The Philippines ranks globally as the most at-risk country for natural hazards and impacts of climate change. A key pillar in Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy is climate adaptation and disaster resilience. Through Gov-CDR, Canada has responded, recognizing the Philippines’ unique vulnerabilities, long-standing development partnership and shared commitment to disaster risk reduction.

Governance for Climate and Disaster Resilience ( Gov-CDR) is a six-year project running from March 2024 to March 2030, funded by the Global Affairs Canada (GAC) and implemented by Alinea International. The Project works with local government units (LGUs) and communities in the Philippines to strengthen their capacity to assess risks and natural hazards, mitigate, prepare for, respond to, and recover from related disasters and the adverse effects of climate change.

The Project directly addresses this challenge by strengthening climate and disaster resilience in 61 local governments across six provinces, ultimately benefiting over 5.3 million Filipinos. Gov-CDR supports inclusive, science-based, and sustainable local CDR initiatives, led by empowered local governments in alignment with the Philippine national climate adaptation strategy to better manage climate and disaster risks and adapt to increasingly growing climate change impacts.

Gov-CDR deploys of Canadian technical experts, who work alongside national government agencies, LGUs, and local resource partners to, strengthen institutional capacities, analyze CDR risks and share proven approaches from Canada’s experience in climate change adaptation and mitigation. These efforts ensure strategies and approaches are based on international good practices, local expertise and are anchored on national policies and supports, scientific data and risk assessments, community participation and indigenous knowledge and multi-stakeholder partnerships.

At the 2024 Asia-Pacific Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction (APMCDRR) in Manila, Alinea International in partnership with Global Affairs Canada, the National Resilience Council (NRC), and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) supported the engagement of two Canadian CDR experts as speakers and panelists. Their participation contributed valuable international perspectives on local resilience planning and financing, reinforcing Canada’s commitment to regional cooperation and capacity development across the Indo-Pacific Region.