Caribbean Needs “Urgent Access” to Finance to Achieve Sustainable Development Goals – PM Mitchell.
Chairman of the World’s Small Island Developing states, Grenada’s Prime Minister Dr.Keith Mitchell, is insisting that Caribbean countries need “urgent access to financing” if they are to achieve Sustainable Development Goals.
Prime Minister Mitchell has also echoed concerns that the process for Caribbean countries to get resources such as the Green Climate Fund can be daunting.
The Grenadian leader and CARICOM chairman was addressing an event of the United Nations Development Programme on the sidelines of Cop 23 in Bonn Germany on Tuesday.
“Time is of the essence in accessing those funds, as events such as these hurricanes are occurring more frequently. Reconstruction must therefore be climate resilient in time for the next event,” said Prime Minister Mitchell.
“Achieving the SDGs will require a rethink of the financing required, given the high costs of rebuilding and the need to reallocate resources to sectors devastated by these natural disasters.
The issue of financing to achieve the SDGs is of paramount importance to developing countries in particular, LDCs and climate vulnerable small states”.
The Prime Minister has been fronting calls for the international community to provide more financial aid to the Caribbean islands, who remain vulnerable to the ravages of Hurricanes which have been on the rise.
In recent months, two category five Hurricanes swept across the Caribbean over a two-week period claiming lives and causing massive devastation.
As a result, 20,000 children in the Caribbean community have been affected and 32,000 people displaced.
Prime Minister Mitchell has pointed at Dominica which was recently decimated by Hurricane Maria two years after it was ravaged by Tropical Storm Erika.
“Before rehabilitation and reconstruction was complete from that first event, a second climatic event has now compounded the problems. The estimated damage and loss from Maria amounts to almost 200 percent of GDP,” Dr. Mitchell said.
“Our experience is that you borrow to rebuild. Another climatic event destroys what you are rebuilding. You have to borrow to build again, even as you have not yet paid off the first set of debt”.
Concessional Development Financing
Meantime, Prime Minister Mitchell is reporting positive signals from the international community regarding the region’s campaign for the relaxation of rules regarding eligibility for concessional development financing.
“In a very almost diabolical way, construction adds to your GDP; hence your per capita income increases and our countries are labeled as middle income. Therefore, they cannot access concessional development financing. It is a trap for countries like ours,” said the CARICOM Chairman.
“As a matter of extreme urgency, I call for vulnerability to be included as a major criterion in determining eligibility for concessional development financing”.
The World Bank report, “Turn down the Heat”, says the number of severe hurricanes is projected to increase by 40 per cent, if global temperatures rise by 2°C, and up to 80 per cent should they rise by 4°.
The study also predicts that the expected sea-level rise will have devastating effects on all Small Island and Low-Lying Coastal Developing States (SIDS), particularly those in the Caribbean.
“The events of last month underscore the fact that climate change is not a matter to be debated. For us, climate change is a lived reality. It is an existential threat to our Region,”said Prime Minister Mitchell.
“With that reality in mind, there is need to respond swiftly and to bolster the resilience of the Caribbean SIDS”.