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https://media.greenpeace.org/asset-management/27MZIFJ6T4W0M
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Keywords
Agricultural land
Climate (campaign title)
Drought
Ecological farming
El Nino
Farmers
KWCI (GPI)
SAGE (campaign title)
Solutions
Surviving El Niño - English Version
Set against the back drop of an El Niño hitting their country, farmers in the Philippines are adopting ecological farming practices in an effort to adapt to climate change.
Restrictions
INCLUDES FOOTAGE OF TYPHOON LANDO (20.13 - 20.39) LICENSED FROM ABS-CBN FOR THIS PRODUCTION ONLY (ALL MEDIA, TEN YEARS).
ALL MUSIC SOURCED FROM ALLMUSIC.NL, CLEARED IN THIS PRODUCTION FOR ALL MEDIA AND IN PERPETUITY.
Unique identifier:
GP0STPIPX
Type:
Video
Shoot date:
01/11/2015
Locations:
Philippines
,
Southeast Asia
Credit line:
© Greenpeace
Duration:
26m24s
Audio format:
Final Mix
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Copyright Valid Until
01/11/2025
Containers
Shoot:
Surviving El Niño
The Philippines is one of the countries worst hit by climate change. In addition, every few years a series of climatic shifts in the Pacific known as "El Niño" wrecks further havoc throughout the country. Set against the backdrop of one of the strongest El Niños on record, Surviving El Niño shows how farmers are adapting to climate change by adopting organic farming practices.
"We should be planting now but there is no water... no rain means no income", laments Quiciano, a conventional farmer. The severe droughts brought on by El Niño have destroyed his crop. The El Niño phenomenon is part of natural climate variability, but the frequency and intensity of these events are predicted to increase with climate change, resulting in droughts and stronger typhoons.
Organic farming can increase farmers' resilience in dealing with a changing and less predictable climate. More and more Filipino farmers are finding that adopting ecological farming practices enables them to adapt to the new climate reality. As the Philippines gets ready to elect its new president, it is time to rethink the country's policies: "We need to change our strategy for agriculture. We have to give the community the capacity to feed itself".
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