Developing a Climate Resilience Policy for St. Vincent and the Grenadines

written by BVC February 21, 2019
A photo of a tree with a split view down the middle. The left showing green grass, blue sky and clouds and the right showing a desert with a dead tree, orange sky and bright sun shining. Developing a Climate Resilience Policy for St. Vincent and the Grenadines

Government, civil society, and private sector stakeholders from various economic sectors in St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) participated in the first national consultation on December 11, 2018, to develop a climate change policy to mainstream climate resilience into the country’s development agenda.

The Caribbean Natural Resources Institute (CANARI) is providing technical assistance to the Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning, Sustainable Development and Information Technology in SVG to facilitate the series of national consultations and develop the new policy. The aim of the first consultation was to gain input from stakeholders on their needs, priorities, and relevant measures for adaptation and mitigation for key sectors to inform the new climate change policy.

At the national consultation, the Director of Planning, Recardo Frederick, noted that “Climate change is a real threat to St. Vincent and the Grenadines with the islands facing more extreme hurricanes and weather, including droughts in 2005, 2010, and 2014 and flooding in 2011, 2013, and 2016, resulting in damages and losses in excess of a billion EC dollars.”

He welcomed the collaboration between his ministry and CANARI to develop a formal coordinating mechanism to streamline implementation of climate change measures across all sectors and enable mainstreaming of climate resilience into development planning. He also highlighted the critical need for climate finance to support such implementation, including the support of the Green Climate Fund and other key donors.

Stakeholders worked together at the national consultation to craft a shared vision and goals for the Climate Change Policy and to identify priority sectors and measures for adaptation and mitigation, including for the agriculture, energy and transport, health, tourism, and water sectors. They also identified potential governance arrangements for effective implementation of the policy.

CANARI and Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning, Sustainable Development and Information Technology will continue to work over the next six months with stakeholders in SVG to develop a Climate Change Policy and a Climate Change Strategy and Implementation Plan. This process is being supported under the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Regional Disaster Vulnerability Reduction Project funded by the World Bank and the Climate Investment Fund’s Pilot Program for Climate Resilience.

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