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Thursday, June 11, 2026

The Breath of a City: Dr. Farah Waseem and the Frontlines of Lahore’s Climate Crisis

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



The morning air in Lahore does not greet its citizens; it suffocates them. It is a thick, caustic veil that tastes of ash and burnt rubber, blurring the horizon into a ghostly, gray void. For 26-year-old Dr. Farah Waseem, the smog is not merely an environmental backdrop—it is a pervasive, clinical antagonist.


Every day, as she traverses the city to reach her hospital, Waseem navigates an atmosphere so toxic that visibility often drops to near zero. It is a stark, recurring nightmare that peaks from October to February, transforming Pakistan’s second-largest city into one of the most polluted places on Earth. In the winter of 2024, the Air Quality Index (AQI) in Lahore surged past 1,000—a number that defies healthy comprehension, especially when the standard for "healthy" is 50 or below. 


"Air pollution," Waseem notes with the weary precision of a physician on the frontlines, "is one thing which does not only affect the lungs. It affects the entire body."


The Physician’s Reckoning

Waseem is a bridge between two worlds: the impassioned climate activist who cut her teeth as a youth delegate, and the modern doctor witnessing the catastrophic toll of environmental negligence. The transition from activist to healer was sparked by personal tragedy; when her father suffered a stroke when she was 18, she became obsessed with the mysteries of the brain, leading her into medicine. 


But in the corridors of her private hospital, the "mysteries" of human biology are increasingly being written by the climate crisis.


In early November, the hospital saw a trickle of patients—30 to 50 a day—suffering from respiratory distress. By December, that number surged past 100. The patients are a cross-section of a society under siege:


Children arriving with acute respiratory infections, bronchitis, and harrowing asthma attacks.


Healthy adults presenting with persistent, dry coughs, severe conjunctivitis, and mysterious skin inflammations.


The elderly, struggling with heart failure and angina flare-ups triggered by the relentless inhalation of particulate matter.


To these patients, Waseem offers inhalers, medication, and clinical care. But she harbors no illusions. "These are just Band-Aids," she says. "If we do not treat that root cause in itself, it’s not going to get better."


Beyond the Smog Season

There is a dangerous tendency to view Lahore’s air crisis as a seasonal phenomenon—a "smog season" that will eventually clear. Waseem rejects this narrative entirely. She argues that the seasonal spike is merely a visibility marker for a year-round systemic failure.


The cocktail of toxic air is fueled by a relentless cycle of fossil fuel combustion, industrial emissions, and biomass burning, all exacerbated by a warming planet that traps pollutants close to the ground. For Waseem, the air is a borderless threat. "The air pollution does not need a visa," she reminds us.


A Moral and Civic Duty

Pakistan stands at the precipice of the climate emergency. From devastating floods that inundated one-third of the country in 2022 to record-breaking heat waves that have forced medical staff to undergo specialized emergency training, the nation is in a constant state of survival.


Waseem’s advocacy has evolved into a form of triage. She, alongside global alliances like Health Care Without Harm and Physicians for Social Responsibility, is calling for a fundamental restructuring of our global energy systems. She supports the demand for a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty—a bold framework to end the era of extraction and transition to a renewable future. 


Yet, she remains deeply disillusioned by the inertia of global climate summits. "It almost feels like we are just buying time and letting those in power extract out the remaining natural resources while the people most affected... continue to bear the brunt," she says.


The Call for Proactive Justice

Back home, the frustration is palpable. The government’s reliance on superficial, "theatrical" fixes—such as anti-smog cannons that spray water into the sky—does nothing to solve the underlying crisis. Waseem calls for the only solution that matters: long-term, structural policy change.


As she continues to treat the victims of a changing climate, Dr. Waseem embodies the new generation of medical professionals who realize that the Hippocratic Oath now demands more than just healing the individual; it demands healing the world that makes them sick.


She isn't just treating patients anymore; she is diagnosing a planet in critical condition. And as the smog settles over Lahore, her message is clear: the time for temporary relief is over. The time for the reckoning is now.


Do you believe that the integration of climate-related health training in medical schools is a critical step in addressing the global climate crisis?


Malaysia’s Electric Moment: A High-Stakes Shift for the ASEAN Frontier

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



The global automotive industry is not merely changing; it is undergoing a fundamental platform shift. As the internal combustion engine (ICE) faces its twilight, the race to define the electric vehicle (EV) era in Southeast Asia is intensifying. While neighbours have opted for aggressive assembly strategies and resource-backed nationalism, Malaysia stands at a decisive fork in the road.


To avoid falling behind, Malaysia must resist the urge to imitate its regional peers. Instead, the country has a unique opportunity to leverage its established technological prowess—semiconductors, engineering talent, and sophisticated financial infrastructure—to capture the high-value "brains" of the EV ecosystem.


The Regional Landscape: A Study in Divergent Strategies

ASEAN has become a critical theatre for global EV competition, with three distinct models currently dictating the pace:


Thailand (The Assembly Hub): Aggressively incentivizing Chinese OEMs to shift production bases to Thai soil.


Indonesia (Resource Nationalism): Leveraging the world’s largest nickel reserves to force downstream battery investment.


Vietnam (State-Backed Champions): Nurturing domestic entities like VinFast through massive, vertically integrated state investment.


