Philippine storm survivors attend climate protests outside Shell headquarters in London | Environmental Action

On two and two nights, Ronalli Carbon and her four children clung to the roof of their home as a storm storm around. As the wind hit her Rizal village, about 10 miles east of Manila, Philippines, the water whirled in the room below, they had no choice but to wait, hoping someone could come and rescue them and hundreds of neighbors.

"We have no shelter, no food...we only have to wait for two days," Carbonel said. "It's not easy, no electricity, no light, we just wait for the sun to rise. The kids are scared, we've never experienced it." Such a thing."

Carbonel spoke with the Guardian, where Greenpeace activists and youth leaders in the Philippines protested outside the headquarters of the London oil company Shell on Wednesday, demanding “the responsibility of the major polluters for all losses and damage they have caused”.

The Philippines has been hit by typhoons, but as the climate emergency worsens, the storms become more violent and winds and floods are more destructive.

Last year, six storms hit the country in just one month during a record typhoon season. Super Zhuwen people YI have airflow up to 120 mph and drives over 650,000 people from their homes. According to experts, the storm season - "pressurized" by climate change, affecting more than 13 million people, destroying lives and livelihoods, which is estimated to cost about $500 million.

Carbonel, the president of her local homeowners association, said the storm has been getting worse since his youth. "I hadn't experienced this powerful typhoon as a kid," she said. "We were scared, but we were already preparing, we prepared food, medicine and water."

A sofa belonging to carbon fiber is one of the climate clothing household items that are put into a giant glass box filled with water on Wednesday. The properties also include TV, shoes and teddy bears, all destroyed during the latest typhoon season.

A teddy bear in the glass box is part of the Greenpeace protest. Photo: David Levene/Guardian

When Shell staff arrived to work, the speaker played the sound of children laughing, people recorded in the Philippines to cook or watch TV. These noises are then replaced with a warning about imminent flooding, like the sirens used by the Philippines in the Philippines.

The militants then smashed the glass box, causing the "flood" water to overflow in front of the building.

Maja Darlington, a climate activist at Greenpeace in the UK, said: "The world is almost a breakthrough point, and like Shell, which burns hundreds of billions of dollars from burning fossil fuels every year, bringing this climate." The chaos caused blame. It was time to cough and pay off the climate debt."

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Bon Gibalay, the young leader of Bohol, Philippines, Part of the protest said: "In long-term communities like me, climate impact has affected climate impacts, and companies like Shell continue to profit from aggravating the climate crisis. By delivering these valuable properties, they are being slapped by the climate crisis." The typhoons were damaged and destroyed directly from the Philippines by Shell's gates from the Philippines, and we demand responsibility and justice of the main polluters and justice to cause all the losses and damage they cause."

The carbon fiber house survived the worst injuries in the recent storm, and she walked the streets all night to warn neighbors to shout. The ten families' homes were severely concealed in her home until the storm subsided.

She said there were a few months left, and she said all she could do was hope the world noticed that big oil companies were responsible for their work.

"How do we ask these people to pay? They are in the government, in big corporations, they are strong and rich. What should I do with people like me? I just tell my kids not to worry, just to God Pray (next) the typhoon will miss us. I just told them to pray."