Title: Small Islands, Big Impact:
1Small Islands, Big Impact Climate Change in the
Caribbean Strategies for getting the message
out 4 December 2008
Based on a presentation prepared by CANARI for
the Joint Nature Conservation Committee, UK for
the UK Overseas Territories
2Presentation outline
- The CANARI climate change programme and its
partners - What are the key messages?
- How will we be affected?
- How can we respond to the changes?
- How can we disseminate the messages?
3CANARI Climate change programme
- Climate change and biodiversity in the insular
Caribbean project (MacArthur Foundation) - Series of guidebooks, leaflets and videos on
Climate change in the UK Overseas Territories
(Joint Nature Conservation Committee, UK) - Capacity building of civil society (Commonwealth
Foundation) - Workshop engaging civil society organisations,
the media and performance artists/drama-in-educati
on practitioners - Development of a Climate change communications
toolkit for community-based organisations - Design of a public education and outreach project
to address key elements of the Caribbean
Regional Climate Change Adaptation
Public Education and Outreach (PEO)
Strategy
4Key messagesClimate change is a pressing issue
- There have been natural and cyclical variations
in the Earths climate in the past, but the
current rate of change is faster than anything
the planet has experienced before.
Photo courtesy NASA USGS
5Key messages Climate change will have profound
effects on our lives
- For the Caribbean region in the 21st century,
there is a fairly high level of certainty that - Air and sea temperatures will increase
- Rainfall will change, with some regions becoming
drier and others wetter - Sea level rise will accelerate and be between 0.2
to 0.5m - Hurricanes are likely to become more powerful.
6Key message Caribbean islands have much to lose
- The economies of Caribbean islands depend on a
narrow range of goods or services - They have high communication and transportation
costs and are vulnerable to natural hazards - Certain Caribbean ecosystems that are important
to human well-being are identified as most
vulnerable - Inherent vulnerabilities climate change
increased risk
7Climate change impacts in the Caribbean
- 1. Livelihoods - Tourism
- Impacts on marine and coastal environments will
affect seaside tourism in Caribbean islands - New carbon taxes and charges will increase air
travel costs - Greater awareness of the impacts of air travel
may affect tourists willingness to come to the
Caribbean - Milder temperatures elsewhere may create
attractive alternative destinations
8Climate change impacts in the Caribbean
- 2. Food Security
- Increased sea temperature and salt water
intrusion into rivers may substantially affect
fisheries in Caribbean islands. - Agriculture will be affected by changing growing
seasons, drought and water shortages, and
increased storm intensity - Northern buy local campaigns are altering
patterns of supply and demand.
9Climate change impacts in the Caribbean
- 3. Infrastructure
- Sea level rise and storms will directly affect
critical infrastructure in the coastal zone such
as ports, airports, houses and businesses. - Disruption from flooding and infrastructural
damage also affects communications and economic
and social sectors (e.g. tourism, agriculture,
health care delivery)
10Climate change impacts in the Caribbean
- 4. Economic and financial impacts
- Direct costs from damage to infrastructure, human
settlements, crops etc. - Indirect costs from lost earnings from tourism,
fisheries or loss of ecosystem services. - Hurricanes can be particularly costly the damage
from Ivan in Grenada was estimated at 200 of GDP
(EC2.4 billion). -
11Climate Change Impacts in the Caribbean
5. Coastal and marine resources
12Climate Change Impacts in the Caribbean
- 5. Coastal and marine resources
- Sea level rise will mean
- coastal flooding
- saltwater contamination of groundwater
- coastal erosion compounded by intensifying
hurricanes - potential loss of wetlands and mangroves -
coastal squeeze
13Climate Change Impacts in the Caribbean
5. Coastal and marine resources (cont.)
- High temperatures are causing mass coral
mortality from bleaching events and diseases
outbreaks. - This can be reduced by better management and
protected areas.
14Other Climate Change Impacts in the Caribbean
- 6. Water Resources
- Changes in rainfall will affect water supplies in
many countries - Ground water supplies face possible threats from
contamination by salt water - 7. Health
- Increased risk of vector-borne diseases, such as
dengue
15Local management and climate change adaptation
- Management of natural resources and biodiversity
at the regional, national and community level can
reduce the impacts of climate change. - Reforestation and forest conservation
- Watershed management
- Treatment of waste water
- Control of mosquito habitats
- Coastal buffer zones
- Protected area management
16Local management and climate change adaptation
Rupert McKenna
Clem McPherson
Speyside Marine Area Community-Based Management
Project
17Key message Adaptation is a no regrets
strategy with immediate benefits
- Adaptation is an opportunity to improve
- natural resource management and physical planning
- ability to deal with the natural hazards as well
as the growing human-induced stresses on the
environment. - Adaptive responses can be
- Technological (e.g. improving coastal defences)
- Managerial (e.g. introducing crop rotation)
- Policy-based (e.g. strengthening planning
regulations) - Behavioural (e.g. preparing ones home for a
hurricane)
18Meeting Multiple Objectives though Adaptation
Disaster Management
Triple Dividend
Climate Adaptation
Biodiversity Sustainable Development
19Key message Good climate policy should adapt and
mitigate.
- Although Caribbean islands make a small
contribution to global emissions of greenhouse
gases, they can play their part in mitigation by - enhancing energy efficiency
- diversifying their energy sources
- increasing reliance on non fossil fuel sources of
energy - promoting climate friendly technologies
- advocating collectively for the mitigation
measures needed in the major industrialised
countries
20Collectively small efforts can make a big
difference
- You can make a difference by
- Reducing personal vulnerability to natural
hazards - Reducing energy use in transportation and in the
home - Practicing good environmental habits e.g.
recycling, conservation - Improving business practices e.g. clean energy,
waste reduction/recycling - Advocating for implementation of national
adaptation plans and sustainable development
policies - Advocating for a stronger Caribbean voice in
international negotiations - Informing others about climate change and what
they can do
21Creating the ripple effect building on Caribbean
talent and culture for public education and
outreach
I DONT WANNA WASH AWAY I dont wanna wash away
I dont wanna lose another day You cant make me
float away Lose my land and all my say Seas are
rising, try to reach the moon Beaches splicing,
dicing, disappearing Political goons acted just
like fools My land is gone so soon Temperature is
rising, competing with the sun I itch, I burn, I
thirst.
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23Using key change agents and champions as
channels of information
- media
- youth
- NGOs and CBOs
- Artists and theatre-in-education professionals
- sportspersons
- UNFCC National Focal Points
- communities that are particularly vulnerable to
climate change - extension officers (e.g. agriculture, fisheries)
- school teachers
24Core public education and awareness strategies
- Building the cadre of champions via facilitated
dialogue with scientists - Developing a community of Artistes Weathering
Climate Change - Region-wide concerts by conscious performance
artists - Developing drama-in-education materials
- National climate change workshops
- Providing relevant information to the media
- Building partnerships between NGOs and the media
- Conducting local research, (e.g. Sandwatch)
- Collecting traditional knowledge (e.g. Panos)
- Video, television, YouTube etc.