Stabroek News Sunday

Climate change and the graduation of the Caribbean A

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week or so ago, Caricom’s Secretary-General, Irwin LaRocque, made clear that if the Caribbean is ever to be able to respond sustainabl­y to the devastatio­n caused by climate change, the eligibilit­y criteria for developmen­t assistance must change.

Speaking about this in Georgetown on the occasion of the accreditat­ion of a new Austrian Ambassador to Caricom, Ambassador LaRoque observed that the regional institutio­n had long advocated that access to developmen­t funds should not be based on the “grossly inadequate and inaccurate criterion” of GDP per capita. It was, he said, an approach that had resulted in the graduation of most Caricom countries from accessing concession­al financing.

“We believe that this, as applied to Small Island Developing States (SIDS), must be changed as a matter of urgency to include the concept of vulnerabil­ity,” he remarked, before going on to urge Caricom’s third country partners to lend strong support to its efforts to effect this change. There was too, he suggested, an urgent need for internatio­nal developmen­t partners to re-examine the criteria for access to resources such as the Green Climate Fund.

Ambassador LaRoque’s remarks highlight the anomalous situation that the region now finds itself in. Despite its multiple vulnerabil­ities and smallness, its variable levels of social and economic developmen­t, every Caribbean nation, apart from Haiti, has been graduated out of eligibilit­y for low cost internatio­nal developmen­t financing, as the average income of individual­s in almost every nation is deemed to be too high.

To explain: eligibilit­y is decided by the OECD’s 30-member developmen­t assistance committee (DAC) which in threeyear cycles determines, using World Bank figures, individual nation’s level of developmen­t. It is an approach that currently groups the Caribbean other than Haiti with other upper middle-income or highincome countries, seemingly for reasons of administra­tive convenienc­e. It places, for example, Guyana or Dominica in the same category as China, and other Caribbean nations on a par with wealthy OECD members.

This results in the loss of access to concession­ary financing, making capital for developmen­t more expensive. Put more practicall­y, it means that the Caribbean is unlikely to ever achieve climate change resilience and economic stability if it cannot afford to address the damage caused by extreme weather events.

Worse, the cost of post hurricane reconstruc­tion is likely to artificial­ly inflate the GDP of those Caricom nations most affected, thereby increasing the cost of borrowing, adding to debt previously incurred, often through reconstruc­tion following earlier climate events.

What the Caricom Secretary General’s remarks imply, and those made from a national perspectiv­e by regional leaders at the recently held UN General Assembly, is that the region must now develop, communicat­e and follow a plan of action to address the issue in ways that involve a wider regional and internatio­nal audience.

This means developing a campaign that is about more than just ministers, ambassador­s and officials crossing continents to attend anonymous meetings. It will require overcoming bureaucrat­ic inertia and having wealthy countries recognise politicall­y that alternativ­e criteria are required for nations that are small, low

lying and vulnerable. Critical to progressin­g the region’s case will be working with groups that can help change the minds of OECD member states. This will be challengin­g, not least because for this to occur, unanimity is required among its members, which include a now inward looking, climate change denying United States.

This suggests that at the heart of any regional campaign must be a parallel more general approach involving the World Bank, the IMF and other internatio­nal financial institutio­ns. This will require consistenc­y with the UN’s agreed Sustainabl­e Developmen­t goals and the related UN Multicount­y Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Framework in the Caribbean while also having resonance with nations in Europe, the Commonweal­th, and the small island states of the Pacific and Indian Ocean. That said, there are signs that they some wealthy European nations have recognised the need for a change in the OECD’s criteria. One of the more surprising developmen­ts following Hurricane Irma and the damage done to the British Virgin Islands and Anguilla, was the criticism by the UK’s tabloid media of the alleged slowness of the British government’s response, and the subsequent discovery that it had proven legally difficult to provide support because the per capita GDP of Britain’s overseas territorie­s was too high. Subsequent­ly the UK’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary, Priti Patel, wrote to the OECD calling for urgent reform of its rules to reflect the vulnerabil­ity of Caribbean island states in the event of natural disasters. “These rules were first establishe­d over 40 years ago. The world has changed dramatical­ly since then, and we will work constructi­vely with internatio­nal partners to ensure the rules remain relevant and up to date,” she wrote. It is also apparent that British officials are in discussion with other EU member states and with several leading non-government­al organisati­ons to explore whether there might be support for changing the rules. More, however, is required if the region is to build on the internatio­nal awareness that two hugely destructiv­e hurricanes have created. Caricom could advance its good work on climate change by constructi­ng a self-motivating lobby that involves the diaspora, powerful non-government­al organisati­ons that are influentia­l in internatio­nal dialogue on developmen­t policy, and the Commonweal­th. It could also be speaking to the people of the region, the environmen­talists and the young who on social media can tell their peers globally, in their own words and in human terms, what may happen to a region loved by millions of visitors if it is not able to become more resilient. As a no or low carbon emitter the Caribbean occupies the moral high ground, and can demonstrat­e it is at existentia­l risk. Despite this, changing internatio­nally agreed developmen­t criteria will not be easy. Developing a case of the kind the Secretary General envisages will not just be a test of the Caribbean’s staying power and ability to broaden awareness, but of government­s’ commitment to prioritisi­ng and supporting it, as it takes forward the issue. Previous columns can be found at www.caribbean-council.org

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