Several Caribbean Community Member States showcased their ambitions to further address climate change at a CARICOM Moment of Ambition event held on the eve of the fifth anniversary of the adoption of the Paris Agreement, on Friday 11 December 2020.
Member States representatives presented highlights of their enhanced National Determined Contributions (NDCs) at the event hosted by the CARICOM Secretariat and the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC) in partnership with the UK Government.
The event was convened to demonstrate continued Small Island Developing States (SIDS) leadership and ambition and to underscore the need for immediate climate action internationally. It was hosted prior to the 12 December 2020, Climate Ambition Summit convened by the United Nations, United Kingdom and France to celebrate the Paris Anniversary, in an effort to amplify the voice of CARICOM SIDS.
Below we present snapshots of the Member States presentations on their NDCs:
Launching Paris – A CARICOM Moment of Ambition
Snap shots of Ambition Statement from the Government of Barbados
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Barbados will strive to reduce its GHG emissions, across its entire economy to zero, by 2030 and intends to become fossil fuel free over the next 10 years.
The Intention is to recover energy from waste streams and to use biomass to provide some firm generation capacity. These sources of renewable energy, combined with energy storage, will provide approximately 1,400 gigawatt hours of energy annually to power homes and cars.
The vision is that by 2030, the average Barbadian household will have solar PV panels on their roofs and an electric vehicle in their garage as the country moves to a more distributed and more resilient, model of both energy generation and storage.
Launching Paris – A CARICOM Moment of Ambition
Snap shots of Grenada’s Revised Nationally Determined Contribution
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Grenada submitted its Second Nationally Determined Contribution to the UNFCCC on November 30, 2020. That Second NDC commits Grenada to reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 40% from 2010 levels by 2030 by taking priority action in the energy, domestic transport, forestry, waste, and cooling sectors
This NDC is much more inclusive than the first one and includes consideration of youth, children, women and other vulnerable groups, as well as loss and damage. The integration of loss and damage is very important to Grenada as it reflects the significant recognition that adaptation and mitigation actions are not enough to address climate change
Grenada indicated that the COVID-19 pandemic has provided the region and international community at large with a golden opportunity to reset and refocus development programming and to integrate COVID-19 recovery packages and eco-system based approaches with the implementation of new and updated NDCs.
Launching Paris – A CARICOM Moment of Ambition
Snap shots of Jamaica’s Revised Nationally Determined Contribution
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Jamaica submitted its revised Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) on June 30 2020 making it one of only 18 other countries in the world to have done so to date. Grenada and Suriname are the other two CARICOM nations included in that number
Jamaica’s revised NDC is considerably more ambitious than its first, comprising both a broadening of sectoral scope and the delivery of deeper emissions cuts. For the first time, the NDC includes the land-use change and energy sectors as they move towards an economy-wide target.
Also, under this NDC, Jamaica, despite being a developing country and a Small Island Developing State, will move closer to decoupling economic growth from its emissions profile.
The decision to include the change of land-use, reflects the importance of the Forestry Sector to Jamaica, which accounts for more than half of the island’s total land use, and the important commitments that the country has made to preserve and enhance these stocks.
The country has identified opportunities to deepen the emission reductions it delivers in the energy sector. These opportunities are part of an increasingly comprehensive approach to decarbonising the sector, which covers both the electricity generation and energy use sub-sectors.
Launching Paris – A CARICOM Moment of Ambition
Snap shots of Suriname’s Revised Nationally Determined Contribution
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Suriname was the second country internationally to submit its updated Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) to the UNFCCC in December 2019.
This NDC outlined the need for a cost-effective way to decarbonize Suriname’s economic development while maintaining the integrity of our natural forest and strengthening resilience to enable adaptation and mitigation actions. The revised NCD has added policies on Agriculture and Infrastructure to actions in the Forest and Energy sectors addressed in the first NDC.
Much effort has gone into setting up the framework for Suriname to reduce emissions and develop strategies to enhance the carbon stock in the forest sector and participate in the REDD+ process. This included presenting its REDD+ investment strategy with a 10-year timeframe as a conditional contribution to the NDC.
Suriname is in the process of developing an Investment Plan to meet the defined contributions and ensure the achievements of the enhanced second NDC ambitions. The investment plan will prioritize the projects included in the NDC.
Suriname’s private sector is making increasing efforts to support the government of Suriname in considering the objective of the Paris Agreement that is included in its development strategies.
As they prepare for a new cycle of national development planning, Suriname stressed that efforts of environmental protection will be even more ambitious than before.
Belize also shared reflections on the country’s accomplishments during its two-year tenure as Chair of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS).
Launching Paris – A CARICOM Moment of Ambition
Snap shots of Belize’s stewardship as Chair of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
#COP26Ambition @UKinCaribbean, @CARICOMorg @CARICOMClimate
In reflecting on the Government of Belize’s Chairmanship of the Alliance of Small Island Developing States (AOSIS) 2019-2020 Minister Cervantes noted
“In the past two years, Belize as the Chair of the Alliance of Small Island States has embraced the duty to advance the cause of the vulnerable, and to advocate for systemic change and robust global responses for the gravest challenges humanity faces, so that no one, nowhere should ever have to ponder their survival.”
Some of Belize’s key accomplishments during their Chairmanship included:
- Demonstrating the leadership of small island developing states as the first major grouping to table a Climate Ambition Package at the 2019 Climate Action Summit. That package headlined AOSIS Members commitment to enhanced NDCs, to aim for 100 percent renewable energy by 2030, to pioneer new approaches to resilience-building and to innovate financial solutions to bridge the climate adaptation finance gap while also managing debt sustainably.
- Convening the Placencia Ambition Forum in April 2020 positioning AOSIS as a convenor of climate actors, driving and sustaining climate ambition.
- Securing international endorsement of a five-year plan to accelerate progress on the SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action (S.A.M.O.A) Pathway at the Mid-term High-level Review of the SIDS sustainable development agenda in 2019.
- AOSIS held fast to key milestones of that plan and pressed forward with a call to the United Nations Secretary General for the elaboration of a multi-dimensional vulnerability index to finally give effect to the special case of small island developing states in the international financial system. The UN system has responded swiftly with UNDP already preparing one version of the index, while the resident coordinators in the different SIDS regions are also refining their contributions to the index. Recently, Jeffrey Sachs, renowned economist and Director of the Sustainable Development Solutions Network has thrown his support and his network behind these efforts.