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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Silent Toll: How Carbon Emissions are Redrawing the Global Map of Survival


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For decades, the true cost of a single ton of carbon dioxide has been a ghost in the machine of global economics—a haunting presence we knew existed but could never quite measure. Now, a groundbreaking study from the Climate Impact Lab, published in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, has finally put a price on the ultimate consequence: human life.


The findings are stark. Every ton of CO2

  we pump into the atmosphere today carries a "mortality tag" of $36.60. It is a ledger written in temperature extremes, and as the mercury rises, the world is being split into those who can afford to adapt and those who will pay with their lives.


The U-Shaped Death Curve

At the heart of the research is a universal biological truth: humans have a "sweet spot" for survival. By analyzing 399 million death records across 41 countries, researchers uncovered a distinct U-shaped relationship between temperature and mortality.


The Cold Sting: When temperatures drop below -4°C (25°F), mortality rates climb as the cold strains cardiovascular systems.


The Heat Surge: When temperatures soar above 35°C (95°F), the impact is even more lethal. A single extreme heat day increases the global mortality rate by 4 deaths per million people.


A Tale of Two Cities: Wealth as a Shield

The study reveals a disturbing "adaptation gap." Climate change isn't just a weather phenomenon; it’s an inequality multiplier. The ability to survive an extreme day depends less on the thermometer and more on the bank account.


Factor

High-Income Regions (e.g., Oslo, Norway)

Low-Income Regions (e.g., Accra, Ghana)


Primary Impact

Economic: Massive spending on HVAC and infrastructure.

Biological: Sharp spikes in actual death rates.


Projected 2100 Outcome

-25.2 deaths per 100,000 (Net lives saved due to fewer cold days).

+106.7 deaths per 100,000 (Net lives lost due to extreme heat).


Adaptation Cost

High (Rich countries spend 3x more to protect citizens).

Low (Lack of resources to invest in cooling).

In wealthy cities like Houston, heat is a nuisance managed by air conditioning. In Delhi, that same heat is a predator. The researchers found that failing to account for this adaptation—the "Houston Effect"—would lead us to overestimate global deaths, but it also highlights a grim reality: the poor are dying so the planet can stay "cheap" for the rest.


The Macro Picture: 2100 and the "New" Leading Cause of Death

If we stay on our current high-emissions path, the results are catastrophic. By the end of the century, the death toll from climate-driven temperature changes will reach 73 deaths per 100,000 people.


To put that in perspective, that is on par with the current global death rate for all infectious diseases combined—HIV, Malaria, and Tuberculosis included.


"We are essentially creating a new global pandemic, one ton of carbon at a time."


The Silver Lining: The Power of Mitigation

The report isn't just a eulogy; it's a call to action. The data shows that policy choices made today have a mathematical, life-saving impact.


High Emissions Scenario: CO2

  damages are valued at $36.6 per ton.


Moderate Emissions Scenario: If we stabilize emissions by 2050, that cost drops to $17.1 per ton.


By shifting to a moderate path, we don't just "help the environment"—we cut the projected mortality costs of warming by a staggering 84%.


The Bottom Line

For years, skeptics argued that climate models were too theoretical. This study changes the game by using hard empirical data from 24,378 distinct regions. It tells us that while the wealthy might spend their way into a safer, albeit more expensive, future, the world's most vulnerable are standing on the front lines of a thermal war they didn't start.


We now know the price of our emissions. The question is: are we willing to pay it?

𝐊𝐨𝐫𝐭𝐞 𝐒𝐮𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐦𝐚 𝐚𝐭 𝐊𝐖𝐅, 𝐍𝐚𝐠𝐩𝐮𝐥𝐨𝐧𝐠 𝐩𝐚𝐫𝐚 𝐬𝐚 𝐄𝐩𝐢𝐬𝐲𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐞𝐧𝐠 𝐏𝐚𝐠𝐬𝐚𝐬𝐚𝐠𝐚𝐰𝐚 𝐧𝐠 𝐕𝐂𝐀𝐃





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Nagpulong ang Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino (KWF) at Office of the Court Administrator (OCA) noong 10 Marso 2026, 10:00 nu, sa tanggapan ng Korte Suprema hinggil sa tuntuning ipinatutupad ng Korte Suprema sa Filipino Sign Language (FSL) sa Hudikatura.



