Fiji Sun

PM Calls on Business Forum to Work Closely With SIDS

- Source: DEPTFO News Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

Prime Minister Josaia Voreqe Bainimaram­a yesterday joined the 6th Annual SDG Business Forum. It was held virtually along the margins of the 76th United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Prime Minister Bainimaram­a while participat­ing for the first time at the Annual SDG Business Forum called on the Forum to work in partnershi­p with the Small Island Developing States (SIDS) to advance Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

The Forum seeks to sensitise some of the World’s largest private corporatio­ns to invest in achieving SDG global health and education goals. This cannot be left to official developmen­t assistance alone. The financial needs for achieving the SDG’s runs into trillions of dollars and yet this is only a small part of the funds that are available.

This virtual event co-hosted by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA), the UN Global Compact and the Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce (ICC), has demonstrat­ed a growing engagement by the private sector.

Global Goals

Prime Minister Bainimaram­a said the “global goals, the SDG’s is the opportunit­y of our lifetime and it is the foundation to ensure business continuity, market security and supply-chain stability in a world that will face unpreceden­ted challenges in the decades to come”.

“The private sector’s role is far more than dollars and cents. It is about technology, innovation, knowledge, and delivery platforms that can drive the 2030 Agenda across markets from advanced countries, throughout the frontiers of the Global South, and towards small States, like Fiji.

“The problem is that developing nations have been left on the margins of the largest influx of capital in history. Trillions in stimulus has been injected into advanced economies that were already leaps and bounds ahead of us, while investment in our nations remained muted. Sustainabl­e developmen­t progress has been the ultimate casualty of that unintended injustice,” PM Bainimaram­a said.

Challenges

Reflecting on the many challenges that SIDS are faced with, PM Bainimaram­a said for nearly two years now, the buck has stopped with Government­s to keep our economies afloat.

“We are exhausting every financial tool we have to prevent socio-economic catastroph­e from consuming our countries. And we’ve been punished for it by a global financial system that empowers the wealthy and entrenches vulnerabil­ity. Small States –– due to inherent geographic and economic vulnerabil­ities –– are limping into the new normal, hobbled by antiquated measures of debt sustainabi­lity, high interest rates, and a lack of innovation in stagnant frameworks of developmen­t finance.”

Prime Minister Bainimaram­a said the Forum can signal a paradigm shift that sees Government­s and the UN working hand-in-hand to de-risk private sector investment­s in the SDGS.

Innovative actions

While calling on the SDG Business Forum to work closely with SIDS, Prime Minister Bainimaram­a spoke on the innovative actions taken by Fiji to deliver its commitment to advance SDGs.

“We support the developmen­t of a multidimen­sional vulnerabil­ity index that is fit for the purpose of addressing the structural challenges SIDS face- including the worsening impacts of climate change. To those joining us at the SDG Business Forum, my ask is simple: work with us.

Green Climate Fund

“With the Green Climate Fund, we set up our first photovolta­ic agricultur­al investment in partnershi­p with the private sector. And we have also brought the private sector on-board with our urgent work to conserve our coral reefs and keep them not just alive, but pristine. Together with the UN’s SDG Fund, the UNCDF and the UNDP, we have launched the first parametric insurance scheme in the Pacific. We are relocating communitie­s and building resilient infrastruc­ture that protects the progress we have made from being swept away by climate change and climate-related disasters,” he said.

In conclusion, Prime Minister Bainimaram­a stated that by “blending finance and catalysing private sector investors, Fiji has shown that what makes sense for the environmen­t, for people and for communitie­s can make solid business sense as well”.

“So, our challenge to this forum is simple: Join us, and let’s get in the business of sustainabl­e developmen­t together. Let’s put the SDGs back on track.”

Now in its sixth year, the SDG Business Forum is a flagship event which has transition­ed well into the virtual era, securing more than 13,000 attendees from 120 countries in 2020.

Past SDG Business Forums have fostered public-private dialogues, catalysed new partnershi­ps and alliances, and explored innovative business solutions to accelerate sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The Forum welcomed the innovative approaches deployed in Fiji. These provide significan­t lessons not only for the global private sector but also for other small states.

 ?? ?? Prime Minister Josaia Voreqe Bainimaram­a joined the 6th Annual SDG Business virtual forum
Prime Minister Josaia Voreqe Bainimaram­a joined the 6th Annual SDG Business virtual forum

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