Government Appropriates P1 Billion in the People’s Survival Fund

Set to strengthen resilience of communities on the frontlines of climate change

MANILA, 21 October 2015—Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima announced today that the PhP 1 billion People’s Survival Fund (PSF) will soon be ready to be accessed by local government units and local/community organizations for their climate change adaptation projects.

“In the Vulnerable 20 Summit last 9 October, we led a call for concerted action against climate change, focusing on climate finance as a powerful tool. The 20 most vulnerable countries face economic losses from climate change amounting to 2.5% of our GDP per year, at US$45 billion in 2010 and expected to increase almost 10-fold to $418 billion in 2030, according to the World Bank.”

“Here at home, the PSF is an example of the government’s commitment to protecting those most vulnerable from the effects of climate change. I look forward to the PSF financing innovative and adaptive projects in response to climate change,” Purisima said.

The PSF was created by Republic Act 10174 to enable the government to address the problem of climate change. The law also mandates the creation of a Board to provide overall strategic guidance in the management and use of the fund.

The Board is headed by the Secretary of the Department of Finance. Its members are the vice chairperson of the Climate Change Commission, secretary of the Department of Budget and Management, director general of the National Economic and Development Authority, secretary of the Department of the Interior and Local Government, chairperson of the Philippine Commission on Women, representative from the academe and scientific community, business sector, and non-government organizations.

Specifically, the fund is intended for adaptation activities that include water resources management, land management, agriculture and fisheries, health, among others, and serve as guarantee for risk insurance needs for farmers, agricultural workers and other stakeholders.

It will also be used for establishing regional centers and information networks and strengthening of existing ones to support climate change adaptation initiatives and projects, for setting up of forecasting and early warning systems against climate-related hazards, support to institutional development such as preventive measures, planning, preparedness and management of impacts relating to climate change, including contingency planning for droughts and floods.

At present, the PSF Board is finalizing details for the implementation of the fund. A Call for Proposal will be available in the coming days and requests for the application can be sent to psf@climate.gov.ph. The Climate Change Office-Climate Change Commission, as Secretariat to the PSF Board, is tasked to receive and pre-assess the proposals.