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Urban Exchange: Cities on the FrontlinesAuthor: urbanexchange
Urban Exchange: Cities on the Frontlines is the podcast series from SmartCitiesWorld and the Resilient Cities Network (R-Cities), delivering frank and open conversations between international city leaders and industry practitioners that share ideas to solve urban challenges. With the worlds cities under pressure to deliver a sustainable future for more than half of the global population a figure that is consistently trending upwards the Urban Exchange provides a platform for the people driving urban innovation and change to share their ideas and insights with those that need them most. As cities seek a future that is environmentally, economically, and socially resilient and sustainable, each episode of the podcast plays host to an in-depth conversation between a city leader and a smart city specialist to uncover the initiatives that cities are working on to deliver on these goals. Language: en Genres: Government, Technology Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it Trailer: |
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Urban Exchange Podcast Episode 32 – Flood and energy resilience in Quezon City
Episode 33
Wednesday, 17 December, 2025
In this episode of The Urban Exchange, hosts Paul Wilson and Katrin Bruebach speak with Bianca Perez, Head of the Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office for Quezon City in the Philippines – a city that, in August 2025, experienced an extreme flooding event where the equivalent of five days of rain fell in just one hour. Bianca explains how Quezon City, the most populous city in the Philippines and part of the wider Metro Manila area, is grappling with more frequent and intense rainfall, legacy urbanisation, and an overstretched drainage system. She shares how the devastating 2009 floods led to a national disaster risk framework, and how the city has since been trying to adapt – with mixed results. The conversation dives into the critical interdependence of water and energy systems: you need power to pump and treat water, but water is also essential to keep energy systems running. When one fails, the other often follows. Using Quezon City’s experience, the episode explores what happens when national infrastructure projects are misaligned with local plans, including pumping stations that are built but not powered, poorly placed structures that worsen flooding, and a lack of systemic, cross-sector planning. Bianca also opens a window into the human and operational side of disaster response: command-centre decision-making with only minutes of warning, coordinating rescues and evacuations for thousands of people, and the toll on responders who work through days of continuous crisis. Finally, the episode looks ahead to energy resilience and clean energy transition in Quezon City – from reliance on generators toward a more integrated approach involving sensors, renewable energy, energy-efficient buildings, and a citywide resilience roadmap. This is a candid, ground-level account of what climate-driven flooding really means for a major city – and what it will take to build resilient, energy-smart urban systems. *This episode was recorded on 12 September, just under two weeks after the extreme weather event discussed hit Quezon City









