Stabroek News

Browne urges climate reparation­s for Caribbean

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Attributin­g the natural disasters that member states of CARICOM have faced recently to climate change, Chairman Gaston Browne on Monday said that it is time that major polluters are made legally liable for the damage they cause as he called for climate reparation­s for the region.

During his address at the opening of the 42nd Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community, Browne, who is the Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda, noted that the meeting was being held against the backdrop of economic, social, financial and environmen­tal storms more intense than the hurricanes that swirl around the Caribbean every year during the season.

He noted that several member states are currently recovering from the effects of Hurricane Elsa and offered support on behalf of the people of Antigua and Barbuda.

“The recent volcanic eruption in St Vincent and the Grenadines and devastatin­g floods in Guyana and Suriname, which displaced thousands of people and destroyed significan­t agricultur­al production, provide further evidence of the ongoing challenges that beset our Member States. These climatic events serve to underscore the vulnerabil­ity of the Region,” he continued while adding that like the rest of the world, the Caribbean is still battling to stem the economic and social tidal wave of COVID-19.

However, he pointed out, unlike the rest

of the world, the Caribbean is battling the pandemic at the beginning of an Atlantic hurricane season that has already seen five storms within the first month. He pointed out that this season is forecast to be one of the busiest in recent years.

With this in mind, Browne said that the causes of the climate crisis have already been scientific­ally establishe­d, and it is time for those countries that have been irresponsi­ble enough to continue their damaging emissions and practices to be held to account.

“It is my view that real progress on the climate crisis will only be made when the major polluters are made legally liable for the damage they cause. The current system of discretion­ary internatio­nal assistance for climate damage, where pledges are honoured only fitfully, is both inadequate and inequitabl­e. This is a call for climate reparation­s that CARICOM must take up urgently, and engage in vigorous diplomatic outreach to build internatio­nal consensus on this issue,” he said.

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