Jamaica calls for comprehensive climate change impact review

WASHINGTON, United States (CMC) — Jamaica yesterday called for a comprehensive review of the impact of climate change on the Caribbean, including the “cancers”

not yet integrated into the process, as it also reiterated a call for the international community to review its concessionary lending policies to Small Island Developing States (SIDS).

“As natural disasters become more frequent, so do the adaptation costs imposed on us as Small Island Developing States, especially since we are on the front line of climate change impacts,” Jamaica’s Prime Minister Andrew Holness told the high-level conference on building resilience to disasters and climate change in the Caribbean.

The event, sponsored by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the World Bank, is a follow-up on the 2017 high-level forum “Unleashing Growth and Strengthening Resilience”.

The IMF said it has brought together key stakeholders, including senior policymakers, multilateral development partners and the private sector to “explore incentives to shift the focus of policies towards building resilience and innovative disaster-risk financing policies and instruments that would help in the region”.

Holness, who is also the chairman of the 15-member Caribbean Community (Caricom) grouping, said that the region is facing rapid urbanisation in coastal zones with corresponding falling populations in rural areas and out islands.

“Some more than others are facing the pending loss of limited land mass due to sea level rise,” he said, noting that one common theme is that the cost of repeated natural disasters has been underestimated, “and this is making sustainable development and prosperity much harder to achieve, especially as we are confronted with many development challenges which affect our economic growth.

“What is clear to many of us though is that meeting the sustainable development goals and the goal of leaving no one behind will become increasingly costly, more challenging and likely not met unless measures are taken to reduce the vulnerabilities and build the resilience of Small Island Developing States to the climate change impacts which continue to set us back.”

Holness told the conference, which is also being attended by several Caricom leaders, that this would require partnership as “well as using existing support more effectively and making new resources available for us to build the required resilience at the country, community and personal level”.

Holness noted that last year, natural disasters in the Caribbean set back the region to the tune of US$130 billion, and he urged the conference to think of resilience “beyond these natural disaster events or what we refer to as sudden events”.

He said there is a “more comprehensive picture that we must pay attention to”, adding that behind the scenes of the natural disasters “there are these slow-growing events for which we have not yet even started to contemplate… the potential impact.

“Specifically as SIDS, we must begin more fruitful dialogue on building resilience to impact these slow onset events, such as sea temperature rise, which, according to the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), is causing our reefs to bleach at an unprecedented rate”.

He said while this situation is not unique to the Caricom countries, countries like Mexico are implanting measures to deal with that, and that there is need for the region to put in place measures to deal with the situation.

He said The University of the West Indies is carrying out research to identify the DNA of coral reefs adaptable to sea temperature rises and other matters.

Holness told the conference another of the “cancers” facing the region is that of ocean acidification, with NOAA indicating that since the industrial period the acidification of the oceans has increased by 30 per cent with no sign of abatement.

He said such a situation could have drastic effects on the Caribbean with the sea egg industry, the shell fish industry, the conch industry, all being “significant economic assets to us”.

He said the sectors account for at least one per cent of gross domestic product, employing hundreds of people, warning “that it is slowly going to disappear if we don’t take concerted action”.

In his address, Holness repeated the call by the Caribbean for developed countries to revisit the criteria used for providing concessionary loans to developing countries, saying that the graduation of the region to high middle -income status is seriously undermining the Caribbean’s socio-economic future.

“And as such we are often times not considered as high priority for the allocation of donor support from the international community. It should be quite clear by now that GDP in and of itself is not a true indicator of development”.

He said apart from indebtedness, “it does not take into consideration vulnerability to… factors including increased intensity and frequency of natural disasters”.

“My point and hope is that we need to quickly find alternatives that are fair, practical, relevant and helpful to us as Small Island Developing States. Alternatives that will ultimately enhance our disaster-risk management capacity and ability to respond to the increasing impacts of climate change”.

He said the region is encouraged by the prospects of the Addis Abba Action Agenda and the financing for development, and noted the progress being made in translating this agenda into action.

Holness said the region is also taking note of new financing opportunities to assist “in our path to become more resilient”.