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Sunday, May 18, 2025

ECLAC Roundtable: Climate change, security issues impacting Caribbean resilience

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250 days ago
20240910
UN ECLAC’s Executive Director, Dr José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, addressing the 8th meeting of UN ECLAC's Caribbean Development Roundtable themed ‘RESILIENCE: What does it mean for the Caribbean Region’, on Monday 9 September 2024. [Image courtesy ECLAC Facebook]

UN ECLAC’s Executive Director, Dr José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, addressing the 8th meeting of UN ECLAC's Caribbean Development Roundtable themed ‘RESILIENCE: What does it mean for the Caribbean Region’, on Monday 9 September 2024. [Image courtesy ECLAC Facebook]

 

Some 17 per­cent of the Caribbean’s Gross Do­mes­tic Prod­uct (GDP) is lost an­nu­al­ly to hur­ri­canes.

The sta­tis­tic was high­light­ed by Dr José Manuel Salazar-Xiri­nachs, Ex­ec­u­tive Di­rec­tor of the Eco­nom­ic Com­mis­sion for Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean (ECLAC), dur­ing the 8th meet­ing of UN ECLAC's Caribbean De­vel­op­ment Round­table on Mon­day (Sep­tem­ber 9, 2024).  Trinidad and To­ba­go host­ed this year's Round­table.

The ECLAC Ex­ec­u­tive Sec­re­tary not­ed these cli­mate im­pacts are sig­nif­i­cant con­trib­u­tors to pub­lic debt in the re­gion.

“In the Caribbean, the growth chal­lenge is ex­ac­er­bat­ed by unique vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties,” he ob­served. “In this re­gion, the cli­mate cri­sis and nat­ur­al dis­as­ters pose an ex­is­ten­tial threat. The pas­sage of Hur­ri­cane Beryl in June speaks clear­ly to your coun­tries’ high ex­po­sure to de­struc­tive cli­mat­ic events and the Hur­ri­cane Sea­son.”

“We [ECLAC] es­ti­mate reg­u­lar an­nu­al loss­es from dis­as­ters in the Caribbean at $3 bil­lion, but in an ac­tive year, this fig­ure ris­es very quick­ly,” he said, not­ing that nat­ur­al dis­as­ters, such as hur­ri­canes, al­so can put a coun­try's econ­o­my on a hold for rough­ly a decade.

The ECLAC boss point­ed to oth­er is­sues im­pact­ing Caribbean growth and re­silience, which he de­scribed as “a trap of high in­equal­i­ty, low so­cial mo­bil­i­ty and weak so­cial co­he­sion”.

“Too large a per­cent­age of the sub-re­gion’s pop­u­la­tion ex­ist on the fringes of the econ­o­my, bare­ly mak­ing a liv­ing in in­for­mal low-pay­ing jobs,” Dr Salazar-Xiri­nachs not­ed. “Wel­fare sys­tems have in­suf­fi­cient cov­er­age and lack of suf­fi­cient fi­nanc­ing.”

“Pover­ty lev­els are high. Ed­u­ca­tion and vo­ca­tion­al train­ing sys­tems have am­ple room for im­prove­ment. Gen­der-based vi­o­lence, gen­der in­equal­i­ty and youth un­em­ploy­ment con­tin­ue to be mat­ters of se­ri­ous con­cern,” he said. “Cit­i­zens with dis­abil­i­ties re­main large­ly on the mar­gins of so­ci­ety with in­ad­e­quate ac­cess to sys­tems or ser­vices con­fig­ured to their needs.”

“And or­gan­ised crime has grown and pen­e­trat­ed both the for­mal and the in­for­mal economies,” he added.

Mean­while… as he ref­er­enced the re­cent ‘CARI­COM Re­gion­al Sym­po­sium on Vi­o­lence as a Pub­lic Health Is­sue’, the Prime Min­is­ter of Saint Kitts and Nevis, Dr Ter­rance Drew, ob­served that while com­bat­ing cli­mate change is high on the agen­da, it is not the re­gion's on­ly threat.

“The threats we face to­day are not on­ly from nat­ur­al dis­as­ters, but al­so from il­le­gal mi­gra­tion, and the im­por­ta­tion of weapons and am­mu­ni­tion—none of which is pro­duced (or very lit­tle) here in our re­gion,” PM Drew said.

He said his gov­ern­ment was do­ing all it can to en­sure the safe­ty and se­cu­ri­ty of cit­i­zens by en­hanc­ing the ca­pa­bil­i­ty of law en­force­ment and im­prov­ing bor­der se­cu­ri­ty.

“How­ev­er, we can­not build a re­silient na­tion if our peo­ple are liv­ing in fear,” he as­sert­ed.

The St Kitts & Nevis PM stat­ed that se­cu­ri­ty is the bedrock up­on which all oth­er forms of re­silience are built.

 


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