Media Coverage

Rights of Nature PH has launched the “Rescue Lakes, Rivers, and Oceans” campaign backed by more than 28 organizations, including NGOs, youth groups, and faith-based coalitions, the initiative aims to restore and protect the Philippines’ vital water ecosystems in response to growing environmental crises and the urgent need for climate action. Emerging from a recent General Assembly, the campaign seeks to rally public support for the passage of the Rights of Nature Bill—a proposed law that recognizes the inherent rights of ecosystems. If passed, it would provide legal safeguards for the country’s natural resources, ensuring their preservation for future generations.
RIGHTS OF NATURE PH launches ‘Rescue Lakes, Rivers, and Oceans’ initiative to protect key water ecosystems and push for the passage of Rights of Nature Bill. The initiative is supported by 28 different organizations and coalitions, led by the Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc. (PMPI), Caritas Philippines, Diocesan Social Action Center Calapan, Katutubo Kabataang Umuugat sa Kabundukan ng Sierra Madre, Silang Sagip Kalikasan, and Renacimiento Manila.
Quezon City, Philippines – Amid escalating environmental crises and the urgent need for climate action, Rights of Nature PH has launched the “Rescue Lakes, Rivers, and Oceans” This groundbreaking initiative, supported by over 28 organizations, a good mix of both individual organizations and coalitions; spanning nongovernmental organizations, youth advocates, and faith-based groups, emerged from the recent General Assembly to advocate for the protection and restoration of the country’s critical water ecosystems and resources.
Quezon City, Philippines – Amid escalating environmental crises and the urgent need for climate action, Rights of Nature PH has launched the “Rescue Lakes, Rivers, and Oceans” This groundbreaking initiative, supported by over 28 organizations, a good mix of both individual organizations and coalitions; spanning nongovernmental organizations, youth advocates, and faith-based groups, emerged from the recent General Assembly to advocate for the protection and restoration of the country’s critical water ecosystems and resources.
In a powerful display of unity, representatives from civil society, faith-based organizations, and government agencies gathered on Friday, September 20, 2024, at the Maryhill School of Theology for “Hope for Creation: Dialogue for a Fossil Fuel-Free Future in the Philippines.” The event aimed to foster meaningful conversations on transitioning away from fossil fuels, with an emphasis on pushing for the endorsement of the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty (FFNPT).
THE Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc. (PMPI) stood in solidarity with global environmental advocates as the sixth International Rights of Nature Tribunal convened a session, titled “The end of the fossil fuel era.” The expert panel at this Tribunal session examined numerous global cases, where the fossil fuel industry has violated nature’s rights, caused extensive harm to communities and accelerated the climate crisis.
September 24, 2024 – The Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc. (PMPI) stands in solidarity with global environmental advocates as the 6th International Rights of Nature Tribunal convened a session titled “The End of the Fossil Fuel Era” during Climate Week in New York City. This session began a pivotal journey toward addressing one of the most pressing global threats—the fossil fuel industry—and its impacts on nature and human rights. The expert panel at this Tribunal session examined numerous global cases where the fossil fuel industry has violated nature’s rights, caused extensive harm to communities, and accelerated the climate crisis. Cases included false climate solutions, devastating pipeline projects, oil spills, and the creation of sacrifice zones. These testimonies will be highlighted for the UNFCCC COP30 in Bélem, Brazil, in November 2025 to advocate for a “New Pact with Mother Earth.”
Amid the corporate events pervading New York’s “Climate Week,” an international people’s tribunal held an emotional hearing that spotlighted the ecosystems and people living in the shadow of fossil fuel projects. Representatives from communities around the world, scientists and advocates told stories of human and nonhuman forced displacement, degraded heath, ruined economies and lost histories to the International Tribunal on the Rights of Nature on Sunday.
MANILA – From forced eviction to threats, intimidation, and escalating violence— Molbog and Palaw’an indigenous people from Bugsuk, Palawan fled to Manila to report the human rights violations they are being subjected to, saying that San Miguel Corporation (SMC) is behind it. Philippine Misereor Partnership Incorporated, a vast network of advocates, said that community members have reported “alarming incidents, including threats at gunpoint to force them out of their ancestral lands and intrusive surveillance and intimidation that profoundly disrupt their daily lives and livelihoods” since June 29.
The destructive impacts of massive gas expansion and other fossil fuel activities in the Verde Island Passage (VIP) drew the spotlight at this year’s Climate Week in New York, with the plight of the marine biodiversity hotspot among cases presented at an international tribunal on violations against nature. According to a news release from Protect VIP, the 6th International Rights of Nature themed “The End of the Fossil Fuel Era” is an initiative convened in 2015 by the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature (GARN). It is a judicial, non-binding institution, promoting the harmonious co-existence of humans and other beings. Providing a new framework for informed legal analysis, it pushes governments and courts to “look beyond economic incentives and make decisions based on the interests of both humanity and the Earth community as a whole.”
The destructive impacts of massive gas expansion and other fossil fuel activities in the Verde Island Passage drew the spotlight at this year’s Climate Week in New York, with the plight of the marine biodiversity hotspot among cases presented at an international tribunal on violations against nature. Themed “The End of the Fossil Fuel Era,” the 6th International Rights of Nature is an initiative convened in 2015 by the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature (GARN). It is a judicial, non-binding institution, promoting the harmonious co-existence of humans and other beings by providing a new framework for informed legal analysis that pushes governments and courts to “look beyond economic incentives and make decisions based on the interests of both humanity and the Earth community as a whole.”