CITY WORKS ITS WAY TO RESILIENCY GOAL VS CLIMATE CHANGE

BAGUIO CITY

As promised, the city government continues to work its way to achieve resiliency status by 2026 and be prepared to handle the effects of the climate crisis. Mayor Benjamin Magalong last year rallied city executives to make resiliency
the focus within the next three years to make the city not only resilient but also “safe, inclusive and sustainable” in
face of the looming environmental, economic and social impacts of global warming.

City Disaster Risk Reduction Management Officer Charles Bryan Carame said initiatives are now being done to implement programs, activities and projects that will help the city achieve its target. He said the city has already prepared its systems for the goal of achieving resilience, has identified, understood and utilized the risk scenarios and made significant accomplishments in pursuing resilient urban development and design, safeguarding
natural resources, strengthening institutional and societal capacities for resilience and ensuring effective disaster
response.

It is presently working on strengthening its financial capacity for resilience by strictly monitoring fund utilization; pursuing urban development and increasing infrastructure resilience by promoting and implementing the Green Building Code as well as various nature-based solutions which include the sustainable management of the city’s open spaces such as parks, the Blue Walks program which develops urban canals and restores natural streams and the Green Walks program which upgrades roads into green streets.

The city’s resiliency journey is guided by the international “Making Cities Resilient (MCR) 2030” program, a big flagship project of the United Nations which provides support to make cities worldwide “safer, preventing risks, promoting innovation and investments and building resilience” through the delivery of a “three-stage roadmap to
urban resilience, providing tools, access to knowledge and monitoring and reporting tools.” A total of 1,748 cities in 86 countries worldwide have joined the program. In the Philippines, only Makati City has so far achieved resiliency
status.

The city through the CDRRMO applied for MCR2026 compliance in 2021 by making a commitment to strive “to
become inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable by 2026 and commit to reducing disaster and climate risk and continue to improve sustainability by taking actions to enhance resilience.” The city has passed two of the three-stage roadmap namely awareness and planning and is now making progress in the third or the implementation stage.

Aileen P. Refuerzo/ABN

Amianan Balita Ngayon