BREAKING

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

When Climate Meets Health: Journalists Demand Data, Experts, and Urgency in Storytelling



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It was meant to be another briefing — slides, speeches, nods of agreement. But midway through the session, frustration boiled over.


“Wake up, speak up, ask us exactly what you need,” one facilitator urged the room of journalists. The silence was deafening, not because the participants had nothing to say, but because they were carrying questions too big to be neatly answered.


And when they did speak, the floodgates opened.


The Missing Links Between Climate and Health

One journalist stood up with a plea: “I see a very low awareness of the climate crisis among health professionals. I struggle to find doctors or medical researchers who can even respond to questions about extreme heat and its impact on health.”


The challenge was clear. While research exists in some corners of the globe, vast gaps remain, particularly in Asia. Alzheimer’s, reproductive health, fertility rates, brain health — all are being quietly reshaped by rising temperatures, yet hardly anyone is connecting the dots.


Japan, for instance, wrestles with a plummeting fertility rate, but how much of that ties back to climate stressors remains unstudied. Across Southeast Asia, children displaced by typhoons and floods are growing up with invisible scars of climate anxiety, but their stories remain anecdotal, undocumented, and uncounted.


Mental Health: The Silent Emergency

Perhaps the most emotional interventions came when journalists touched on the link between climate change and mental health.


“How are these disasters shaping children’s psychology?” asked one reporter. Another followed: “I want to explore climate anxiety — but finding experts is nearly impossible. Mental health data is rarely categorized as ‘climate-related.’”


The dilemma is brutal: people are suffering, yet the science and data lag behind. Clinics record anxiety and PTSD, but no doctor writes “climate” on the diagnosis. Without that categorization, the numbers don’t exist — and what doesn’t exist, policymakers ignore.


Still, the stories are real. A Philippine journalist recalled covering survivors of Super Typhoon Haiyan, whose panic resurfaces whenever storms threaten again. A South Asian father spoke of buying mosquito repellent for his daughter for the first time, after insects climbed to altitudes they’d never reached before. These lived anxieties aren’t waiting for peer-reviewed journals; they are already here.


The Data Desert

Reporters also vented about a persistent roadblock: lack of localized data.


“I’d love to do a story on heat-related deaths in Nepal,” one journalist admitted, “but there’s no data. It’s like trying to write about a ghost.”


The response from experts was blunt: “Then make the absence of data the story. Push governments to track what they are ignoring. Anecdotal evidence is not worthless — it is the seed that pressures institutions to start measuring.”


It was a reminder that journalism is not just about relaying facts, but also about forcing accountability where silence reigns.


The Tariffs Question

Amid the emotional weight of climate-health intersections, another thread tugged at the room: trade. Questions circled around the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) — a set of tariffs targeting carbon-intensive industries like cement, steel, and aluminum.


Would these tariffs cripple export-oriented economies in Asia? Could they push industries to cleaner practices, or would they simply punish developing nations already reeling from climate damages?


India, one expert explained, opposes the unilateral imposition of CBAM, seeing it as a sovereignty issue. But the negotiations remain unresolved, underscoring how climate change is not just about storms and droughts, but also about markets, geopolitics, and livelihoods.


The Struggle for Impactful Storytelling

Perhaps the hardest question came last: “When we tell these stories, what should the call to action be?”


It was asked by a journalist reporting on sex workers in coastal communities, whose mental health is deteriorating as climate impacts strip away livelihoods. Her interviews were heartbreaking, but she worried the story would end in despair.


The advice was pointed: don’t just end with statistics or sorrow. Connect with civil society groups, amplify community voices, and frame demands in ways policymakers cannot ignore. Journalism, after all, is not just about describing suffering — it is about provoking response.


A New Kind of Journalism

By the end of the session, the room was no longer silent. It was buzzing with urgency, with a realization that climate reporting must break old molds.


