US, South Korea ink partnership to boost PH’s climate resilience

US, South Korea ink partnership to boost PH’s climate resilience

US, South Korea ink partnership to boost PH’s climate resilience

The United States and South Korea have signed a P111.5 million partnership to spice up the capabilities of the cities within the Philippines to handle the impacts of local weather change and pure disasters, based on the US Embassy in Manila on Wednesday.

Under the settlement, the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) will help the US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) five-year Climate Resilient Cities Project.

The mission will profit the cities of Batangas, Borongan, Cotabato, Iloilo, Legazpi, and Zamboanga, the US Embassy stated.

This may even improve the capability of the native authorities models (LGUs) to develop tips and use of local weather adaptation expertise, it added.

Six LGUs and different stakeholders may even be supported to successfully disseminate climate-related info to native communities, enhance entry to local weather financing for financial and social improvement, and promote pure local weather options that strengthen cities’ resilience to local weather change.

The embassy additionally stated that the US and South Korea will launch a partnership to forestall and cut back maritime air pollution in Manila Bay.

“As the US and South Korea are among the largest bilateral donors in the Philippines, this momentous partnership of USAID, KOICA, and the Philippine government will bring together our accumulated experience and technical expertise to build climate change and disaster resilience in the country,” KOICA Country Director Eunsub Kim stated in an announcement.

This was the most recent settlement between the USAID and KOICA following the signing of a memorandum of understanding in April 2021, through which two main improvement businesses agreed to strategically collaborate on precedence applications, together with local weather change-related initiatives, to advance improvement within the Philippines, based on the embassy. —Richa Noriega/KBK, GMA Integrated News

Source: www.gmanetwork.com