Super Typhoon Fung-wong has unleashed catastrophic flooding on Aurora province in the Philippines, bringing a storm surge over 10 feet high and leaving coastal towns submerged. The typhoon’s violent arrival has forced nearly a million residents to flee in fear, as waves and wind batter homes, roads, and communities along the eastern seaboard.

The devastation follows in the wake of Kalmaegi, a previous typhoon that claimed more than 200 lives, underscoring the recurring human toll of these increasingly powerful storms. Many survivors describe the scene as apocalyptic: streets transformed into rivers, homes ripped apart, and entire livelihoods swept away in a matter of hours.

Experts warn that the intensity of Fung-wong is fueled by climate change, with greenhouse gas emissions from industrialized nations amplifying the fury of Pacific storms. While wealthy countries hold back on meaningful action, the Philippines—like many vulnerable nations—continues to bear the brunt of the crisis. Communities with limited infrastructure and resources are paying the ultimate price, as typhoons grow stronger, more frequent, and more destructive.

The humanitarian response is underway, but officials stress the scale of the disaster requires global solidarity. Relief efforts are focused on evacuating residents, providing temporary shelter, and distributing food and medical supplies, yet the path to recovery is daunting.

Fung-wong serves as a stark reminder that climate justice is urgently needed. Without swift action to slash emissions, strengthen resilience, and aid vulnerable populations, tropical storms could increasingly transform paradise into tragedy. For the people of Aurora, and millions across the Pacific, the time to address the climate crisis is no longer tomorrow—it is now.