Nilinaw ng dalawang panig ang mga proseso sa pagsasagawa ng Visual Communication Assessment for the Deaf (VCAD) kabilang ang pagtalakay sa dokumentasyon at pagbabayad sa Deaf Assessor, alinsunod sa A.M. No. 21-12-04-SC (Re: Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Filipino Sign Language Act). Nakaangkla rin ito sa Batas Republika 11106 o FSL Act na naglalayong palakasin ang akses ng Deaf Community sa mga serbisyong panghudikatura at maisulong ang ingklusibidad na pamamahala bilang tugon sa Strategic Plan for Judicial Innovations (SPJI) ng Korte Suprema.








Dumalo mulâ sa KWF si Dr. Benjamin M. Mendillo Jr., Komisyoner sa Pangasiwaan at Pananalapi, kasáma ang Yunit ng FSL sa pangunguna ni G. Patrick Bryan Q. Ablaza, Senior Deaf Advocacy Officer; Bb. Diana Pria Vizmanos, Deaf Advocacy Officer; at mga Admin Assistant na sina Bb. Nicah Lagrimas at Bb. Mitzi Mae Tabao. Kinatawan naman nina Hon. Lilian Barribal-Co, Assistant Court Administrator, at Atty. Andrea Mae E. Oraciln ang OCA.

DepEd three-term calendar reform gains support from teachers, parents


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MAKATI CITY, 25 March 2026 — Several parents, teachers, and school leaders have expressed support for the Department of Education’s (DepEd) shift to a three-term school calendar, saying the reform could help improve the flow of instruction and give teachers more time to focus on teaching.

The new calendar for School Year 2026–2027, approved by President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. after consultations with education stakeholders, reorganizes the school year into three terms to better manage teaching time, assessments, and school activities.

Consultations were conducted at national, regional, and school levels, including engagements with teachers and school leaders.




Education Secretary Sonny Angara emphasized that the change aims to help teachers manage their workload through clearer scheduling of grading, reporting, and other administrative tasks.

School leaders like Edwin Fuego, school head of Alveola Integrated School Annex in Butuan City, said the three-term structure could help schools focus more on time spent on actual instruction.

“With a more structured distribution of the school year, educators can devote sufficient time to ensure that learning competencies are thoroughly taught and mastered,” Fuego shared.

Teachers themselves said the change could help reduce the pressure from administrative work during the school year.

Teacher Reden Juego of Ramon Magsaysay Cubao High School said the three-term calendar separates instructional time from tasks such as checking exams and preparing report cards.

“On the part of the teachers, administrative tasks such as checking the summative test papers, computing for grades, distribution of report cards, and the like will be reduced. This entails time for teachers to focus on actual planning and execution of lessons,” he said.

Among parents, the reform is seen as a way to bring better pacing to the school year.

Miriam Illescas, a parent from Malolos Marine Fishery School and Laboratory in Bulacan, views a more structured calendar could help minimize class disruptions caused by frequent school activities or unforeseen events.

“The three-term school calendar by DepEd offers a structured yet flexible framework for learning. With proper planning, it can improve student achievement, minimize fatigue, and provide timely support for learners who are struggling,” she said.

Angara noted that the calendar shift is part of broader efforts to improve learning outcomes nationwide, alongside programs on classroom construction, school feeding, literacy interventions, and the delivery of textbooks to learners.

DepEd said it will continue to engage stakeholders and monitor implementation to ensure that the reform supports both learners and teachers.
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