(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
representatives at the United Nations (UN) Climate
Change Conference 2007 in Bali, Indonesia, which
ended on Friday 14 December, continued their
engagement with the international community to
address the projected harmful consequences of
climate change.
The Region was represented by Antigua and
Barbuda, The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica,
Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and
Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Included among the delegations were four Government
Ministers and high-level representatives from the
CARICOM Secretariat, led by Assistant
Secretary-General Trade and Economic Integration,
Ambassador Irwin LaRocque, and the Caribbean
Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC)
The Centre sponsored a Side Event on `Capacity
Building for Climate Change Adaptation - Caribbean
Experience’ at the Conference which not only
demonstrated the impacts of Climate Change on the
Caribbean but, more importantly, highlighted the
coping mechanisms the Region has been developing to
address climate change.
The Bali Conference focused on a set of ground
rules and benchmarks to initiate the next two years
of negotiations for a post-2012 multilateral
agreement on climate change. At the Conference, much
emphasis was given to concluding an agreement that
includes a strict timetable and inter-sessional
meetings to complete negotiations by 2009, and to
ensure enough time to ratify the post-2012 agreement
before the first commitment period of the Kyoto
Protocol expires in that year.
Among the principal issues addressed at the
Conference were the modalities to keep global
average temperature rise as far as possible below
two degrees centigrade relative to pre-industrial
levels to prevent dangerous changes in the climate
system, and the translation and application of the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)’s
principle of “common but differentiated
responsibilities” into clear and fair criteria.
These criteria include the polluter pays principle,
binding emission targets, the role of industrial
countries in adopting strong and aggressive action
consistent with their level of development to
fulfill their obligations under the Convention, and
consideration of a range of mechanisms to assist
developing countries to address the negative
consequences of climate change.
CARICOM Member States, in articulating their
positions at the Conference, highlighted the
importance of: the establishment and implementation
of an Adaptation Fund to assist developing countries
to build resilience and adaptive capacity. Among the
objectives of the Fund is the provision of a more
consistent, predictable and substantial source of
funding.
CARICOM also spoke to the need for the
international community to fix the loopholes in the
Clean Development Mechanism, which are undermining
the environmental integrity of the scheme by
generating windfall profits for an increasing number
of industrial greenhouse gas emitters.
Further, Member States made a call for new
policies and incentives to be a central part of the
negotiations with respect to the development of
mechanisms to Reduce Emissions from Deforestation
and Degradation (REDD). Existing initiatives to
reduce deforestation have failed to achieve large
scale forest conservation.
Strong calls were also made for the sharing of
clean technology which has the potential to reduce
emissions growth in developing countries at low
cost. Some Member States emphasised the importance
of the removal of barriers to sharing of clean
technology and the establishment of strong
obligations for developed countries to share
expertise, training and technology with developing
countries.
Negotiations at the Bali Conference have been
complex, intense and largely deadlocked on almost
every issue. However, a major breakthrough on the
Adaptation Fund and a REDD scheme to assist
developing countries to stop deforestation breathed
new life into the negotiations on a Bali Mandate.
Contact:
piu@caricom.org