Caribbean-France Regional Summit on preparation and mobilisation for the 21st Sesssion of The Conference of the Parties to The United Nations

Mon, May 11th 2015, 11:12 AM

It is my pleasure to address the opening session and participate in this Regional Summit on Climate Change.

Mr President, I am in the pleasurable position of being able to welcome you on behalf of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to the Region even as you are in France.

Let me thank our hosts here in Martinique for the excellent arrangements they have put in place on this beautiful island to create an atmosphere conducive to productive discussions.

Mr President

Small island developing states have championed the phrase “1.5 to Stay Alive”! On the basis of scientific evidence many have called for a reduction in the level of greenhouse gases so that mean global temperatures will not to exceed 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels.

The evidence of the impact of climate change in our region is evident.

Grenada saw a three hundred percent loss of GDP as a result of one storm! We see on average across CARICOM a 2-5% loss of growth in the region due to the responses to hurricanes and tropical processes which occur annually.

For The Bahamas which has eighty percent of its land mass within one meter of mean sea level, climate change is an existential threat to our land mass. Indeed that is the story across the region.

Mr President France will serve as the President of the Conference of The Parties (COP21) when it convenes in Paris in the winter.

Today’s gathering is a good idea. We have met with your counterparts from the United States and China.We found a strong commitment on their part to a successful outcome in Paris.This meeting also deepens relations between France and the Caribbean.

Mr President

The Caribbean Community reiterates to you as the incoming President of COP 21, the urgent need to close the gap between the mitigation pledges by major emitters and the level of effort required to decrease the global average temperature. Any Paris outcome must include the following essential elements:

·clarity on ambitious targets for developed countries, including a long-term goal for significant emission reductions by these countries;

·clarity on the adaptation measures and resources required to facilitate and enhance the sustainable development plans and programmes in small developing countries and thereby significantly reduce the level of poverty in our developing countries;

·clarity on measures and mechanisms to address the development challenges associated with climate change, sea level rise and loss and damage for small islands and low-lying coastal developing states;

·clarity on how the financial and technological support both for mitigation and adaptation will be generated and disbursed to small developing countries.

Further it must be recognised that the existing widespread practice of using Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita as the primary basis for access to resources, simply does not address the reality of the vulnerability of our countries.

We take particular note of the agreements with the Green Climate Fund in line with meeting the pledge of securing US$100 billion per year by 2020.

In seeking to find ways to live up to the financial obligations, we stress however that the most vulnerable countries must not be penalized through tax systems which would further impact our services based economies. The particular references to taxing international maritime and air transport we find particularly troubling.

I invite to you to continue to give this climate change issue and the wider financial issues the highest priority and to lend your nation’s considerable international clout, and the personal prestige of your office and its clout to conclude a satisfactory and binding agreement in Paris in the fall. History will not judge us kindly if we fail.

As a result of the impacts of climate change, the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre which spearheads the technical work for CARICOM on this issue estimates the cost of global inaction in the sub-region to be approximately US$ 10.7 billion per year by 2025 and that this figure could double by 2050.

Mr President we through you, urge Parties that have made pledges towards the initial capitalization of the Green Climate Fund (GCF) to enter into their contribution agreements with the GCF as soon as possible and scale up their contributions in line with the pledge for US$100 billion per year by 2020.

For the region, climate change magnifies the growing concerns regarding food security, water scarcity, energy security and the resource requirements for protection from natural disaster.

Another significant threat is linked to the projected impact of climate change on public health, through an increase in the presence of vectors of tropical diseases, such as malaria and dengue, and the prevalence of respiratory illnesses.

These diseases will affect the well-being and productivity of the workforce of the sub-region and compromise the economic growth, competitiveness and development potential of the Caribbean Community. Heat Stress is also an issue Mr President that France can identify with as a result of the unprecedented heat wave which had an enormous adverse social, economic and environmental effect such as the death of thousands of vulnerable elderly people across Europe in 2003.

Mr. President the region is not fully able to adapt to or mitigate the loss and damages associated with climate change induced processes.

Our situation is rendered especially urgent in the face of information that ocean acidification, sea surface temperatures and sea levels are already rising.These processes particularly sea-level rise will therefore irreversibly change the geography and ecology of many coastal states and territories.It has been projected that responding to these factors can have particularly disastrous consequences causing a perpetual recession in each of the CARICOM Member States for a significant period as our infrastructure, built environment, settlements and economic well-being are concentrated in coastal areas prone to flooding and inundation.

The region’s challenge associated with the on-going Climate Change negotiations is that even if the goal to limit global warming to 1.5 or 2°C is achieved, the Caribbean will experience severe adverse impacts for which stronger programmes of adaptation would have to be implemented.

We most strongly advance the view that in this current situation the global architecture on Climate Change needs to be redesigned to also facilitate and promote the development of developing countries. As a Region of small developing countries, regional policy makers have generally acknowledged the significant role of multilateralism. On that basis the Region is prepared to work for and is optimistic that, at the COP21, the appropriate actions would be taken to establish a new framework for global cooperation on Climate Change.At the very least, such a framework should address the basic requirements for the survival of the Small Island and Low-Lying Coastal Developing States(SIDS).

The ongoing collaboration between one of our Member States, Dominica and France to advance a project in the area of geothermal energy can be replicated. The application of French technology to our natural assets could form the basis for growth of a renewable energy sector in the region. This would bolster our energy security, cut the high energy costs and assist in the global battle against greenhouse gas emissions.

The Bahamas does not have the benefit of geothermal capacity, but we have advanced a National Energy Policy that calls for a minimum of 30% of our energy generation comprising renewable energy by 2033. We have passed legislation this year making grid-tie connection for solar and wind legal. We have signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Carbon War Room which will allow for 20 mega-watts of utility scale solar power throughout our archipelago of islands.

We have also launched a net billing programme for residential and commercial customers, which if maximized will allow an additional 25 mega –watts of solar and /or wind being connected to our grids. Storage technology for solar is critically important to us. The application of French technology in this area would benefit Caribbean countries like The Bahamas and Bermuda.

Mr President, France can be a vibrant development partner to our Community. Such a development would be most welcome, even more so if spurred by a sector that benefits the global family as much as it does our region.

It is my hope that this day will be the one that history will record as the new beginning of a strengthened relationship between France and the Caribbean.

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