Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/El-Nino-Impacts-Documentation-in-Maguindanao-27MZIFJJMA8QH.htmlConceptually similarEl Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1KCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1MCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1NCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1OCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1PCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1QCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts on Indigenous Peoples in MindanaoGP0STPU1XCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1RCompleted★★★★El Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoGP0STPU1SCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STPU1LEl Niño Impacts Documentation in MaguindanaoA view of corn fields in Brgy Mirab, Upi, Maguindanao. Farmers have started planting their fields after several months of being empty due to drought brought by El Niño.Locations:Maguindanao-Mindanao-Philippines-Southeast AsiaDate:7 May, 2016Credit:© GreenpeaceMaximum size:2159px X 1098pxKeywords:Aerial view-Climate change impacts-Day-Drought-El Nino-Farms-Fields-KWCI (GPI)-Landscapes-Outdoors-People-Rural scenes-SAGE (campaign title)Shoot:El Niño Impacts Documentation in Mindanao PhilippinesAmidst the lingering El Niño that has caused massive agricultural damage to much of Southeast Asia, Greenpeace wants ASEAN governments to transition their country’s food and farming system to a new, more climate-resilient and ecological farming system to address the region’s food and nutrition security in the age of climate change.Related Collections:El Niño Documentation in Southeast Asia