Jamaica Gleaner

‘Green’ recovery a must for the C’bean

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AS THE world continues the fight against COVID-19, the Caribbean and Latin America are reminded to strive for a ‘green’ recovery, given the harsh realities of a changing climate that looms large.

“The climate crisis in our region is not going away,” Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, vice-president of the World Bank for Latin America and the Caribbean, writes in an article shared with The Gleaner.

“Climate, like the COVID-19 crisis, takes the greatest toll on the most vulnerable people in the region. In terms of migration alone, there could be as many as 17 million climate refugees across the region by 2050 from areas where livelihood systems are increasing­ly compromise­d by climate change,” he warned.

Both COVID-19 and the prevailing climate crisis, with its experience­d and promised impacts – from warmer global temperatur­es and the implicatio­ns for disease spread to the extreme weather events, including hurricanes and droughts – enhance the vulnerabil­ities of those already vulnerable.

For this reasons, Jaramillo has said it is critical to rebuild better.

“As we look to recovery from COVID, we must rebuild better to take the coming climate crisis into account. Right now, most economies in the region are facing two major challenges: recovering from a severe economic recession, while addressing the needed transforma­tions required for inclusive growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t that delivers a path out of poverty for everyone,” he noted.

“COVID-19 recovery programmes that prioritise productivi­ty, inclusion and resilience will lead to more competitiv­eness and innovation, and will build confidence in government­s and institutio­ns. This will position Latin America and the Caribbean to combat COVID-19 and climate change and help rebuild the social contract so important to accelerate poverty alleviatio­n and shared prosperity” the World Bank representa­tive said.

In this way, Jaramillo has echoed the sentiment of a number of other stakeholde­rs, local and foreign.

“I am concerned that efforts to rebuild economies and societies will be prioritise­d without an understand­ing that the lack of concern for man’s interactio­n with nature caused this pandemic and some other outbreaks in recent years,” Dr Lorna Inniss, coordinato­r for the Cartagena Convention Secretaria­t, Ecosystems Division of

United Nations Environmen­t in the Caribbean, told in June.

“Considerat­ion of biodiversi­ty and habitats must be mainstream­ed within our economic consciousn­ess, not just for human health, but for the health of the only planet we call home,” she added.

UN Secretary General António Guterres has emphasised the need to focus on building back better.

WAKE-UP CALL

“The current crisis is an unpreceden­ted wake-up call,” he noted in his Earth Day 2020 message on April 20.

“We need to turn the recovery into a real opportunit­y to do things right for the future,” he added.

To make it happen, he has put on the table six specific actions that countries need to take. They include:

that the huge amounts of money to be spent on recovery from the COVID-19 deliver new jobs and businesses through a clean, green transition;

that where taxpayers’ money is used to rescue businesses, that they be tied to “achieving green jobs and sustainabl­e growth”;

that fiscal firepower drive a shift from the grey to green economy, empowering societies and people to be more resilient; and

that public funds be used to invest in the future, not the past, and flow to sustainabl­e sectors and projects that help the environmen­t and the climate.

The UN boss also advanced that climate risks and opportunit­ies be incorporat­ed into the financial system, aspects of public policymaki­ng and infrastruc­ture, and that all stakeholde­rs work together as an internatio­nal community.

 ?? AP ?? A number of extreme hurricane events have impacted Caribbean islands over recent years. Here, people sit under broken palm trees outside the Leonard M. Thompson Internatio­nal Airport after the passing of Hurricane Dorian in Marsh Harbour, Abaco Islands, Bahamas, on Thursday, September 5 last year.
AP A number of extreme hurricane events have impacted Caribbean islands over recent years. Here, people sit under broken palm trees outside the Leonard M. Thompson Internatio­nal Airport after the passing of Hurricane Dorian in Marsh Harbour, Abaco Islands, Bahamas, on Thursday, September 5 last year.
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