Government Minister in the OECS makes impassioned plea for climate financing at COP27

Honourable Shawn Edwards, Minister for Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology, and Vocational Training in Saint Lucia

Honourable Shawn Edwards, Minister for Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology and Vocational Training in Saint Lucia made an impassioned plea on the global stage of COP27 in Sharm El Sheik Egypt, for Small Island Developing States to receive climate financing for loss and damage due to the effects of climate change. Minister Edwards made his address during a high-level COP27 panel discussion today, November 10, which included H.E Nino Tandilashivili,  Deputy Minister in the Ministry of Environment and Agriculture of Georgia, and H.E Aminath Shauna, Minister of Environment, Climate Change, and Technology in the Republic of Maldives.

The panel discussed the issues developing countries face as a result of climate change, and the financing needed to address them. Developing countries have faced mounting pressure during this United Nations Climate Change Conference (UNFCCC) to make financing available to countries facing the most severe impacts of climate change, yet are the lowest emitters of greenhouse gases – carbon dioxide being the primary one emitted through human activity.

Minister Edwards told the gathering that a few days ago, Saint Lucia faced an unprecedented storm on a scale which persons had not experienced in a lifetime. “Homes were damaged, vehicles were floating in the streets like paper, schools were impacted and the initial assessment we were estimating was somewhere in the region of 6-8 million dollars, and all of this happened in approximately the space of three hours. These are weather systems that visit us in Saint Lucia and the Caribbean with a degree of frequency that we have not seen before and every time they come, they leave us in tatters. We have to find resources to build back, to reconstruct.”

Twelve years ago in Copenhagen, developed countries pledged $100 Billion annually to less wealthy nations to mitigate and adapt to rising in global temperatures. However, this promise has not been kept, thus every year, the frustration of world leaders increases as their countries deal with the adverse effects of violent hurricanes, extreme flooding, and extreme drought. These new phenomena have given rise to food security issues, increased national debt – as countries borrow money to recover from these cataclysmic events – and loss in GDP.

Edwards lamented that “every year, at every forum, at COP, at UNEP, you will hear the global pronouncements being made time and against that there are monies being pledged for Small Island Developing States, but it never reaches our treasury. And when proposals are written and submitted to the International financial agencies for support, there is always an inadequacy in the proposal you submit.”

Climate change poses steep challenges to Small Island Developing States in the OECS, and regional leaders are constantly seeking means to overcome them, build resilience in their economy and advocate for international, regional, and local policy that will ensure their survival for future generations.

 

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5 Comments

  1. November 18, 2022

    Garcon while you guys are at your “bon temps” there is one more impassionate plea you have to make on behalf of the Dominican populace “No Reform No Election” and if we are truly Caribbean brothers and sisters remove this political “pinnez” called Roosevelt Skerritt on the backs of decent minded people, he is a disaster and a disgrace to the entire region.I

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 5 Thumb down 0
    • Toto
      November 20, 2022

      Begging, begging we are always begging as if others don’t have their own needs to to look after themselves first. When I see a politician like Roosevelt Skerrit spending his country’s money so lavishly and at the same time begging other nations for more money again I really feel embarrassed and ashamed. Isn’t there anything we can do for ourselves. It appears not but we are proud to squeeze more out of the gullible nations without A shred of shame as if we are entitled, always entitled gallivanting like champion beggars with no respect.

  2. Ibo France
    November 18, 2022

    The heads of government and their ministers from the Caribbean attend this particular international forum screaming on their knees for climate reparatory justice.

    They have accused the large industrialized countries of negatively impacting the small vulnerable countries like ours with their disproportionate emission of green house gases. However, these tiny hypocrites destroy wetlands and forested areas, dump debris in rivers, streams, ponds and the sea, strip steep slopes of alk vegetation.

    My point is simply this: Take care of the environment at home. Put measures and mechanisms in place to mitigate against the destruction of the land during the event of any natural phenomenon. Also do something about the many old vehicles emitting so much carbon monoxide in the atmosphere.

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    • Lawyer
      November 19, 2022

      Exactly, but they are not really interested in their environment, all they are interested in is the money they want from the big industrial nations. Imagine the income stream Skerrit would have. That’s all these guys are after! Never mind taking care of their own environment. Look at all those pollution emitting lorries, buses, SUVs and heavy machinery that are present in hundreds. One would not see one of those ‘dirt emitters’ any where in the EU or on their roads. What about those dirty beaches? What about all those discarded vehicles on the road side? What about all those used lubricants and other chemicals released into the environment. Not a single politician in DA bothered by that! Hypocrites, greedy hypocrites. Nothing but.

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