Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/El-Nino-Drought-in-the-Philippines-27MZIF323ZWR.htmlConceptually similarEl Niño Drought in the PhilippinesGP0STOYPTCompleted★★★★Local Farmers in Rice Fields in PhilippinesGP0STPR0UCompleted★★★★Local Farmer in Rice Field in PhilippinesGP0STPR0VCompleted★★★★Dried Rice Field in the PhilippinesGP0STOYPZCompleted★★★★Farmer's House in Rice Field in the PhilippinesGP0STOYPVCompleted★★★★El Niño At its Peak DocumentationGP0STPR0JCompleted★★★★Drought-Stunted Rice Grains in the Philippines Due to El NiñoGP0STPQZVCompleted★★★★Local Farmer in Rice Field in PhilippinesGP0STPR0KCompleted★★★★Dry Corn Field in the PhilippinesGP0STOYPYCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STOYPWEl Niño Drought in the PhilippinesArchie Bello, a farmer from the village of New Antique in M’lang, North Cotabato has very little crop left to harvest from a small 2-hectare rice field a month after PAG-AGA declared a weak El Nino in the Philippines. With no signs of rain coming soon, Bello and his family face an uncertain future.Locations:Mindanao-Philippines-Southeast AsiaDate:11 Apr, 2015Credit:© Karlos Manlupig / GreenpeaceMaximum size:3600px X 2400pxRestrictions:NO FUNDRAISINGKeywords:Agriculture-Babies (0-2)-Climate (campaign title)-Climate change impacts-Day-Drought-Dry-El Nino-Families-Farmers-Fields-KWCI (GPI)-Local population-Natural disasters-Outdoors-Three peopleShoot:El Niño Documentation in the PhilippinesPositioned at the front lines of climate change impacts, the Philippines is plagued by food and nutrition security concerns – a growing emergency. The worsening impacts of climate change and the unpredictability of extreme weather events, such as typhoons, El Niño events or drought, are putting unnecessary stresses on the coping mechanisms of many regions in the country.Related Collections:"Countdown to Extinction" Report CollectionEl Niño Documentation: Impacts on Agriculture in the Philippines