(CCCCC Press Release 2021/023)

(City of Belmopan, Belize) In the first meeting of the Board of Governors of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC) held on December 16-18, 2021, following the conclusion of the United Nations Climate Change Conference (UNFCCC) twenty-sixth Conference of the Parties (COP26), the Board, inter alia, discussed the implications of the outcome of the COP26 for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM).

The Board noted that while the Glasgow Pact signaled a reckoning with the urgency of raising ambition around greenhouse gas emissions reduction and accelerating implementation of actions to maintain global warming below 1.5°C, in line with the best available science, the decisions reached at COP26 only afford a very narrow window of opportunity to keep that goal within reach.  Moreover, the ongoing process required for keeping global warming below 1.5°C will demand strong and global political commitment towards achieving this goal.

The Board noted that the COP26 outcomes did not meet, in the main, the region’s pre-COP26 expectations. 

With increasing climate impacts already being felt worldwide, particularly so among Small Island Developing States (SIDS), and the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment report that these impacts will worsen with every fraction of a degree of warming, CARICOM States expected major emitters to step up their near-term 2030 emissions pledges and to do so in line with the science of 1.5°C and the pursuit of the net zero target by 2050.  In addition, CARICOM expected major emitters to urgently scale up their support to enable the far-reaching systemic transformation of economies and societies toward low emission climate resilient development pathways. 

 More than 140 countries at COP 26 announced net zero goals, but without strengthened 2030 targets, 1.5°C of global warming will be ‘locked in’ for this decade with devastating implications for CARICOM Member States and all SIDS. Given current policies, global warming is still projected to surpass the 1.50C by 2030, and to reach 2.7°C within this century.  

On adaptation and finance, the Board acknowledged that pledges to the financial mechanisms of the UNFCCC do not come close to the USD70 billion per annum needed now to build climate resilience in the region. Furthermore, the demand for climate financing is projected to quadruple by 2030 based on impacts associated with climate change and slow onset events.  Still more concerning is the fact that the pledge for a USD100 billion floor by 2020 was not achieved at COP26, with developed countries indicating that they may not be able to meet this target, even with the most creative accounting matrix adopted, until 2023. Based on these indicators, the mitigation, adaptation and finance gaps are set to widen, unless immediate action is taken to scale and make climate finance more available to the most vulnerable.

The Board agreed with the notion that the Glasgow Climate Pact consolidates a new pre-2030 climate agenda which has been described as a bridge to ambition. Thus, from a process standpoint, COP26 completed work around the Paris Rulebook, inclusive of transparency, common timeframes, while Article 6 maps out the framework for the operationalization of a carbon market.  Taken together, these processes could yield results consistent with 1.5°C ambition but how much and how fast is not yet known.

The Board of Governors of the CCCCC emphasized the urgent need for the region’s effective engagement in the programmes currently underway based on strong effective leadership, continued advocacy, greater partnership with the private sector and civil society, and other key stakeholders to define deliverables in line with regional interests and priorities.  Even more critical will be support for regional efforts to advance climate action and bolster access to affordable finance. The Board encouraged the CCCCC to advance its strategic work plan moving forward and encouraged early engagement with policy makers, Member States, and the donor community to ensure its adequate resourcing. 

The Board recognizes that the region faces a climate emergency and recalled the Ministerial Declaration which called for unprecedented global action to ensure a climate safe future for all our peoples now and in the future.

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The Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre is an inter-governmental Caribbean Community (CARICOM) institution that is mandated by the CARICOM Heads of Government to coordinate the Region’s response to climate change. We maintain the Caribbean’s most extensive repository of information and data on climate change specific to the region, which in part enables us to provide climate change-related policy advice and guidelines to the CARICOM Member States.  In this role, the Centre is recognized by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the United Nations Environment Programme, and other international agencies as the focal point for climate change issues in the Caribbean. The Centre is also one of the few institutions recognized as a Centre of Excellence by the United Nations Institute for Training and Research. CCCCC is empowering the Caribbean Community to act on climate change.

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