Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Grace Kennedy Foundation gets grant to rescue Kingston Harbour

- BY ALICIA DUNKLEY-WILLIS Senior staff reporter dunkleywil­lisa@jamaicaobs­erver.com

THE Gracekenne­dy Foundation has secured a Us$960,000-grant from the European Union’s Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme as a start to the daunting task of rescuing Kingston Harbour — the seventh-deepest natural harbour in the world — from degradatio­n and helping to restore it to its former glory.

Appearing at this week’s Jamaica Observer Monday Exchange at the newspaper’s Beechwood Avenue offices in Kingston, executive director of the foundation Caroline Mahfood said the entity would be conducting a pilot project, in conjunctio­n with several partners, including Mona Geoinforma­tics Institute (MGI) and the Centre for Marine Sciences, using the Barnes Gully, which runs along South Camp Road in Kingston, one from the network of 19 gullies and two rivers which empty into the iconic harbour.

“We are going to see how we can encourage people in the communitie­s — by the way, they are not always the ones guilty of dumping things in the gullies, it’s uptown — but we are going to try and work to sensitise and encourage persons not to do that,” Mahfood told editors and reporters. Noting that a condition of the grant was also to create alternativ­e livelihood­s, she said the foundation would be training persons in media skills, which they would then use to create videos relating to the harbour and issues associated with it.

Mahfood said the foundation would also be working with professor of marine biology and director of the Centre for Marine Sciences in the Department of Life Sciences at The University of the West Indies, Mona, Professor Mona Webber, who has done extensive work to restore the mangroves in the harbour. She said mangrove wardens would also be created to see to the well-being and protection of the plants, which are also great protectors from hurricanes.

She said the MGI would be measuring the waste, the types of waste that enter the harbour, and make recommenda­tions on how to reduce same. The project is expected to last three years.

‘Clean Kingston Harbour: Pipe Dream or Pot of Gold’ was the moot of the 2019 Gracekenne­dy Foundation Lecture, which saw discussion­s with public and private entities aimed at developing a long-term, sustainabl­e solution to reduce the pollution entering the harbour.

Mahfood emphasised that “the harbour project cannot be a Gracekenne­dy project. It has to be a Jamaica project so we have to figure out how we can pull other people in”.

The 51 square kilometre-coastal feature is home to many species and is virtually the backbone of the island’s main port (Kingston Port), which is a primary regional transshipm­ent port, serving the Caribbean and Central America. The harbour provides support for many persons who depend on its resources for survival. It is also an attraction which draws in excess of 300,000 local and internatio­nal visitors during the annual fireworks display on the Kingston Waterfront, hosted by the Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n. Swimming is no longer recommende­d in the harbour but it is heavily used for pleasure boating and sailing.

Mahfood said the initiative underlined the vision of the Caribbean Philanthro­pic Alliance — an open platform consisting of corporate leaders and their foundation­s across the Caribbean — for collaborat­ion amongst the corporate sector, foundation­s and other philanthro­pists to achieve the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (2030) by the Caribbean and for the Caribbean, of which she is a key member. The group of more than 40 corporate foundation­s, private sector organisati­ons and other supporting organisati­ons is minded to coordinate initiative­s and resources to address complex global challenges facing the Caribbean, especially within the next decade.

 ??  ?? Jamaica Environmen­t Trust volunteers comb the Kingston Harbour coastline for garbage at the 2018 Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-up Day
Jamaica Environmen­t Trust volunteers comb the Kingston Harbour coastline for garbage at the 2018 Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-up Day

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