
ISULAN, Sultan Kudarat (March 5) — As earthquake swarms continue to rattle communities near the Cotabato Trench, Sultan Kudarat 2nd District Rep. Bella Vanessa Suansing is calling on Congress to confront what she describes as a glaring national vulnerability: the absence of a unified, science-driven coastal defense strategy.
In a privilege speech at the House of Representatives of the Philippines, Suansing urged lawmakers to explore and implement integrated coastal defense systems — warning that traditional, infrastructure-heavy approaches are no longer sufficient for a country battered by both climate and seismic threats.
“We, the Philippines, are one of the most climate change vulnerable countries in the world. We’re at the frontlines in all of this,” she said.
A country exposed
Suansing cited estimates that 66 of the country’s 82 provinces are at risk of tsunamis — a statistic that underscores how deeply exposed the archipelago remains.
Her call comes after months of earthquake swarms off the coast of Sultan Kudarat that have unsettled residents in Kalamansig, Lebak and Palimbang (KaLePa), forcing local governments to revisit evacuation plans and coastal risk maps.
But beyond the immediate tremors, the lawmaker pointed to a deeper structural issue: coastal protection efforts in the Philippines remain fragmented, reactive and heavily dependent on “hard” infrastructure such as seawalls and breakwaters.
“We need to take one, two, three steps further than traditional hard structures,” she said.
Study first — act later?
Suansing asked the House Committee on Ecology to investigate existing government programs and legislation on coastal protection and climate adaptation to assess the country’s preparedness.
The move signals concern — but also raises a familiar question: will another congressional inquiry translate into concrete funding, enforceable standards and inter-agency coordination, or simply add to a growing pile of policy reviews?
The Philippines already has climate adaptation frameworks and disaster risk reduction laws in place. Yet coastal communities continue to face repeated destruction from storm surges, sea level rise and tectonic hazards, suggesting persistent gaps between planning and implementation.
Beyond concrete walls
Suansing emphasized that any coastal defense strategy must be localized and science-driven — not a one-size-fits-all blueprint.
“One coastal defense plan cannot apply in all areas in the Philippines,” she said.
She advocated for systems that combine:
- Nature-based solutions such as mangrove restoration
- Flood mitigation and shoreline management
- Early warning and evacuation systems
- Livelihood protection for fisherfolk and coastal residents

