Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Dried-Rice-Field-in-the-Philippines-27MZIF3230Q7.htmlConceptually similarEl Niño Drought in the PhilippinesGP0STOYPTCompleted★★★★Local Farmers in Rice Fields in PhilippinesGP0STPR0UCompleted★★★★El Niño Drought in the PhilippinesGP0STOYPWCompleted★★★★★★Damaged Rice Farms in the Philippines Due to Drought by El NiñoGP0STPR08Completed★★★★El Niño At its Peak DocumentationGP0STPR0JCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts in MindanaoGP0STPRA6Completed★★★★El Niño At its Peak DocumentationGP0STPR0GCompleted★★★★Dried Corn Field in the PhilippinesGP0STOYQ7Completed★★★★Local Farmer in Rice Field in PhilippinesGP0STPR0VCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STOYPZDried Rice Field in the PhilippinesAn aerial view showing un-harvested and dried rice fields in Barangay New Antique in M’lang, North Cotabato. The dry spell in M’lang, North Cotabato and other farming areas in nearby municipalities is a big threat to the already impoverished farmers, getting very little support from local and national governments to address the impacts of El Nino. This condition further reinforces the call to implement ecological agriculture, being a more climate-resilient farming system.Locations:Mindanao-Philippines-Southeast AsiaDate:11 Apr, 2015Credit:© GreenpeaceMaximum size:4000px X 2865pxKeywords:Aerial view-Agriculture-Climate (campaign title)-Climate change impacts-Day-Drought-Dry-El Nino-Fields-KWCI (GPI)-Maize-Outdoors-TreesShoot:El Niño Documentation in the PhilippinesPositioned at the front lines of climate change impacts, the Philippines is plagued by food and nutrition security concerns – a growing emergency. The worsening impacts of climate change and the unpredictability of extreme weather events, such as typhoons, El Niño events or drought, are putting unnecessary stresses on the coping mechanisms of many regions in the country.Related Collections:El Niño Documentation: Impacts on Agriculture in the Philippines