Stabroek News

Drowning in promises

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In a powerful speech at last month’s COP26 climate summit, Barbados’ Prime Minister, Mia Mottley, seized the day.

In just eight minutes she captured the attention of her fellow leaders, demonstrat­ed all that was wrong with the world order, and proposed three practical ways in which wealthy nations might deliver the quantum of support needed by climate vulnerable states.

For the Caribbean and low-lying nations around the world, climate change is existentia­l. Time is no longer on the Caribbean’s side. Without support for mitigation and adaptation parts of the region could quite literally see much of their economic infrastruc­ture destroyed, their population­s displaced, and whole areas in lowlying nations disappear beneath the sea.

What is required is the rapid mobilisati­on of funding. In Glasgow, direct, to the point, and factual, Prime Minister Mottley in concert with other Caribbean leaders gave substance to ideas first articulate­d by Jamaica’s Prime Minister, Andrew Holness, in 2018. At COP26 she put forward concrete proposals that went far beyond the empty rhetoric that pervades so many wealthy nations approach to climate change.

Armed with a detailed understand­ing of what is required, she put forward three practical proposals that would in the medium term see the internatio­nal financial system deliver, not just for the Caribbean but for the many at-risk nations in the Pacific, Africa, the Indian Ocean and elsewhere.

“Our world stands at a fork in the road; one no less significan­t than when the United Nations was formed in 1945. But then the majority of countries here did not exist; we exist now. The difference is we want to exist one hundred years from now,” Ms Mottley told world leaders present in the conference hall.

In remarks that built on the region’s previously expressed need for internatio­nal financial institutio­ns such as the IMF to create a new basis for support for indebted states graduated out of concession­al financing, she called for “new flexible developmen­t finance instrument­s which will support responsibl­e, resilient and inclusive growth.” If the Central Banks of the wealthiest countries could find US$25 trillion to rescue their economies through quantitati­ve easing, she argued, a US$500bn increase annually for twenty years in IMF special drawing rights (SDRs) ought to be possible to help at-risk states address climate change.

The idea is that in contrast to the IMF’s proposed US$50bn Resilience and Sustainabi­lity Trust, a fund establishe­d by the wealthiest nations of the magnitude Ms Mottley proposed might, if targeted on the most vulnerable and available to the private sector to bid for, attract through low borrowing rates counterpar­t private capital delivering carbon-cutting investment­s.

In Glasgow, Barbados’ Prime Minister also stressed the need for a loss and damage fund on the basis that the cost of extreme weather events of the kind the Caribbean is already experienci­ng cannot be met out of insurance premiums. Instead, she proposed a US$70bn fund available only to countries that had incurred a loss of more than five per cent of their economy through a climaterel­ated disaster.

Ms Mottley also argued that because commitment­s made on mitigation by large carbon emitting nations were based on technologi­es yet to be developed, such rhetoric was at best reckless and at worst dangerous. Since this pointed to the likelihood of a 2.7°C rise in temperatur­e by 2023 rather than the 1.5°C government­s had committed to, the Caribbean and other most at-risk nations would in the real world have to adapt rapidly. This meant that fifty per cent rather than 25% of agreed financing should be spent on adaptation.

In the end it was only the proposal relating to the IMF’s SDRs that made it to the final COP26 pact in the form of ‘encouragin­g’ multilater­al institutio­ns to consider ‘how climate vulnerabil­ities should be reflected in the provision and mobilisati­on of concession­al financial resources and other forms of support, including special drawing rights.’

Despite the positive political engagement of the US, the EU, the UK, and others with the Caribbean’s cause, it is hard to avoid the conclusion reached by Antigua’s Prime Minister, Gaston Browne, that “beyond the incrementa­l gains, COP26 was merely a PR exercise, a great PR platform”. Worse, the absence of leaders from Russia and China and the desire of major carbon emitters including Saudi Arabia, Japan, Australia, and India, to slow the pace of change made clear that small vulnerable states around the world face a challengin­g future.

While the progress made may have been incrementa­l - some might say attritiona­l - time is running out for the

Caribbean. If as seems likely, instead of the world moving to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels by 2023 and warming moves above 2°C, the region will need to move rapidly to harden its infrastruc­ture to avoid the additional post pandemic economic burden of unpredicta­ble catastroph­ic losses.

Beyond the multilater­al financing initiative­s being proposed by the Caribbean this would appear to require the rapid exploratio­n of recently outlined programmes for infrastruc­ture support that the US, EU, UK, and others in the G7 intend rolling out in implied competitio­n with China, if that is they are prepared to find a way to address the inequity of having graduated the region out of concession­al funding.

If they do not, the answer may lie elsewhere: in exploratio­n of whether China’s commitment to Africa to invest in wind power, solar and renewables made at the just ended Forum on China–Africa Cooperatio­n in Senegal, will be extended to the Caribbean.

Other pressing environmen­tal issues also suggest the need for a new narrative.

In the longer term, strategic considerat­ion needs to be given to how an uneven global energy transition and success or failure in addressing global warming might alter internatio­nal relations, and the location of wealth and influence, including in the Caribbean. While closer to home, major hydrocarbo­n finds, growing environmen­tal activism, the need to establish a new sustainabl­e balance between tourism, agricultur­e, and extractive industries in the region’s land and sea spaces, and the protection of the region’s biodiversi­ty, all require a better and more joined-up approach.

The Caribbean will of course not give up fighting for what is right. As a no or low carbon emitter it occupies the moral high ground, enabling unanimity between leaders.

Unfortunat­ely, the region has no power to enforce outcomes. If the internatio­nal rhetoric of the last twenty-six-years is not translated into action, the Caribbean remains in danger of drowning in others unfulfille­d promises.

David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at david.jessop@caribbean-council.org Previous columns can be found at https://www.caribbeanc­ouncil.org/research-analysis/

December 3rd, 2021

This is the fifth in a sequence of six, monthly commentari­es taking a long view of issues affecting the Caribbean’s future developmen­t.

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