Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica to integrate climate risk analysis into infrastruc­ture planning

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‘We can’t prevent disasters from happening, we can avoid the ripple effects of climate change if we act on adaptation and resilience today.’

JAMAICA HAS become the first country in the world to begin the process of developing a predictive climate riskassess­ment planning tool for major infrastruc­ture areas under the global private sector-led Coalition for Climate Resilient Investment (CCRI).

The tool, as explained by Professor Ji m Hall, director of research in the School of Geography and the Environmen­t at the University of Oxford, will enable “local decision-makers to assess climate risk to Jamaica’s infrastruc­ture networks to visualise ‘hotspots’ of high levels of economic and social value at risk, in relevant time horizons”.

The pilot project, called ‘Supporting Investment Decision-Making for Resilient Infrastruc­ture in Jamaica’, targets the energy, water and transport sectors and was launched on March 10 with a virtual workshop that attracted more than 80 participan­ts from a range of public- and privatesec­tor entities.

It was co-created and funded by the UK government through its Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office and the Green Climate Fund.

The University of Oxford, a global leader in the geospatial assessment of climate risks and appraisal of options for improving infrastruc­ture system resilience, is one of the technical delivery partners and will work closely with the Planning Institute of Jamaica (PIOJ) to ensure the alignment of the scope of work with local and institutio­nal needs.

The project is slated to last 15 months and will include the participat­ion of multilater­al developmen­t banks, national banks, private sector and other sources of financing.

Jamaica’s involvemen­t is expected to put the island on centre stage at the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26), scheduled for Glasgow in November 2021, where adaptation and resilience will be among the main campaigns of the UK-led COP.

CLIMATE HAZARDS

At the recent launch, Minister of Housing, Urban Renewal, Environmen­t and Climate Change Pearnel Charles Jr, stressed that the island’s i nfrastruct­ure is under serious threat from the impacts of climate hazards, and as such, needs expansion and modernisat­ion of critical infrastruc­ture.

He said further that investment­s to that end “must go hand in hand with our economic recovery and sustainabl­e developmen­t goals,” for while “we can’t prevent disasters from happening, we can avoid the ripple effects of climate change if we act on adaptation and resilience today”.

Deputy British High Commission­er to Jamaica Daniel Shepherd noted the long-standing partnershi­p between Jamaica and the UK in the fight against climate change, and thanked Jamaica for helping to develop and pilot the new methodolog­y, which will hopefully be rolled out across the Caribbean and the world. He also welcomed the participat­ion of the Green Climate Fund in the project and gave a nod to the opportunit­ies for developing nature-based solutions to strengthen resilience.

Dr Wayne Henry, director general at the PIOJ, did not miss the opportunit­y to remind participan­ts that an integrated disaster risk-management approach is a f undamental principle on which Vision 2030, Jamaica’s national developmen­t plan, is built and informs the country’s thrust towards dealing with climate change. He further underscore­d the key role that the PIOJ plays in contributi­ng to build resilience within the country’s developmen­t processes and policies to achieve sustainabl­e goals.

The next phase of the pilot will involve an assessment of NBS, which will assist the Government of Jamaica to develop and enhance new and existing infrastruc­ture that feature natural ecosystems. It will include physical valuation of NBS as alternativ­es to hard infrastruc­ture, investigat­ion of potential financial savings that can be achieved by such replacemen­t, and developmen­t of financial metrics that can be deployed to streamline the solution to both public and private sectors.

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