(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) Guyana’s President, His Excellency Bharrat
Jagdeo, on Thursday, reiterated his call for Member
States of the Caribbean Community to remain united
in the Community’s advocacy on climate change.
The President’s call came in the wake of
preparations for the 16th Conference of Parties (COP
16) to the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC) slated for December in
Cancun, Mexico. Climate Change was one of the major
issues which dominated the agenda of the Third Joint
Meeting of the Council for Trade and Development (COTED)
and the Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD),
which opened in Guyana on Thursday.
President Jagdeo asserted that the Liliendaal
Declaration on Climate Change and Development was
still the endorsed position of the Community in
Climate Change negotiations and emphasised the need
for Member States must have a common for dealing
with climate change issues in the international
arena.
The Declaration, issued by Heads of Government at
their 30th regular conference in Guyana in July
2009, outlined, among other things, five thematic
areas on which to focus negotiations: mitigation and
adaptation, technology transfer, capacity building,
financing and Reducing Emissions from Deforestation
and Forest Degradation (REDD Plus) and support for
consideration to Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS).
The Guyana President said that while the
disappointing outcomes of Copenhagen had prompted
the need to take stock, the Community should not
dwell on what had already passed but should focus on
seizing the opportunities that had emerged from the
Copenhagen Accord in 2009 “as flawed as it might
have been.”
One such opportunity to which the President
referred is the commitment under the Copenhagen
Accord to make available to Caribbean and Latin
American countries US$10 billion per annum, for
climate change adaptation and mitigation, 65% of
which are available grant resources and 35% of which
are in the form of loans.
“We need to ensure that we seize this opportunity
and tap into those resources by developing
appropriate projects…,” he said.
The President made the observation that some
countries were not ready to capitalise on those
funds and urged the Member States to ensure that
they meet the criteria for eligibility in accessing
the funds and putting in place the necessary
institutional arrangements to secure and manage
those resources. In this regard he recommended that
the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre work
with Member States in helping them to develop
projects appropriate for funding.
In addition, the Guyana President stressed the
need for a strategy that balances technical and
political positions in the upcoming Cancun
negotiations. Explaining his rationale, he stated
“negotiations are not just about technical issues;
its about politics, and decisions are invariably
influenced by a country’s interest therefore we have
to be careful that we don’t get sucked into the
technical process that we lose sight of the
political opportunities that we can seize.”
In charting the way forward, President Jagdeo
said “we need to emerge from this meeting with a
lucid sense of where we are and where we are going…
We can’t afford to stand still; we can’t afford to
wait on the international community to get things
done for us…”
He then applauded Saint Lucia’s Prime Minister,
the Honourable Stephenson King - who has lead
responsibility for Sustainable Development including
Climate Change - for what he described as his
exemplary leadership and strong advocacy in the area
of Climate Change and Sustainable Development.
In underscoring the President’s call, Prime
Minister King told the meeting of environment
ministers and technocrats that it was imperative to
stress the political implications in the
negotiations. However, he also stated that the
Community must continue to maintain its focus on its
target of 1.5 Degree Celsius in stabilisation of
Greenhouse Gas Emissions by the year 2050.
The Saint Lucia Prime Minister also endorsed the
importance of maximising the resources which were
pledged under the Copenhagen Accord and called for
unity in the way forward, noting that “while we all
have our individual agendas, we must understand that
we are a body and should work together as a body.”
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org