Consortium for People's Development - Disaster Response

Consortium for People's Development - Disaster Response

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A national, multi-stakeholder consortium of development and humanitarian organizations that seeks to facilitate the development of comprehensive, community-based, relevant and people-oriented DRR initiatives and programs.

28/04/2026

HEAT INDEX ALERT🌡️☀️ Warning na 'to 🥵

Extreme heat continues to intensify across the Philippines, with heat index levels reaching as high as 44°C in some areas. At this level, the situation is no longer merely uncomfortable; it poses significant health risks that should not be ignored. High temperatures combined with humidity greatly increase the danger of heat-related illnesses such as heat exhaustion, heat cramps, and potentially life-threatening heat stroke.

Everyone is at risk under these conditions, but certain groups are especially vulnerable. These include children, the elderly, informal workers such as jeepney drivers and street vendors, and individuals with pre-existing medical conditions.

As of April 2026, the highest recorded heat index in the Philippines reached 46°C in Dumangas, Iloilo on April 4, 2026. This record underscores the severity of current weather conditions and highlights how extreme heat has already affected multiple regions. As April comes to an end, forecasts suggest that May will likely remain intensely hot, with the possibility of even more severe conditions in some areas. In fact, recent advisories indicate that several locations have already experienced heat index levels ranging from 42°C to 45°C even before the start of May. This pattern suggests that extreme heat conditions are persisting and may continue into the coming month.

CPD-DR urges everyone to remain vigilant and prioritize health and safety during this period of extreme heat.

Photos from Consortium for People's Development - Disaster Response's post 27/04/2026

Ang init! All throughout the initial weeks of summer, the Philippines has been dominated by consistently high temperatures and humidity. For the Filipino people this provides big challenges, both for lives and lifelihood.

Over the past few years, summer news has regularly become dominated by incidents of mass faintings and heat exhaustion, as well as deaths from heat strokes and other heat-related illnesses.

The heat index, which combines data on temperature and humidity to indicate “feels like” temperature, provides an important tool to warn us of imminent heat-related risks. In humid weather sweat evaporates slower, making it harder to cool down and worsening heat-related risks.

At the same time, the Filipino people face increased risks of devestating fires as well as droughts and other heat-related affects to lifelihood.

The 2026 early onset of the dry season and subsequent drought, together with the oil price crises and related price hikes, have already affected many farmers and there production, particularly the Cagayan Valley region. This has caused the local governments of both Isabela and Cagayan provinces to declare a state of calamity.

According to the Provincial Agriculture Office, almost 50,000 hectares of corn crops are severely affected in Isabela alone and corn farmers could lose up to 80 percent of their harvest. Estimated damages could reach at least ₱2.3 billion this cropping season.

A case study by farmers organization Danggayan Dagiti Manalon ti Cagayan Valley (Danggayan), shows how, in essence, production costs have become unsustainable.

In the previous cropping, even under more favorable rainy conditions, the farmer incurred a P575 deficit, with production costs at P35,000 against income of P34,425.

The current dry season is expected to further widen losses due to higher fuel use amidst rising costs, as weekly irrigation costs alone have increased from P9,975 to P15,400. This is next to rising costs of other farm inputs, such as fertilizer and pesticides.

Poor farmers and farmworkers are the most vulnerable and most affected. Only a few of the big landlords, wealthy farmers and corporate planters can afford to buy their own water pumps for their farms. A resulting cycle of chronic indebtness and rising interest rates push the farmers in the region, and the wider Philippines, to ever greater despair.

Although initially declared over, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) recently raised its warning status from El Niño Watch to El Niño Alert for the period of June-July-August 2026.

El Niño is a phenomenon characterized by fluctuating ocean temperatures in the equatorial Pacific, coupled with changes in the atmosphere. It typically brings with it drier-than-usual conditions, including below-normal rainfall in several areas.

Next to this, is a forecasted Super El Niño from June to December 2026.

These warn us of more droughts and dry spells in parts of the Philippines for the rest of the year. These bring key risks to food security as well the most marginalized sectors of the nation, affecting critical sectors such as water resources, agriculture, energy supply, and overall public welfare.

All of this only further underscores the importance of a comprehensive approach to community development and climate readiness. Next to urgently supporting communities in relief and in building their own preparedness and resilience, it is important to challenge the systematic problems that the most marginalized sectors in society face. From genuine land reform to improved industrializations, a climate-proof future requires a people-centered and extensive change in our society.

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