BREAKING

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Planet in Crisis, Youth in Power: 5Ps SDG Youth Summit Installment 3 Ignites a Climate Revolution


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In an era where climate headlines scream louder than ever—melting ice caps, super typhoons, dying coral reefs, and plastic-choked rivers—the youth are no longer just observers. They are rising. With passion in their hearts and resolve in their voices, young changemakers from all corners of the country convened for the third installment of the 5Ps SDG Youth Summit, boldly themed “Planet in Crisis: Youth Rising for Climate and Nature.”


This isn’t just another youth gathering.


This is a pre-summit deep dive into the Planet pillar of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), spotlighting some of the most urgent and interlinked ecological missions of our time:

SDG 6: Clean Water and Sanitation

SDG 12: Responsible Consumption and Production

SDG 13: Climate Action

SDG 14: Life Below Water

SDG 15: Life on Land

Each number, each goal, is not just a statistic—it’s a call to action.



A Generation Awakens

In a packed virtual and physical space buzzing with ideas and hope, environmental advocates—many still in their teens and early twenties—gathered not only to understand the daunting scale of the Philippines' ecological issues but to begin carving a path forward. These are students, volunteers, scientists-in-the-making, community organizers, and storytellers. What binds them is not age or profession—it is urgency.


From the polluted esteros of Metro Manila to the vanishing forests of Sierra Madre, the environmental state of the nation is at a tipping point. And these young Filipinos have made it clear: tipping points are turning points.


Dissecting a Nation’s Environmental Pulse

The summit unpacked five SDGs with sharp clarity and immersive discussions:


SDG 6 reminded participants that access to clean water remains elusive for many in rural and marginalized communities. Stories were shared of rivers turned into sewage lines, and of children walking miles just to fetch murky water.


SDG 12 put the spotlight on the consumer culture that fuels waste. Plastic sachets, food waste, fast fashion—youth participants bravely acknowledged the roles society and even they themselves play, while proposing innovative community alternatives and circular economy ideas.


SDG 13, perhaps the loudest cry of the summit, captured the chaos of climate change. Super Typhoon Yolanda’s shadow loomed large, and so did the increasingly unpredictable patterns of weather, agriculture, and migration. But amid the doom, hope glimmered in youth-led climate audits, tree planting campaigns, and climate education drives.


SDG 14 plunged into the country’s embattled seas. Bleached reefs, dwindling fish stocks, and illegal fishing sparked anger and activism. Coastal youth spoke of ancestral fishing grounds turning barren, while others launched coastal cleanups and marine conservation apps.


SDG 15 lifted eyes to the mountains and rainforests, many of which are rapidly disappearing due to mining, logging, and encroachment. The voices of Indigenous youth were especially powerful, offering traditional wisdom as a beacon of resilience and regeneration.


Youth at the Frontlines

The summit was not a monologue—it was a movement. Participants didn't just absorb facts. They exchanged solutions. They built networks. They formed new advocacy coalitions. From school-based zero-waste campaigns to tech-powered mangrove monitoring, the ideas sparked in this summit had real-world firepower.


Workshops led by sustainability experts, environment defenders, and policymakers grounded the idealism with strategies. Climate anxiety was met with climate agency.


In one moving breakout session, a 16-year-old environmental blogger from Eastern Samar declared, “We are not just victims of climate change. We are the antidote.”


Why the 5Ps Matter

This summit series—rooted in the 5Ps of the SDGs: People, Planet, Prosperity, Peace, and Partnership—is more than a framework. It’s a manifesto for the future. And in this installment, “Planet” took center stage—not as an abstract idea, but as a burning, breathing, bleeding reality.


The Philippines, one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations, is ground zero for environmental action. And if this summit made anything clear, it’s that the youth refuse to be ground down by despair. They are groundbreakers.


A Rising Tide of Resolve

As the final speaker concluded with a challenge—“What will your legacy be in a world on fire?”—the screen lit up with responses. Hundreds of commitments. Thousands of hearts stirred. A million seeds of change, planted.


