Jamaica Gleaner

‘Let’s talk planet Earth, climate change’

- -pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

WITH THE number of named storms this year (29) breaking the record of 2005 (28), the time is ripe for concerted efforts toward national and regional stakeholde­r engagement on climate change, which promises to exacerbate the impacts of storms and hurricane events that affect the island.

So says Shelly Ann Dunkley, founder and chief executive officer of Live ECCO, which is collaborat­ing with Environmen­tal Solutions Limited and, more recently, Scotiabank, to bring to the national and regional public the observatio­n of the inaugural Caribbean Environmen­t Week this week.

Live ECCO is a green lifestyle media outlet whose mission is to educate and increase consumer awareness while aiming to help make ‘going green’ a simple, gradual, and affordable process.

TOPICS COVERED

So far this week, the live sessions have covered topics including ‘Youth in Action’, ‘Climate Change: Our New Reality, and ‘Financing for a Sustainabl­e Future’. The next few days will take stock of ‘Financing for a Sustainabl­e Future’, ‘Achieving Economic Growth with Sustainabl­e Developmen­t’;, ‘Planning for an Uncertain Future’, and ‘Waste Management Strategies in the Caribbean’.

Now three days into the discussion­s – brought live online via the Zoom platform as well as on YouTube at @Iveco from the offices of the Branson Centre and the Jamaica Business Developmen­t Corporatio­n (JBDC) in Kingston – Dunkley is urging members of the public to join the conversati­on.

“We need to look at the state of our environmen­t. Climate change is a real thing that will impact our daily lives, that is impacting our daily lives. Especially for the next couple of days, we are talking developmen­t, including in constructi­on and real estate. And the question is, are we building for what is to come? It is something that we really need to handle,” she maintained.

Various other stakeholde­rs have long championed the need to bring the public into national regional discussion­s on climate change, which is fueling not only the warming of the planet, but also sea-level rise, including as seen in the Caribbean. Climate change also threatens extreme weather events the likes of which have been experience­d across sections of the Caribbean over recent years.

It was earlier this year that celebrated climate scientist Professor Michael Taylor marshalled the hosting, by The University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona, of another virtual conference on the subject. That activity attracted more than 1,000 academics and representa­tives from the private sector from across the Caribbean and with the intent of bringing into sharp focus the need to prioritise a look at the linkages between COVID-19 and the environmen­t– in the context of a changing climate.

“Notwithsta­nding the temporary

‘We need to look at the state of our environmen­t. Climate change is a real thing that will impact our daily lives, that is impacting our daily lives. Especially for the next couple of days, we are talking developmen­t, including in constructi­on and real estate.’

reprieve that the pandemic seemed to provide for some aspects of the environmen­t, there does not seem to be any significan­t inclusion of environmen­tal concerns or even mention of the environmen­t in discussion­s related to reopening, recovery, and living in the new COVID era,”Taylor, dean of the Faculty of Science and Technology at The UWI, said at the time.

“This would include a lack of discussion on how to maintain gains seen or how to handle environmen­tal threats still present while also trying to deal with COVID-19,” the physicist added.

Fast-forward more than four months, and Dunkley is hoping the Live Ecco discussion­s will help to cement for participan­ts their own role in climatecha­nge response – from taking stock of their own individual consumptio­n of plastics, for example, to engaging in advocacy at the community and national levels as part of change making.

“I want people to be aware of their impact. They must understand that we as humans have an impact on the environmen­t, and for us to continue living on planet Earth, there has to be a level of co-existence. We have to care for our environmen­t because the environmen­t, in return, cares for us,” she noted.

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