Trinidad and Tobago is warming 2.5 times faster than the global average, according to statistical data. With similar trends across the Caribbean, this is a growing crisis which poses a severe threat to sustainable development in our region. Without urgent course-correction on climate change and adaptation to its effects, the Caribbean will face worsening loss and infrastructural and environmental degradation.
This was the stark message coming from the Climate Analytics Caribbean event, “Islands All In for GST 2023”, which commemorated Earth Day and raised awareness of the United Nations climate change process, the Global Stocktake. The event featured a special selection of Caribbean short films in partnership with the Green Screen Environmental Film Festival, the only sustainability-themed film festival in the Caribbean.
A statement issued by event hosts Climate Analytics Caribbean says the UN’s Global Stocktake (GST) process can enhance regional resiliency to extreme events.
The GST will inform countries' enhanced climate commitments on issues related to mitigation, adaptation, and finance, as well as cross-cutting equity issues. It also will assess how the world is working towards staying within a 1.5OC warming limit, which is at the core of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)’s landmark Paris Agreement. The Paris Agreement compels every country to do their fair share to demonstrate their climate action ambition and contribute to the solution. Every country around the world must account for their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and whether they are achieving them. This will feed into the Global Stocktake.
According to the Climate Analytics Caribbean release, the Caribbean is particularly vulnerable to a warming limit above 1.5OC. There is real danger that many of its existing natural wonders and essential ecosystems—such as coral reefs—may soon be a thing of the past, with catastrophic consequences.
“With the Caribbean on the frontlines of the climate crisis, the Global Stocktake (GST) presents a critical opportunity for countries to implement initiatives to reduce emissions, and for our region and other small island developing states to receive much-needed financial and technological support to adjust and adapt to climate impacts,” the release stated.
Guardian Media’s Multimedia Journalist, Kalain Hosein, who was one of the presenters at the event, painted a grim picture for Trinidad and Tobago if current warming trends continued.
“In Trinidad and Tobago, every single year since 1986 has been warmer than the 1961-1991 climatological average,” he said. “Trinidad and Tobago has warmed at a rate of 0.24OC per decade since 1946. The last two decades have been the hottest on record. The trend is clear. We are getting hotter, faster, with decreased rainfall, causing alarming knock-on effects to public health, agriculture, energy consumption and more. This is not good news for our country.”
Hosein was announced as an ambassador for the Islands All in for GST 2023 drive, which will advance regional participation in the Global Stocktake. He is joined as an ambassador by fellow multimedia journalist and climate champion Seigonie Mohammed, who also presented at the event.
L to R Kalain Hosein, Multimedia Journalist and Founder of the Trinidad and Tobago Weather Center; Rueanna Hayne, Director, Climate Analytics Caribbean; and Kishan Kumarsingh, Head, Multilateral Environmental Agreements at the Ministry of Planning and Development Ministry of Planning and Development, following their presentations at the Climate Analytics Caribbean event, Islands All In for GST 2023, as part of Earth Day commemorations in 2023. [Image courtesy Climate Analytics Caribbean]
Kishan Kumarsingh, Head, Multilateral Environmental Agreements at the Ministry of Planning and Development, reported on progress with this country’s attempts to reduce its emissions via its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) initiative.
“Trinidad and Tobago’s NDCs address emissions in the Power Generation and Transportation sectors and is perhaps the most ambitious NDC in the region,” Kumarsingh noted.
“It also contains an unconditional commitment to reduce emissions in the public transportation sector. The approach is to develop the requisite policy, legislative, institutional and administrative enabling environment to facilitate ambitious climate action as a holistic approach,” he explained.
According to Kumarsingh, T&T is “walking the talk”, with several important alternative energy initiatives, including:
● Development of a utility-scale solar plant to generate approximately 112 MW of power, with ambition to increase capacity to 30% by 2030.
● Procurement of 240 electric buses to further reduce emissions from the CNG initiative.
● Development of a green hydrogen roadmap, with assessment on the feasibility of wind power both onshore and offshore to power the green hydrogen economy.
● Development of a net zero plan consistent with the Paris Agreement to identify additional emissions reductions opportunities and actions to raise mitigation ambition.
● Development of a carbon pricing and carbon trading policy.
Meanwhile, Director of Climate Analytics Caribbean, Rueanna Haynes, maintained there is still hope for the Caribbean.
“We still have time to turn the ship around—the Global Stocktake can help get us there,” she asserted.
“Technological solutions and know-how already exist to put us on the pathway that will avoid the worst and most dangerous climate impacts,” she pointed out. “This global moment is designed to help us understand in more precise terms the gaps that exist. Showcase the solutions that are already being deployed. Secure real political commitment for cooperation to go further, faster. All based on equity and the best available science.”
The Climate Analytics Caribbean director added:
“In order for the promise of this process to be made real, whole of society buy in will be required. As a people, as a region we have the opportunity to contribute. And in fact, have already done so with a submission into the global process that presents the outcome of regional discussions on a Caribbean approach to climate justice. We can continue to contribute through engagement with governments on the upcoming political phase of the process. But critically, we should be preparing to help to implement the outcome of the Stocktake in the context of greater climate action on the ground.”