Save the Children Federation Inc.

05/10/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/10/2024 11:23

Drought Hits 900,000 Families Across the Philippines, with some Children Forced from School to Help on Farms

Drought Hits 900,000 Families Across the Philippines, with some Children Forced from School to Help on Farms

Media Contact:Diana Oberoi+1.202.286.1421 (O)

MANILA, (May 10, 2024) - A protracted drought across large swathes of the Philippines is impacting over 900,000 families[1] - or over 3.7 million people - including some who have taken their children out of school to help deal with the economic impacts of the crisis.

The drought, a result of the El-Nino phenomenon and exacerbated by the climate crisis, is ravaging 14 out of the Philippines' 17 regions and approximately 5,000 villages across the country. Its impact is devastating, severely damaging local agriculture, causing acute water shortages, eroding soil health, and rendering crops highly vulnerable to pests and disease.

Several families have told Save the Children that their children have had to temporarily stop going to school to help on family farms survive financially through the drought. While schools remain open for now, the aid agency is concerned about the worsening impact of the crisis on children's education, health, and wellbeing.

Heatwaves and drought attributed to El Niño - a natural weather phenomenon whose impacts are being exacerbated by the climate crisis - have hit several Asian countries over the past weeks, including drought in Vietnam's Mekong Delta and school closures because of extreme heat in parts of South and Southeast Asia.

Climate and environmental threats are responsible for the disruption of the education of over 37 million children each year, with children from lower-income homes and countries more likely to live in areas impacted by climate change.

Save the Children Philippines has partnered with the Western Samar Development Foundation (WESADEF) Inc. to distribute cash grants to approximately 200 farming families in the Samar province and has introduced drought-resilient seeds to help farmers.

Teresita Abides, a 46-year-old mother whose family depends heavily on rice farming, said her children had to stop school to help the family cope with drought on their farm:

"Before, our two-hectare farm used to produce around 70 sacks of rice, but because of the impact of El Niño, we lost everything."

Rex Abrigo, Environment and Climate Change Advisor at Save the Children Philippines, said:

"The climate crisis is a child rights crisis with children facing more extreme weather events every year. As we're seeing in the Philippines, climate threats also disrupt learning. Adults cause the climate crisis, but children endure the most severe consequences. This highlights the urgent need for proactive measures to protect vulnerable communities, especially children, from the effects of climate change."

Through our global Generation Hope Campaign, Save the Children Philippines actively advocates for climate adaptation measures to safeguard the wellbeing of children affected by climate crises.

Save the Children has been working in the Philippines since 1981 with programs in humanitarian response, health and nutrition, education, and children's rights and protection.

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[1]https://reliefweb.int/report/philippines/dswd-dromic-report-58-effects-el-nino-09-may-2024-6pm

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