Confront climate change challenges from position of strength, together – CARICOM Chairman

CARICOM Chairman and President of Haiti Jovenel Moise

With climate change at the centre of discussions among Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Heads of Government, President of Haiti, His Excellency Jovenel Moise wants the Region to confront the challenges together, from a position of strength.

He also wants a new mechanism for disaster risk funding that would assist affected Member States to quickly recover and reconstruct. The thinking behind the call for a new mechanism was to ensure that funds for reconstruction are chanelled through “affordable and effective procedures, rather than be paralysed by the expectation of unlikely assistance which, in most cases, is too little, comes too late and, sometimes, never happens”, he said.

The President of Haiti who is the current Chairman of CARICOM, addressed the opening ceremony of the Twenty-Ninth Intersessional Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM, in Port-au-Prince on Monday and placed much emphasis on climate change, natural disasters and funding for recovery. He said that he was organising an international conference aimed at strengthening the mechanisms of resilience to the effects of climate change and the management of natural disasters in the Caribbean.

“This will be an opportunity for the States, partners and international development actors to exchange ideas and make proposals on the best features of prevention and responses to natural disasters. Without your full participation, this conference will not be successful. You are, already, invited,” he said.

In his address President Moise said that he was assuming the Chairmanship of the Community at a time when it was grappling with the effects of extreme weather caused by global warming. The “sometimes permanent damage and losses” that were consequences of natural disasters slowed the socio-economic development of countries in the Region, and prevented them from achieving sustainable development goals, he said.

No stranger to devastation from natural disasters, Haiti is still suffering the effects of the massive 2010 earthquake that killed about 300 000 people, left a similar number injured and more than a million and a half displaced. It continues to be affected by natural weather phenomena including floods and hurricanes.

Alluding to the damage and the “deep bruising in the spirit” wrought by Hurricanes Matthew, Irma and Maria in 2016 and 2017, President Moise saluted the “courage of our brothers and sisters” of the countries that were affected by those storms.

“It is an inescapable fact that the Caribbean region is placed in the path of the cyclones and hurricanes, and that one of the consequences of climate change is the growing intensity of weather phenomena for which this area is exposed. We must guard against these risks. We must do it together, because isolation led to our regression…,” he said in his address during the hour-long opening ceremony.

He pointed out that the risks caused by climate change were global and that their consequences acted indiscriminately.

“So, the next few years will be crucial,” he said, and added that the Region must do everything to respect international commitments, maintain the momentum of the Paris Agreement, and work to overcome challenges related to implementation.

The Republic of Haiti, he said, was very attached to the environmental dimension of sustainable development. As a small island developing state, Haiti was determined to strengthen its resilience to the natural disasters that affected the Region each year, he added.

Among the matters the Heads of Government are deliberating on during their two-day Meeting is Disaster Management and Recovery.

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5 Comments

  1. UDOHREADYET
    February 28, 2018

    Each of the countries in Caricom should manufacture a particular material needed for climate resilience. They can then trade with each other accordingly. that effort will create jobs, businesses and allow the Islands to have the materials needed when faced with disastrous storms. Essentially making Caricom self sufficient where climate change is concerned.

  2. anonymous2
    February 28, 2018

    The UN has all of these guys spouting the same propaganda about climate change. Corporations have done the greatest harm to the atmosphere and earth. And the people buying their products contribute to the destruction. There is not much people can now do, other than to be aware and look at the sky and environment, to change the course because it it past the point of no return. The climate has been changing for eons, so what is the big fuss all of the sudden? It is a distraction tactic from what is really going on.

    • Roger Burnett
      February 28, 2018

      “The climate has been changing for “aeons” , so what is the big fuss all of a sudden?”

      I agree. But the big fuss, all of a sudden, is that there’s money to be made out of it!

  3. It's my damn business
    February 27, 2018

    What position of strength we have in the Caribbean to confront anything? As we speak the prime Minister of St Kitts Mr Harris and opposition leader Denzil Douglas are before the court because of a diplomatic passport of Dominica Douglas holds, under what appears to be very shady and dark circumstances. Though the cought matter is between the pm and opposition leader of St. Kitts but based on the circumstances it feels like a court matter between St. Kitts and Dominica, where one individual seems to have violated the laws of St. Kitts nonetheless seems to have been supported and encouraged by Dominica. With all that mess and corruption I don’t see how we can combat climate change together

    • SMA
      February 28, 2018

      What does that have to do with climate change? PAPA MET!!!!!

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