The 5Ps SDG Youth Summit Installment 3 was not an ending. It was ignition.


And if the youth keep rising, then perhaps this crisis will become the generation’s greatest opportunity—to heal the planet, to redefine leadership, and to build a tomorrow not just greener, but braver.

Manila Meets Metropolis: Superman Cast Lands in the Philippines for Epic Fan Encounter



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David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, and James Gunn soar into Manila for a historic visit — with a powerful stop at the Bridgetowne “The Victor” statue


 Faster than a speeding bullet and with more heart than a thousand fan letters, the cast and director of the new Superman film landed in the Philippines this week to a thunderous welcome that could rival any comic book crossover event.


Hollywood’s newest Man of Steel, David Corenswet, joined by the fierce and brilliant Rachel Brosnahan (Lois Lane), and visionary director James Gunn graced Manila not just to promote the upcoming film — but to connect with a nation that has always celebrated heroes, both real and fictional.


A Hero’s Arrival

Filipino fans were out in full force as the Superman cast made their grand entrance at the SM Mall of Asia Arena for a red-carpet fan event that transformed the venue into a living comic book — complete with skyline backdrops, Daily Planet props, and a giant Fortress of Solitude installation.


“This is unbelievable,” Corenswet told the ecstatic crowd. “The love you’re showing us is what being Superman is all about — lifting each other up.”


Brosnahan, elegant and commanding, channeled her inner Lois Lane: “I’ve played journalists, comedians, and truth-seekers — but nothing compares to meeting fans who are this passionate and thoughtful. Thank you, Manila!”


A Cinematic Symbol Meets a Filipino Giant

But the event wasn’t just about lights, cameras, or capes. In a moment rich with symbolism, the trio made an unannounced stop at the iconic Bridgetowne “The Victor” statue — the towering steel sculpture that has become a modern landmark of Filipino strength and resilience.


Standing over 60 meters tall, “The Victor” — a triumphant figure reaching skyward across the Pasig and Quezon City boundary — served as the perfect metaphor for Superman’s own legacy: bold, aspirational, and forged from struggle.


As David Corenswet looked up at the colossal figure, he remarked:


“This is the Philippines’ Superman — a symbol of overcoming, rising above challenges, and believing in the impossible.”


James Gunn, visibly moved, added, “This isn’t just an art piece. It’s a story — and that’s what Superman is about. The world needs more Victors.”


Rachel Brosnahan knelt beside a group of fans gathered nearby and posed for photos with children dressed as Clark Kent, Wonder Woman, and The Flash. “If Lois were here,” she said, “she’d be writing a headline about this statue — and how it inspires a nation to keep climbing.”


Photos and videos of the cast standing at the base of “The Victor,” hands raised in salute, instantly went viral. One fan captioned it:


“From Metropolis to Manila, heroes recognize heroes. #SupermanInPH #TheVictorStandsTall #LookUpManila”


Beyond the Red Carpet

In addition to their appearance at Bridgetowne, the trio paid a heartfelt visit to a children’s hospital in Pasig. Corenswet, in full costume and character, lit up the ward with hugs, smiles, and hope.


“They didn’t just bring Hollywood to Manila,” said Wazzup Pilipinas founder Ross Flores Del Rosario, who covered the visit. “They brought humanity — and reminded us why we fall in love with heroes in the first place.”


At the exclusive fan premiere, attendees were treated to never-before-seen footage, including soaring action sequences, tender Clark-Lois scenes on the Daily Planet rooftop, and a first look at Lex Luthor’s chilling new persona.


A Legacy Cemented in Concrete and Courage

As their Manila leg drew to a close, fans were left not just with autographs and selfies — but with something deeper. A message.


James Gunn summed it up on stage:


“Every country we visit leaves a mark on our film. But the Philippines — with your warmth, passion, and grit — you’ve left a mark on our hearts. You are now a part of Superman’s legacy.”


