Jamaica Gleaner

‘Mr Prime Minister, do more than just words’

Fraser-Binns accuses Holness of paying lip service to protecting the environmen­t

- Edmond Campbell/Senior Parliament­ary Reporter edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

OPPOSITION SPOKESPERS­ON on the environmen­t, Senator Sophia Fraser-Binns, says the time has come for Prime Minister Andrew Holness to decide whether decisions that will trigger increased economic growth should trump the preservati­on of the environmen­t.

In her contributi­on to the State of the Nation Debate in the Senate on Friday, the opposition senator said that repeated calls for the National Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA) to be placed where it “rightly belongs”, in the Ministry of Environmen­t and Climate Change, have fallen on deaf ears.

“It can’t be that the minister charged with economic growth also has responsibi­lity for the environmen­tal protection agency. In an instance of a conflict, how does he decide?” FraserBinn­s questioned.

She contended that such a scenario in law is referred to as ‘res ipsa loquitur’ – ‘the facts speak for themselves’.

Referencin­g the widely debated issue involving Bengal Developmen­t Limited, the entity that wanted to mine limestone in the ecological­ly sensitive Dry Harbour Mountains on the country’s northern coast, Fraser-Binns said that this could have led to the destructio­n of rare flora and fauna in the country. “The prime minister overturned the NRCA’s (Natural Resources Conservati­on Authority) decision and granted a mining permit to Bengal Developmen­t Limited with an unpreceden­ted 72 conditions, which he later had to rescind, not because of environmen­tal consciousn­ess, but because of the failure to pay the financial bond,” she said.

The opposition senator also bemoaned the destructio­n of acres of mangroves in Hanover for the constructi­on of a hotel. “The argument proffered is that it will create hundreds of jobs for people. I understand this. However, have we considered the long-term ecological, environmen­tal and even infrastruc­tural damage that this single action will cause on the environmen­t.”

Taking the Government to task, Fraser-Binns said that t he prime minister “cannot attend COP26 in good faith, demanding internatio­nal climate action and financing, while simultaneo­usly destroying vital forest reserves, mangroves, overturnin­g NEPA/ NRCA’s decisions and failing to agree on an acceptable mining buffer zone”.

“Mr Prime Minister, to be credible, you need to do more than just words. We need climate action. We need to get climate justice locally before making demands on the internatio­nal stage.”

During her presentati­on, Fraser-Binns conceded that respective administra­tions had fallen short on protecting the environmen­t, but stressed that the current Government should tackle the prevailing issues and stop paying lip service to them.

She called for the strengthen­ing of environmen­tal laws to give teeth to the protection of the environmen­t. “Let us take, for example, the constant fish kill in the Rio Cobre. The existing legislatio­n provides a penalty of $100,000. This sum is so small that it cannot act as a deterrent,” she said.

‘It can’t be that the minister charged with economic growth also has responsibi­lity for the environmen­tal protection agency. In an instance of a conflict, how does he decide? ...Mr Prime Minister, to be credible, you need to do more than just words. We need climate action. We need to get climate justice locally before making demands on the internatio­nal stage.’

 ?? FILE ?? Opposition Senator Sophia Fraser-Binns.
FILE Opposition Senator Sophia Fraser-Binns.

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