For Malaysia, these models serve as a "negative" guide. Lacking the massive ICE scale of Thailand, the raw mineral abundance of Indonesia, or the state-directed capital tolerance of Vietnam, Malaysia’s path must be different. The goal should not be to assemble the vehicle, but to build the components, software, and financial engines that every manufacturer in the region requires.


Why Malaysia’s Current Footprint is a Launchpad, Not a Limit

Malaysia’s potential is anchored in four strategic pillars that are difficult for competitors to replicate:


Semiconductor Dominance: Malaysia is a top-five global exporter of chips. With EVs requiring 2–3 times more semiconductor content than ICE vehicles, Malaysia is already deeply embedded in the "nervous system" of modern transport.


Engineering Talent: The country boasts a deep pipeline of electrical and mechatronic engineers. The primary challenge is not supply, but retention—addressing the wage leakage to Singapore through high-value industrial development.


Financial Sophistication: As the world’s largest issuer of sukuk, Malaysia is uniquely positioned to pioneer "green sukuk" to fund massive, long-horizon infrastructure projects.


Corporate Reach: Government-linked companies (GLCs) like Petronas and Tenaga Nasional Berhad possess the institutional weight to anchor grid modernization and charging infrastructure, shifting from fossil fuel dependency to energy transition leadership.


The Path Forward: Five Strategic Imperatives (2026–2031)

To transition from a participant to a regional leader, the following policy framework is required within the next three to five years:


1. The 15k Charging Target: Move beyond the current 10,000-point goal. By leveraging TNB’s grid infrastructure, Malaysia should target 15,000 operational fast-charging points by 2028, turning transit corridors into commercial assets.


2. Component Leadership: Reposition the Penang/Kulim cluster as the premier regional supplier of power electronics and battery management systems. The objective is clear: ensure that every EV produced in Thailand or Indonesia relies on components designed or packaged in Malaysia.


3. The Battery Circular Economy: Since Malaysia cannot mine its own nickel, it should become the "recycler." Establishing battery testing, second-life repurposing, and end-of-life recycling facilities will turn a lack of minerals into a sustainable service advantage.


4. Human Capital Retention: Implement targeted curriculum reforms coupled with aggressive fiscal incentives for engineers who remain in domestic EV-related sectors, treating this as a national security priority.


5. ASEAN Diplomatic Leadership: Use Malaysia’s ASEAN Chairmanship to lead regional harmonization. By advocating for unified standards and cross-border charging infrastructure, Malaysia can position itself as the indispensable coordinator of the Southeast Asian EV corridor.


The Verdict: Vision over Imitation

Proton and Perodua remain vital for the domestic market, but they cannot carry the weight of a regional export strategy against the scale of Chinese competitors. Malaysia’s real leverage lies in the knowledge-intensive niches of the EV supply chain.


The transition to electric vehicles is not a future possibility; it is a present reality. The window for Malaysia to pivot is closing, but its foundations remain strong. By focusing on where it is uniquely equipped to excel, Malaysia can move from being a bystander in the automotive race to becoming the architect of the region’s clean energy future.


Does your organization have a specific focus on one of the four areas mentioned—semiconductors, battery recycling, smart grids, or charging infrastructure—and would you like a deeper breakdown of the policy incentives currently available for that sector?

MAFBEX 2026: 20 Years of Exciting Flavors and Opportunities

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 




The Manila Foods and Beverages Expo (MAFBEX), the Philippines’ highly anticipated food and beverage exposition, officially started yesterday June 10, 2026, at the World Trade Center in Pasay City, Metro Manila, celebrating 20 fruitful years of flavors and opportunities. 


The exhibition has brought industry leaders, culinary experts, business entrepreneurs, and food enthusiasts, together for an exciting week of local and international innovation and collaboration. 




Ms. Charlotte Ferguson, kickstarted the opening program by introducing the De La Salle College of Saint Benilde drummers that set the festive tone of the event followed by a spectacular cultural performance.








The program followed through with opening messages from industry leaders and partners, taking note of MAFBEX's position as a platform for innovation, growth and community leadership. 




Respected leaders and dignitaries such as Hon. Mayor Imelda Calixto - Rubiano was represented by Ms. Angelica Roa Yu; Hon. Secretary Dita Agnara- Mathay by Hon. Undersecretary Maria Victoria Jasmin; Hon Atty. Genevieve E. Velicaria- Guevarra represented By Hon Director Junibert De Sagun; Hon. House Speaker Borjie Dy represented By Hon. Congressman Tsuyoshi Anthony “Hori” G. Horibata and Worldbex Event’s Managing Director - Ms. Jill Aithnie Ang.




Ms. Ang specifically mentioned, “The best flavors and opportunities are here. Welcome to MAFBEX.”—officially opening this year’s MAFBEX event.



This year’s event also supports the ABS-CBN Foundation, with every ticket supporting its programs. Ms. Tracy Hizon of ABS-CBN Foundation Inc. took the stage to highlight the importance of the partnership.



The opening veered away from the traditional ribbon-cutting ceremony for a milestone cake. Letters indicating “M-A-F-B-E-X” were revealed one by one, marking 20 years of uniting the food and beverage industry—culminating with a wine toast to celebrate a stronger bond and beneficial partnership for all. 




Written by: Renz Delim


Images from: MAFBEX Media, Alejandro Diego and Miles Alimangohan


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