Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica to benefit from UK investment in climate change programmes

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JAMAICA HAS welcomed the United Kingdom’s (UK’s) investment of £1.7 million in the Caribbean on climate change programmes as a major boost to protect critical economic infrastruc­ture.

Speaking at the launch of the ‘ Regional Climate Finance Programme: Small Island Developing States Capacity and Resilience (SIDAR) Programme for the Caribbean’, yesterday, at the ROK Hotel in downtown Kingston, Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator Matthew Samuda, said work needs to be done in building “our institutio­nal capacity”.

“The scope of what we need to do is significan­t and the financial support will help to meet the critical gap of project developmen­t in our countries,” the minister said, hailing the UK as a country that has “establishe­d leadership on the climate change issue”.

The SIDAR programme aims to respond to disadvanta­ges small island developing states face through small population sizes, remoteness, vulnerabil­ity to economic shocks and natural disasters, and limited capacity. It seeks to scale up access and speed to climate finance and support programmat­ic accelerati­on of climate-resilient actions in seven member states of CARICOM.

“You will have the committed support and the action behind it to ensure that these projects are successful­ly deployed, because we are in a race against time, and we are happy to be a beneficiar­y,” Samuda said.

The other countries benefiting from the programme are Belize, Dominica, Grenada, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Suriname.

For her part, British High Commission­er to Jamaica, Judith Slater, said they are “looking hard” at how the Jamaica Systemic Risk Assessment Tool can influence support to “guide decisionma­king on public-private sector investment­s within this region”.

She noted that the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC) stands as the premier institutio­n for coordinati­ng responses to climate change, and for maintainin­g the depository on climate issues.

Through its role as a Centre of

Excellence, the CCCCC supports the people of the Caribbean as they address the impact of climate variabilit­y and changes on all aspects of economic developmen­t, through the provision of timely forecasts and analyses of potentiall­y hazardous impacts on both natural and manmade climate changes on the environmen­t and the developmen­t of special programmes that create opportunit­ies for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

 ?? ?? Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator Matthew Samuda (second left), exchanges pleasantri­es with British High Commission­er to Jamaica, Judith Slater (second right), at the launch of the ‘Regional Climate Finance Programme: Small Island Developing States Capacity and Resilience (SIDAR) Programme for the Caribbean’, yesterday, at the ROK Hotel in downtown Kingston. Others (from left) are Executive Director of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre, Dr Collin Young, and Programme Manager for SIDAR, Diane Wade-Moore.
Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator Matthew Samuda (second left), exchanges pleasantri­es with British High Commission­er to Jamaica, Judith Slater (second right), at the launch of the ‘Regional Climate Finance Programme: Small Island Developing States Capacity and Resilience (SIDAR) Programme for the Caribbean’, yesterday, at the ROK Hotel in downtown Kingston. Others (from left) are Executive Director of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre, Dr Collin Young, and Programme Manager for SIDAR, Diane Wade-Moore.
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