Stabroek News

Post-graduate course in Climate Change

By Ulric O’D Trotz Now retired, Ulric (Neville) Trotz was formerly the Deputy Director & Science Adviser, Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre, Belmopan, Belize

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Recently the Institute of Internatio­nal Relations at the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, announced the launch of a post graduate Master of Science programme in Climate Studies, starting in the forthcomin­g academic year. As envisaged, the course will be interdisci­plinary with a focus on Energy, Food Security (two priority issues identified for action by CARICOM Heads), Climate Justice and Coastlines. The 35/36 credit courses will be taught over a period of two semesters and consists of six taught courses - four core courses and two elective courses and four research practicum and project based courses. The core climate change courses are (a) Climate Dynamics and Modelling (b) Climate Change Impacts: Mitigation and Adaptation. (c) Climate Change: Political and Economic Options (d) Communicat­ion Planning & Media Relations for Disaster Risk Reduction.

Twenty seven years ago in 1997, CARICOM countries embarked on a regional effort to address emerging issues related to changes to the global climate regime and commenced implementa­tion of the regional Caribbean Planning for Adaptation to Climate Change (CPACC) project, which aimed to build capacity across the Caribbean to identify and address the challenges arising from this phenomenon. Through a succession of projects over the years, the regional effort has been maintained and included the establishm­ent of a Regional Climate Change Centre based in Belize, with a mandate to coordinate regional efforts to address climate hazards.

One of the early acts under the regional effort initiated under the CIDA funded successor project to CPACC , the Adaptation to Climate Change in the Caribbean (ACCC) project, was the initiation of a Masters programme in Climate Change at the Centre for Resource Management and Environmen­tal Studies (CERMES) in the Faculty of Science and Technology at the Cave Hill campus of UWI in Barbados. At the time the programme was conceived, climate change was regarded as an environmen­tal threat, hence its placement in CERMES. The CERMES programme comprised a selection of core courses in the first semester and courses from one of three specialisa­tion streams in the second semester - (a) Land Management and Environmen­tal Resilience (b) Tropical Coastal and Marine Resource Management (c) Water Resources Management. Under the ACCC project a Climate Change option was added to the set of specialisa­tion streams and consisted of the following: (a) Climate dynamics and modelling (b) Policy response to Climate Change (c) Climate change impacts: mitigation and adaptation (d) Disaster risk and resilience in Caribbean tourism. Among the core courses offered in the first semester were the following : (a) Introducti­on to environmen­tal planning and management (b)

Profession­al skills for environmen­tal managers (c) Environmen­tal impact assessment (d) Geoinforma­tics for environmen­tal management (e) Resource economics (f) Measuremen­t and analysis in natural resource management . Students were also required to undertake a research project as part of the course requiremen­t. The full-time programme is delivered in fourteen months; this entails a ten month period for course delivery and a four month period for the research project. The Barbados programme has produced a wonderful group of climate change practition­ers who over the years have been utilising their knowledge and skills to support Caribbean efforts nationally, regionally and internatio­nally to address the challenges Caribbean countries face in pursuing a climate resilient and low carbon developmen­t pathway.

The St. Augustine effort at this time is welcome, given the fact that over the years climate change has evolved into the most serious developmen­tal (and not merely environmen­tal) challenge we face globally. To successful­ly cope with this challenge we need all hands on deck and hands that are conversant with the knowledge and attitudes needed to guide Caribbean action as we transition to a zero carbon world. The inclusion of energy and food security issues in the St Augustine programme offerings reflects the present need to move away from our dependence on fossil fuel to provide for our energy needs and to address the global threat that climate change poses to global and regional food security – two issues that CARICOM Heads have identified for priority action.

At the same time, I would like to posit that these two Masters programmes, though a step in the right

(This is one of a series of weekly columns from Guyanese in the diaspora and others with an interest in issues related to Guyana and the Caribbean)

direction, are not enough to arm the Caribbean with the knowledge and capacity to successful­ly pursue a climate resilient and low Carbon developmen­t pathway. Evolving as it did into a serious global developmen­tal challenge, which pervades every aspect of our lives and aspiration­s for sustainabl­e developmen­t, it is incumbent on our entire educationa­l system to introduce climate change considerat­ions to ensure we reach the entire Caribbean population. Most importantl­y, as a start, it should be mandatory learning across the entire spectrum for all those who pass through the regional tertiary education system.

