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(Caribbean Community Secretariat,
Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown, Guyana) Madam Chair,
Hon. Lisel Alamilla, Minister of Forestry,
Sustainable Development and Indigenous Peoples of
Belize
I extend to you all a very warm
welcome to the 39th Special Meeting of the Council
for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) which
focuses on the environment and sustainable
development.
This special meeting was mandated
by CARICOM Heads of Government to prepare a CARICOM
position for our participation in the upcoming
United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development
– Rio+20. In short, we need to discuss the
importance of the Rio+20 process; what we want out
of Rio and how we propose to get what we want.
At that Conference we hope to
secure renewed political commitment for sustainable
development; assess our progress to date in
fostering sustainable development; and decide how we
propose to address the implementation gaps arising
out of the outcomes of the subsequent summits on
sustainable development.
The Conference will review
progress within the framework of Agenda 21. It will
also focus on two major themes: a green economy in
the context of sustainable development and poverty
eradication; and the institutional framework for
sustainable development.
For the Caribbean Community, Rio
+ 20 must be more than just an event. It is a
process that presents us with an opportune global
platform from which to speak with one voice and
articulate with clarity the unique realities,
perspectives, priorities and concerns of the
Caribbean, and ensure that those are adequately
reflected and addressed in the outcome of the
Conference. Rio+20 also provides an opportunity for
the global community to adopt a new international
architecture that will assist CARICOM Member States
in re-shaping their own national frameworks for
achieving sustainable development.
The Caribbean is blessed with a
rich and diversified resource endowment. According
to the United Nations Environment Programme, (UNEP).
We have been stewards of the highest level of
natural resources per capita in the world. It is our
task to utilise or manage such resources to the
advantage of the Region and ensure a better quality
of life for our peoples - the ultimate goal of our
regional integration movement.
Ladies and Gentlemen, twenty
years ago, after the 1992 Rio Summit on Environment
and Development – a summit at which we had
demonstrated our commitment to sustainable
development - we are heading back to Rio painfully
aware that the Caribbean Region is contending, for
example, with high levels of indebtedness; increased
vulnerability to natural and man-made disasters; and
the effects of climate change - all of which has
affected our quality of life as a people and
undermined our ability to build our social, economic
and ecological resilience.
As highlighted in review of the
Mauritius Strategy of Implementation, Small Island
Developing and Low-lying Coastal States (SIDS), such
as ours, continue to be seriously challenged by the
increasing vulnerabilities associated with disaster
risk management and emerging consequences associated
with climate change and sea–level rise.
The management of these risks
requires enormous attention and resources given the
high level of exposure of the Region to these
phenomena. These increasing risks are taking place
at a time when CARICOM Member States are
increasingly challenged by the new conditions of
development assistance and the changes in the
international trading regimes, both of which
severely constrain our capacity to sustain a
programme that fosters growth, competitiveness and
sustainable development.
The Rio+20 Conference calls for
developing a green economy within the context of
sustainable development and poverty reduction. For
CARICOM, we first have to reach consensus on a
common approach towards giving expression to the
green economy at the national level within the
context of national peculiarities and circumstances.
It will require broader and deeper partnerships
between and among economic drivers, social policy
engineers, science and technology practitioners,
consumers and beneficiaries.
The green economy presents
opportunities for the expansion of economic activity
and employment which contributes to the reduction of
poverty. In addition, to meet that challenge of
greening the economy, our most valuable asset - our
human resources - must be given every opportunity to
fulfil their potential and contribute to that goal.
This will require retraining and reorientation of
our labour force at all levels.
In developing a CARICOM position
for this conference therefore, I would suggest that
the COTED consider the level and quality of support
necessary to strengthen our infrastructural
framework for sustainable development. It should be
a position that emphasizes integration, coherence
and implementation for sustainable development.
It should be a position that
clearly articulates people at the centre of
sustainable development, focusing on the needs and
aspirations of human beings and their responsibility
towards present and future generations.
Simply put: It should be a
position that articulates the Region’s priorities;
the prerequisites and assumptions for
implementation; and the need for resources.
The challenge is yours to chart
that position that will help shape the future we
want for our children and our children’s children.
I thank you
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org;
caricompublicinfo@gmail.com
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