And as the cape billowed in the breeze beside “The Victor,” perhaps the world’s most famous superhero met his match — not in battle, but in meaning.


Up, up, and Mabuhay!

Because here in the Philippines, even Superman finds strength.

Powering the Future: How PBBM’s Green Light Sparked Hope in a Remote Agusan del Norte Tribe


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Sitio Tagpangi, Buenavista, Agusan del Norte — June 21, 2025. In a small, isolated village carved deep into the mountains of Mindanao, hope finally arrived — not by road, but by the spark of solar power and the glow of connectivity.


For the first time, the classrooms of Datu Saldong Domino Elementary School, nestled in the ancestral lands of the Higaonon tribe, lit up with electric light and satellite internet — a revolutionary moment under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s landmark Last Mile Electrification Program.


This transformative initiative — a ₱1.295-billion collaboration between the Department of Education (DepEd), the Department of Energy (DOE), and the National Electrification Administration (NEA) — aims to energize the country’s most isolated schools, ensuring no Filipino learner is left in the dark.


And in Sitio Tagpangi, the darkness was real.


From Shadows to Screens

For years, students here studied under flickering candles and kerosene lamps, while teachers struggled with limited resources and no access to digital tools. The isolation wasn’t just geographical — it was educational, economic, and deeply social. But all that changed on June 19, 2025, when government officials arrived bearing not just infrastructure, but the promise of inclusion.


Education Secretary Sonny Angara, braving river crossings and treacherous mountain roads, led the historic energization mission. Under the beating sun and amidst the cheers of the Higaonon community, the school was switched on — literally and figuratively — powered by solar energy and connected to the world via Starlink satellite internet.


“This is an IP school. They got electricity last Monday, thanks to the quick work of NEA and DOE,” Angara proudly announced during a live video call with President Marcos Jr., who joined from Quezon City. “This is just the beginning. We are ready to roll out to the rest.”


The Department’s bold vision is to electrify 295 remote public schools across the country within the year. With this pilot launch, the dream has become a tangible reality.


A President’s Promise

During the virtual engagement, President Marcos Jr. encouraged the young learners with an inspiring message:


“Maganda yung bago ninyong laruan. Gamitin niyo nang husto ‘yan. Marami kayong matututunan. Pararamihin pa natin ito—especially in Geographically Isolated and Disadvantaged Areas.”


True to his administration’s commitment to inclusive education, the President vowed to ensure that no child, regardless of where they live, is left behind in the digital era.


Community Empowerment Beyond the Classroom

Agusan del Norte Governor Angelica Amante, visibly moved, highlighted the impact on the Higaonon tribe:


“Ngayon po, very excited na silang pumasok. Hindi katulad dati na ayaw nila pumasok.”


The electrification goes beyond school grounds. Nearby homes are also benefiting from the newly installed solar power system, thanks to the support of ANECO (Agusan del Norte Electric Cooperative, Inc.), which partnered with NEA on implementation.


NEA Administrator Antonio Mariano Almeda reaffirmed the urgency of their mission:


“I committed to Sec. Sonny that all 295 Last Mile Schools will be covered and rolled out within the year.”


It was a promise rooted in equity — to bridge the gap between students in urban hubs and those tucked away in the remotest corners of the archipelago.


A Spark That Ignites Dreams

In Sitio Tagpangi, light now dances on blackboards where shadows once reigned. Students who once hesitated to go to school now rush in with anticipation. For them, electricity isn’t just power — it’s opportunity. It’s access to information, to modern tools, and to a broader world that had long felt out of reach.


The story of Datu Saldong Domino Elementary School is now a beacon — proof that real change doesn’t start in the corridors of power but in the flicker of a classroom light, the hum of a tablet booting up, and the joyful gasp of a child seeing the world beyond the mountains for the very first time.


As the electrification program powers forward, one thing is clear: this isn’t just a project—it’s a revolution of hope, inclusion, and dignity.


The light has been turned on. The future has begun.

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