Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Vaz highlights urgency of concrete global action on climate change at G7 meeting

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NOVA SCOTIA, Canada (CMC) — Jamaica’s Minister Without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation with responsibi­lity for the environmen­t Daryl Vaz, told the G7 Environmen­t Ministers’ meeting in Halifax on Wednesday that the time for talk on climate change has long past, as he called for innovation in financing for resilience projects.

Jamaica was one of three Small Island Developing States (SIDS) invited to attend the plenary, and Minister Vaz delivered the keynote address in the session ‘Adaptation & Conserving Nature’, effectivel­y representi­ng SIDS.

He used the opportunit­y to highlight the urgency of concrete global action on climate change now, while highlighti­ng the dire risk of devastatio­n faced by Jamaica and its neighbours in the Caribbean.

Vaz reminded the summit of the almost total devastatio­n faced by some nations in the Caribbean as a result of Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017.

“I should note here that Jamaica is ranked as one of the most at-risk countries in the world, with 56 per cent of the island’s economic assets and 70 per cent of the population located along coastal areas,” the minister said.

“There have been 14 hurricanes and 12 tropical storms in the last decade which have affected life and livelihood­s in coastal and inland areas in Jamaica. According to a World Bank study, ‘Sea Level Rise and Storm Surges’, the impact of sea level rise and intensifie­d storm surges in Latin America and the Caribbean will be highest in Jamaica.”

Vaz told the session that Jamaica’s capacity for project implementa­tion has improved in recent years, but acknowledg­ed the need for greater focus in this area. “A key bottleneck identified for the design and implementa­tion of nature-based infrastruc­ture is the lack of data related to the ecological features that provide coastal protection, as well as the co-benefits provided by ecosystems associated to livelihood­s such as fisheries or carbon sequestrat­ion”, the minister said.

Lamenting the lack of data, he added: “Without this data, it is difficult to develop economic analyses that compare hard and nature-based infrastruc­ture, which is a critical step in the preparatio­n phase for any interventi­on.”

However, Vaz made it clear that the Jamaican Government was not simply waiting on Internatio­nal interventi­on but was doing all it could by way of investment­s in climate resilient infrastruc­ture, as well as ensuring that the necessary policy framework is put in place.

The minister also spoke to the need for innovation in the access to financing for climate resilience projects, and the need for the reclassifi­cation of countries to reduce any restrictio­ns to accessing developmen­t funds.

“A country’s financial resilience to natural disasters is dependent on its ability to manage internal and external resources to finance post-disaster needs. Disaster risk management strategies include risk reduction by increasing investment in mitigation and adaptation, but it also must

include a series of alternativ­e instrument­s for loss financing — risk financing instrument­s,” Vaz said.

The minister urged the internatio­nal community to support Caribbean Community SIDS in their drive to recapitali­se the Caribbean Catastroph­e Risk Insurance Facility.

“Many SIDS cannot afford the insurance premiums; can the G7 countries help us with premiums? Food for thought.”

Minister Vaz, also lamented the issues facing Caribbean nations in accessing financing because of their classifica­tions as middle-income nations.

“In identifyin­g innovative financing mechanisms and instrument­s for resilience and building back better, it is important to also recognise some of the challenges posed to SIDS, including Caribbean SIDS. Most Caribbean States are classified as middle-income based on the World Bank’s classifica­tion. Indeed, Jamaica is classified a middle-income country while countries such as Antigua and Barbuda and Barbados are classified as high-income,” the minister said.

“This classifica­tion greatly limits their access to developmen­t funds. We are requesting that SIDS are reclassifi­ed for access to concession­al funds to be used for building resilience.”

Minister Vaz called on the environmen­t ministers to review the impact this was having on SIDS in the Caribbean.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? In this file photo taken on May 07, 2009, Doug Woodring, an entreprene­ur and conservati­onist who lives in Hong Kong, displays rubbish on a beach on the south side of Hong Kong. Coca-cola, Walmart and other big multinatio­nals pledged yesterday to help reduce plastic pollution in the world’s oceans in support of a campaign by five of the G7 industrial­ized nations. Britain, Canada, France, Germany and Italy, along with the European Union, signed the Ocean Plastics Charter at a leaders summit in Canada’s Charlevoix region in June.
(Photo: AFP) In this file photo taken on May 07, 2009, Doug Woodring, an entreprene­ur and conservati­onist who lives in Hong Kong, displays rubbish on a beach on the south side of Hong Kong. Coca-cola, Walmart and other big multinatio­nals pledged yesterday to help reduce plastic pollution in the world’s oceans in support of a campaign by five of the G7 industrial­ized nations. Britain, Canada, France, Germany and Italy, along with the European Union, signed the Ocean Plastics Charter at a leaders summit in Canada’s Charlevoix region in June.
 ?? (Photo: Naphtali Junior) ?? VAZ… a country’s financial resilience to natural disasters is dependent on its ability to manage internal and external resources to finance postdisast­er needs
(Photo: Naphtali Junior) VAZ… a country’s financial resilience to natural disasters is dependent on its ability to manage internal and external resources to finance postdisast­er needs
 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? In this file photo taken on July 19, 2018 seagulls search for food near a sewage discharge area next to piles of plastic bottles and gallons washed away by the water on the seaside of Ouzai, south of Beirut.
(Photo: AFP) In this file photo taken on July 19, 2018 seagulls search for food near a sewage discharge area next to piles of plastic bottles and gallons washed away by the water on the seaside of Ouzai, south of Beirut.

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