It’s no longer enough to write about floods, fires, or rising seas. Journalists must expose how climate change is infiltrating hospitals, homes, and even the minds of children. They must document the invisible costs — the anxiety, the infertility, the untreated trauma — and insist these be counted, studied, and addressed.


The conclusion was sobering but empowering: lack of data is not a dead end. It is an invitation. An invitation for journalists to push harder, to turn anecdotes into evidence, and to make silence impossible.


As one speaker said, almost as a rallying cry:

“Our job is to keep the public best informed so that they can make the best decisions for their own interests. Lack of data? That itself is the story. And it’s up to us to tell it.”

Geeks on a Beach 2025: From AI Hype to Hands-On Impact


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Get ready for an electrifying confluence of technology and paradise, as Geeks on a Beach (GOAB) 2025 is set to transform the shores of Mactan, Cebu, into a hub of AI-driven innovation. This year, the Philippines' premier international tech and startup conference is tackling the future head-on, introducing new Artificial Intelligence (AI) tracks designed to propel businesses and tech teams from conceptual hype to tangible, real-world application.




A New Era of AI-Powered Growth

Mark your calendars for 


October 1–3, 2025, at the beautiful JPark Island Resort. GOAB 2025 isn't just another conference; it's a launchpad for actionable strategies aimed at leveraging AI to ignite growth, supercharge efficiency, and spark innovation. Tina Amper, the lead organizer of GOAB, emphasizes the urgency of this transition, noting that while "every company is turning into an AI company," many are grappling with where to start. GOAB's new tracks are crafted to be that definitive roadmap, empowering founders, executives, and tech teams to use AI to enhance operations, boost revenue, and upskill their workforce.




AI Masterclasses: Deep Dives for Every Team

The three-day event kicks off on 


October 1 with a series of masterclasses built for deep, practical learning. Two distinct tracks will run simultaneously, each meticulously tailored to the needs of a different audience:


For Tech & IT Professionals: This track offers hands-on sessions. Attendees will learn to develop AI solutions using Gemini and Google Cloud with Cleo Credo from Full Scale. Carl Angelo Orale of Ticketnation will lead a session on creating practical AI playbooks for achieving tangible business results , while Raven Duran from Symph.co will guide participants on implementing real-world strategies for AI-augmented software development.


For Business, Marketing & Startup Teams: This track focuses on strategic thought leadership. Industry leaders like Mohan Belani (e27 Singapore), Eli Harrell and Gladys Palarca (Emerge.ph), and Robert Cristobal (NxtStory Studios) will share their expertise. They'll cover how organizations can strategically position themselves, use AI for powerful branding and communication, and lead high-performing teams in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.



Zero to Strategy: Your AI Roadmap

On October 2, a pivotal moment arrives with a hands-on workshop led by seasoned AI technology leader Tim Santos. With over 16 years of experience in AI, MLOps, and data science, Santos has a proven track record of bridging the gap between cutting-edge research and real-world enterprise adoption.


His workshop, aptly titled "Zero to Strategy: Building Your AI Roadmap," is designed to help decision-makers and innovators identify critical opportunities within their own organizations. Participants will be guided through a transformative process: turning broad, ambitious ideas into concrete, actionable use cases. You'll leave with a personalized AI roadmap for the next 30, 60, and 90 days. Santos will also provide a data-driven perspective on AI adoption in the Philippines, sharing insights from the Philippine AI Report Survey and highlighting key areas ripe with opportunity.


With its blend of practical learning and strategic insights, GOAB 2025 promises to arm every attendee with the tools and strategies necessary to not just navigate, but to lead the charge in the AI revolution.


Ready to harness the future? Join the movement and secure your spot at this game-changing event. For tickets and more information, visit geeksonabeach.com.

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Toxic Deception: EcoWaste Coalition Exposes Hazardous Lead Paints Masquerading as “Safe”


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Quezon City, Philippines — September 9, 2025.

What happens when a toxic poison hides behind a false promise of safety? The!? EcoWaste Coalition has once again sounded the alarm after uncovering another brand of imported spray paint flooding the Philippine market—boldly mislabeled as “lead-free” but in truth, dangerously laced with lead levels thousands of times above the legal limit.


