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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

The Rising Tide: A Global Battle for Health, Justice, and Survival at the Water’s Edge


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SEOUL, April 8, 2026 — As the warming world pushes our oceans to new heights, the advancing waterline is no longer a distant scientific projection; it is an immediate, escalating health emergency reshaping daily life for hundreds of millions. In a landmark move to address this "defining policy challenge of our time," a prestigious group of 26 global experts has convened to launch the Lancet Commission on Sea-Level Rise, Health, and Justice.


A Crisis Beyond the Environment

While sea-level rise is often framed as an environmental or "climate" problem, leaders of the new Commission argue its true toll is deeply human. Rising seas are quietly contaminating freshwater supplies, failing overtaxed sanitation systems, and driving new, dangerous patterns of waterborne and vector-borne diseases.


"Rising seas don’t just threaten coastlines, they threaten lives, livelihoods, and basic fairness," warns Prof. Dr. Jemilah Mahmood, Executive Director of the Sunway Centre for Planetary Health. "This is not only a climate problem. It is a health crisis, a justice crisis, and an urgent call for collective action".


The statistics are staggering: by the year 2100, up to 410 million people are projected to live on land falling below the high-tide threshold. For these populations, the threat includes not just the physical trauma of coastal flooding and storm surges, but a profound erosion of nutrition security, mental health, and the very cultural foundations of their communities.


The Architecture of Justice

The Commission, the first of its kind to examine these intersecting challenges through a "health lens," is built upon three core pillars:



Connection: Recognizing that environment, culture, and place are inseparable from human health.



Imagination: Pushing for policy and scientific responses that look beyond current, limited frameworks.



Justice: Ensuring that those most vulnerable—who often contributed the least to global emissions—are protected, heard, and compensated.


Co-Chair Christiana Figueres, former Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, emphasizes that the Commission's unique strength lies in putting human and planetary health at the center of the work. "The cost of inaction is staggering," Figueres notes, "but so too is the opportunity" to uplift those on the frontlines.


A Global Mandate for Action

Born from a 2024 political mandate by Western Pacific Health Ministers, the Commission brings together a multidisciplinary powerhouse of expertise from six continents. Its five transdisciplinary Working Groups will tackle everything from ocean modelling and epidemiology to law, policy, and ethics.


Crucially, this is not an ivory-tower exercise. The Commission is committed to weaving together First Nations Knowledges and Indigenous sciences with robust scientific analysis. As Commissioner Brianna Fruean shares through a haunting Pacific Islander proverb: "What is felt on the coast, will soon be felt inland. What is felt by the East, will also be felt by the West".


What Comes Next?

The Commission’s findings are intended to be a catalyst for global change, with recommendations designed for adoption by governments and multilateral institutions. Key upcoming milestones include:



April 11, 2026: Publication of the print version of the Lancet Comment.



April 20, 2026: Distribution of reports during UNFCCC week in South Korea.



Ongoing Engagement: High-level advocacy at the World Health Assembly and the IPCC Seventh Assessment Report.


As Dr. Sandro Demaio of the WHO Asia-Pacific Centre for Environment and Health concludes, "Inaction is not neutral, it is a choice that puts lives and justice at risk". The tide is rising; the Commission ensures the world can no longer look away.

Malaysia at the Brink: The Bold New Blueprint to Save a Nation’s Future


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As the clock ticks toward the mid-twenty-first century, Malaysia find itself standing at a harrowing crossroads. Buffeted by the storms of climate volatility, the tremors of geopolitical uncertainty, and a crumbling foundation of public trust, the nation faces a choice that will define its existence.


The old path—a relentless pursuit of growth at any cost—has led to a dangerous dead end. Now, a revolutionary vision emerges to pull the country back from the edge: The National Planetary Health Action Plan (NPHAP).