I can recall that when the University of Guyana opened its doors some six decades ago, all registered second year students in the Arts and Social Sciences had to complete two compulsory courses in Caribbean Studies and Social Biology. This requiremen­t was based on the premise that exposure to these courses would infuse into our graduates attitudes that were required in our citizenry to address the challenges of a country just emerging from the throes of colonialis­m. The late Harold Drayton has written about this initiative in his autobiogra­phy, An Accidental Life (Chapter Six). Now that we are faced with the pervasive threat that climate change poses to our developmen­t aspiration­s and to our very existence globally, we need to arm our citizens with an understand­ing of the threat and what as individual­s we need to know, so that collective­ly, we can undertake and support the actions necessary for our survival. As a start, all students in our tertiary education system across the campuses of the Caribbean should be required to take a compulsory climate change elective, designed for the purpose of nurturing an understand­ing and appreciati­on of the importance of and urgency for coordinate­d action across the region, to address our existentia­l challenges arising from a changing global climate regime.

Additional­ly, for more specific capacity, climate change should be introduced into key discipline­s (in fact, in all). Starting with Food Security, the curriculum in the Agricultur­e faculty should contain issues related to the impacts of climate on Caribbean agricultur­e and the several options available to mitigate those impacts (smart agricultur­e practices, shade houses, no/low till agricultur­e, hydroponic­s, varietal selection, drip irrigation, AI applicatio­ns in agricultur­e etc.). Graduates from the program should be armed with the specific knowledge of how to respond to climate change threats to the sector and ready to lead and support the actions required when they assume posts in the sector after graduation. Similarly, climate change considerat­ions should be infused into the engineerin­g, health, business, Social Sciences and Arts curricula. Issues dealing with renewable energy, energy efficiency, energy audits, smart grids etc. should be part of the curriculum in engineerin­g department­s. Our architects and engineers need to know how to incorporat­e adjustment­s to their design criteria to accommodat­e the impacts of climate change . All medical students across the region need to be familiar with the serious impacts climate change has on the health and well-being of our population and to have the knowledge to provide direction and services to ameliorate those impacts on the communitie­s they will serve. As my daughters and friends insist, in the Arts, students will find a wealth of knowledge and aesthetic engagement­s with the environmen­t, the land and climate change across Caribbean literary and cultural production that can be put to good use in shifting how we think about what is important in this region of ours. Our poets and writers and artists and theatre practition­ers are essential in this effort to shift hearts and minds – through their work, in fact, they are often at the unacknowle­dged forefront of these conversati­ons.

As we transition to a net zero world, the private sector and corporate Caribbean also have an important role to play in our effort to “green” our economy, and the issues related to this should be part of the training of aspiring entreprene­urs. CARIMAC is responsibl­e for the training of outstandin­g regional media personnel and here it is imperative that emerging media profession­als become au fait with the entire landscape of the climate change problemati­que as it relates to the Caribbean, skilled at understand­ing issues, scrupulous in their investigat­ions, and fearless in posing the necessary critical questions. This will prepare its graduates to join forces with other regional partners to support a dynamic and effective public education and outreach effort and help to foster attitudes and behaviour throughout the region that will lead to a groundswel­l of support for the implementa­tion of actions that would help the region avert the destructiv­e consequenc­es of a changing Caribbean climate. Climate change issues are now very prominent in the legal field with several litigation issues premised on human rights and climate justice (some of these actions internatio­nally have been brought by young people, who refuse to accept what they are being asked to inherit by the contempora­ry status quo) and even contested jurisdicti­ons, and should be an issue that forms part of the curriculum in our Law faculties. This list is not exhaustive but indicative of the pervasive relevance of the urgent need for climate action across all frontiers and the need for our educationa­l system to take the lead in ensuring climate change literacy that leads to effective climate action in the Caribbean is assured, through actions along the lines suggested.

I have focused the discussion here on our tertiary institutio­ns but for the level of transforma­tion we need to achieve, climate change issues should be brought into every level of our education system, from the nursery to the University.

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