The culprit: Easyman Spray Paint All Purpose Enamel.


Sold for as little as ₱99 in stores across Bulacan and Quezon City, this brightly packaged paint claims to be safe, non-toxic, and “no Pb”—a direct reference to the absence of lead. But scientific analysis tells a chillingly different story.


A Toxic Reality Behind the Label

Using an Olympus Vanta M Series X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzer, EcoWaste screened multiple Easyman paint variants. The findings were staggering:


Yellow: over 100,000 ppm of lead


Orange: 84,900 ppm


Green: 65,600 ppm


Signal Red: 1,577 ppm


Blue: 866 ppm


Silver Red: 446 ppm





To put this in perspective, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has set the maximum allowable lead content in paints at 90 ppm under Administrative Order 2013-24. These paints exceeded that by astronomical margins, making them not only unsafe but outright poisonous.


And yet, Easyman’s cans flaunt multilingual instructions declaring the product “non-toxic” and “lead-free.” No manufacturer or distributor information is provided, leaving consumers in the dark about who is responsible for unleashing these toxic goods into Philippine households and communities.


A Betrayal of Consumer Rights

EcoWaste did not mince words, branding the sale and distribution of Easyman paints as “deceptive, unfair, and unconscionable.” Such mislabeling directly violates Republic Act 7394, the Consumer Act of the Philippines, which enshrines the right of consumers to truthful information and protection against unsafe products.


“The importation, distribution and sale of lead-containing Easyman Spray Paints violate DENR A.O. 2013-24 banning lead use in paints,” the group emphasized. “Consumers have the right to be protected against fraudulent claims and unsafe products, as well as the right to be provided with facts needed to make an informed choice.”


A Pattern of Toxic Dumping

Sadly, this is not an isolated case. Since 2020, EcoWaste has repeatedly unearthed paint brands marketed as “lead-free” but later exposed as toxic offenders. Among them: Easyman, Korona, Sinag, Standard JR, and Tiger.


Despite the Philippines ratifying the Rotterdam Convention in 2006—an international treaty designed to regulate hazardous chemicals—the illegal importation of toxic paints continues unabated. This loophole allows unscrupulous manufacturers and distributors to profit at the expense of public health, particularly endangering children, whose developing brains are most vulnerable to lead poisoning.


The Hidden Cost of Lead

Lead is not just another chemical—it is a potent neurotoxin. Even small exposures can cause irreversible brain damage, lowered IQ, learning difficulties, behavioral problems, and in severe cases, organ failure. Children are disproportionately at risk, often exposed when they touch or inhale dust from lead-painted surfaces.


The World Health Organization (WHO) has repeatedly warned: “There is no safe level of lead exposure.”


Toward Global Accountability

Together with the International Pollutants Elimination Network (IPEN), EcoWaste is calling for stricter global enforcement. They are lobbying for the inclusion of lead chromates—a common lead pigment—into the Rotterdam Convention’s Annex III, subjecting them to the treaty’s Prior Informed Consent (PIC) procedure.


This means countries like the Philippines would have the power to reject toxic shipments before they even dock at local ports. Encouragingly, nations such as Cameroon, Morocco, and Switzerland have already nominated lead chromates for inclusion. The Philippines, EcoWaste insists, must follow suit with urgency.


The Fight for a Lead-Free Future

EcoWaste’s relentless investigations serve as both a warning and a call to action. Unless authorities tighten enforcement at customs and crack down on illicit distributors, hazardous paints will continue to slip through the cracks—masquerading as safe, affordable products, while poisoning Filipino homes, schools, and workplaces.


The discovery of Easyman Spray Paint is more than a scandal. It is a stark reminder that when public health is at stake, complacency is complicity.


Will we allow toxic lies to repaint our nation—or will we demand accountability, enforcement, and a truly lead-free future?


The answer, quite literally, could shape the health of generations.

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