The Ghost in the Machine: A Legacy of Extraction

For decades, Malaysia followed a "reductionist" model of progress inherited from the West—a mechanistic worldview that viewed nature as a mere commodity and science as a tool of domination. The consequences of this value-neutral approach have been devastating:



Economic Paradox: While the economy grew, the environment regressed and innovation hit a plateau.



The Lethal Toll: Environmental risks now account for premature deaths costing Malaysia approximately 5% of its GDP.



The Price of Deluge: Between 2021 and 2023 alone, climate-driven natural disasters, mostly flooding, drained RM1.1 billion from the nation.


"If you destroy nature, you destroy the foundation of the economy," warns Academician Datuk Dr Tengku Mohd Azzman Shariffadeen, President of the Academy of Sciences Malaysia (ASM).


The Reckoning: Crossing the Tipping Points

The global situation is even more dire. By 2025, humanity had breached seven of the nine planetary boundaries—the literal safety limits of our world. Malaysia has already crossed multiple lines.


Professor Dr Mahendhiran Sanggaran Nair, a leading architect of the NPHAP, points out the fatal flaw in modern teaching: the singular obsession with profit maximization. This "zero-sum development model" has created a world of forest fires, floods, and lost productivity. The window for action isn't just closing; it is slamming shut as we approach irreversible tipping points.


A New Logic: Return on Values (ROV)

The NPHAP isn't just a policy; it is a fundamental reframing of progress itself. At its heart lies a radical new metric: Return on Values (ROV).


Unlike traditional ROI, ROV measures stewardship across four critical dimensions:



Environmental: Protecting and restoring the ecosystem.



Social: Ensuring wellbeing for all.



Economic: Building resilient, planet-friendly industries.



Political: Fostering accountable institutions.


ROV makes the invisible trade-offs visible. By saving money on environmental disasters and health risks, the government can reinvest in high-quality education, healthcare, and infrastructure.


The Four Pillars of the Future

To navigate this new path, the NPHAP establishes an "ethical architecture" built on four foundational principles:



Humanity-Centric: Progress that serves the people, not just the machine.



Nature-Based: Treating nature as a primary asset rather than a constraint.



STI-Enabled: Using Science, Technology, and Innovation as a servant to society, not its master.



Values-Internalised: Moving toward governance rooted in wisdom and ethics.


The Mission: A Whole-of-Nation Transformation

This transition requires nothing less than a "mission-oriented" overhaul of how the country is run. Gone are the days of government agencies operating in silos. The plan calls for a top-level framework that unites industry, civil society, and indigenous communities at the same table.


The challenge is significant. A survey of 2,000 Malaysian firms revealed that while 90% acknowledge the environment's importance, only 13% have actually taken action. The hurdles—cost of transition and a lack of talent—must be cleared by decisive government leadership and ecosystem support.


The Promise: A Pioneer for the Global South

Malaysia is uniquely positioned to lead this charge, leveraging its biodiversity, Islamic finance expertise, and research capabilities. By adopting values-based governance early, Malaysia can become a thought leader for the Global South.


This is not a retreat from growth; it is a redefinition of it. It is a move away from extraction and toward regeneration—a future where progress is measured by long-term sustainable prosperity for all.


As Dr Tengku asserts, the transformation must begin with the smallest citizens: "We must start with the children. If they learn these values early, they will teach their parents". For a nation at the crossroads, this values-driven journey is no longer a choice—it is the only path forward.


Kom. Marites A. Barrios-Taran, kinilala ng Quezon City Association of the Deaf (QCAD)


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Tinanggap ni Kom. Marites A. Barrios-Taran, Tagapangulo ng Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino (KWF), ang sertipiko ng pagkilala mulâ sa Quezon City Association of the Deaf (QCAD). Kaugnay ito ng suporta ng KWF sa QCAD para sa venue ng kanilang Post-New Year Celebration na ginanap noong 21 Pebrero 2026 sa Bulwagang Quezon, 5/P, Harvester Corporate Center, KWF.

Ang naturang gawain ay dinaluhan ng 42 B/binging senior citizen ng Lungsod Quezon.
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