home disappears in a river swell?

What does a conference declaration mean to the farmer who replants her crops after every storm?

What does a “high score in emissions” matter to the communities who lose everything despite contributing almost nothing to the crisis?

We build seawalls without asking fisherfolk if the wall destroys their livelihood. We install early warning systems but ignore the reality that some communities cannot evacuate because relocation means hunger. We talk about “resilience” as if communities owe the country a performance of strength.

Nothing is sustainable when people are not part of the decision-making. If climate policy does not begin with the people most exposed to risk, then the policy is simply paperwork. If adaptation projects are not informed by those who experience the floods, then they are only success stories in donor reports.

What COP30 really forces us to confront is this: the Philippines keeps demanding climate justice from the world, but we rarely practice justice at home. We want financing, technology, and reparations—all justified, all necessary. But what happens when that money arrives? Will it reach the barangays whose budgets are already stretched thin? Will it strengthen the capacity of local responders? Will it prioritize the poor, who carry the weight of every “once-in-a-lifetime” typhoon happening three times in a decade?

Or will it flow through the same channels that turn climate funds into ribbon-cutting ceremonies—another project, another photo, another “achievement”?

If sustainability is to mean anything, it cannot remain a performance staged for global conferences. It must be a lived process shaped by those whose lives are at stake. It must be development that listens, not dictates.

So as the Philippines arrives at COP30—bearing data, demands, and decades of devastation—perhaps the bigger question we must ask is not whether the world will finally act.

The question is whether we will finally stop treating climate resilience as a project and start treating it as a practice.

A practice rooted in the people who rebuild after every storm, plant mangroves after every storm surge, wade through floodwaters to rescue neighbors, and stretch meager incomes to repair homes that will be damaged again.

Communities survive not because institutions lead, but because people do. And if climate governance listened to necessity—to what people already know they need—our policies would finally match the urgency of our reality.

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