Beenie Man Rebuilding Burnt Down Houses For Kingston Residents

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Urban Islandz

Beenie Man is assisting the set of families who were rendered homeless in the Kingston community, Standpipe, last month. There are reports that eight

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Caribbean Nationals to benefit from CDEMA’s Young Professionals Programme

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Caribbean News Service
Aleem Mahabir.

The Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) has launched its Young Professionals Programme (YPP) aimed at involving the region’s youth in Comprehensive Disaster Risk Management.

Trinidadian national Aleem Mahabir and Barbadian Adiel Charles, are the first interns selected to take part in the initiative, which started in February and will continue for six months.

The YPP is initially funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) under the Caribbean Climate Resilience Initiative (CCRI) and will offer participants the opportunity to gain work experience through engagement in all technical programme areas of the CDEMA System.

Adiel, who is no stranger to the CDEMA system, having volunteered her services in 2021 to the Regional Coordination Centre (RCC) to assist in responding to events, holds a BSc. in Industrial Relations, and recently completed her MSc. in Geoinformatics.

She said, “Although I know it has not been a long time since I began my time as an intern at CDEMA, I am truly enjoying the opportunities for development as a disaster and humanitarian professional.”

Adiel Charles

Aleem has been exposed to other regional and international institutions such as the Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (CCREEE), the Inter-American Development Bank and the Food & Agriculture Organization (FAO), working as an Intern and on research projects.

He holds a BSc. Geography and is a PhD candidate in Urban Geography. Commenting on his tour of duty, “Given my studies in Geography and my interest in development research, I see the attachment as a very good opportunity to be working with the premier Caribbean institution which is responsible for disaster risk management in one of the areas of the world prone to different hazards. I am looking forward to drawing the skills learnt to contribute to the region.”

At the end of the programme, the interns will receive a CDEMA “Certificate of Completion” which can be promoted in the region as a means of elevating their opportunities for employability.

Deputy Executive Director of CDEMA, Kester Craig, said “We embrace the youth as agents of change and we are committed to the vision of creating opportunities for their involvement in Comprehensive Disaster Management. We believe that the Young Professionals Programme is a key conduit in CDEMA to develop new leaders in the field through experiential learning.”

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Research finds rising temperatures will limit adaptation options in The Bahamas, with implications for the wider Caribbean

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Caribbean News Service
Dr. Carl-Freiderich Schleussner.

New evidence from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 funded PROVIDE project, run by leading climate scientists, urban planners and adaptation experts, shows that rising temperatures will increasingly limit the options available to adapt to climate change in The Bahamas, with increased intensity of tropical cyclones, sea level rise and ocean acidification expected to strain infrastructure and affect people’s livelihoods.

The report emphasises that limiting global temperature rise to 1.5?C, a global goal established in the 2015 Paris Agreement, is fundamental to reducing pressures on resources, and risks to people.

While the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change findings tell us this goal remains within reach, a very significant gap remains between the emissions reductions that governments have committed to by 2030 and what would be required to get the world on a 1.5?C track. Without significant increases in global mitigation ambition this decade, overshooting 1.5?C limit becomes increasingly likely, at least temporarily.

Impacts of such an overshoot will materialise globally but be particularly consequential for vulnerable regions.

“If temperatures rise over this limit, there is still an option we can bring them back down again if we can get to net zero emissions and get carbon out of the atmosphere,” commented Dr. Carl-Freiderich Schleussner, from Humboldt University and Climate Analytics, who leads the PROVIDE project.

“But it’s really important for people to recognise that some of the changes that occur at these higher temperature levels – like sea level rise for example – may not be reversible. So policy makers need to have this in mind. Reducing our emissions buys us so much on the adaptation front.”

The Bahamas is entirely classified as a coastal zone, due to its low elevation and small land area. More than 70% of the population resides on the capital island of New Province, concentrating much of the population and assets in a small geographic space of 207km2. It, and other small island developing states, are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change with environmental impacts intersect with socioeconomic constraints, like high levels of public debt.

Adaptation and urban planners do not routinely consider the implications of temporary overshoot of 1.5?C and what this would mean locally and regionally for sea level rise, flooding, extreme heat, and other extreme weather events.

“Incorporation of potential overshoots into adaptation planning is crucial to avoid maladaptation”, says Dr. Schleussner.

To share its findings the PROVIDE project has set up an innovative web tool, Climate Risk Dashboard. Built for everyday users and adaptation practitioners alike, users can explore different warming scenarios and its implications, and eventually be able to input their own specifications for adaptation options and see what kind of warming scenarios these correspond with. The final version will be available in 2024.

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Antigua and Barbuda to host major SIDS conference next year

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Caribbean News Service

Minister of Foreign Affairs, E. P. Chet Greene was elected Vice President of the Fifth United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5) in Doha, Qatar.

Greene and the high-level delegation of Antigua and Barbuda were in Doha on a fact-finding mission to facilitate the transfer of knowledge and provide guidance to Antigua and Barbuda on hosting a similar global conference, the Fourth United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States (4th SIDS Conference) in the summer of 2024.

Greene noted the necessity to collaborate and partner with the government and people of Qatar as an exemplar of their successful hosting of FIFA World Cup 2022 and their demonstration of strong leadership in hosting LDC5.

The team was afforded the opportunity to engage with the secretariat of LDC5 and gained behind the scenes experience associated with hosting the international conference.

Coming out of a bilateral with Alya Ahmed Saif Al-Thani, Permanent Representative of the State of Qatar to the United Nations, a commitment was made to offer support to the Government of Antigua and Barbudan in hosting the 4th SIDS Conference.

The minister expressed his profound gratitude to the people and Government of Qatar for its continued generosity for providing travel and accommodations to the delegation of Antigua and Barbuda at LDC5 and most importantly for its commitment of support towards the 4th SIDS Conference.

The 4th SIDS Conference will bring together World Leaders, the Private Sector, Civil Society, and youth to generate a holistic approach that will identify challenges and opportunities for the sustainable development and building the resilience of SIDS.

Throughout the five days visit, Greene also held talks with high officials from the United Nations including the interim Executive Director of UNOPS who made commitments to support Antigua and Barbuda’s hosting of the 4th SIDS Conference and to provide technical support to Antigua and Barbuda’s national development efforts. While in Doha, the delegation of Antigua and Barbuda actively participated in various meetings and key events.

Walton Webson, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Antigua and Barbuda to the UN, led discussions at an event on the development of a Multidimensional Vulnerability Index (MVI) where Prime Minister Browne is currently the Co-Chair of the High-Level Panel of Experts on the development of the MVI.

Tumasie Blair, Deputy Permanent Representative of Antigua and Barbuda to the UN was elected Rapporteur-General of LDC5 and delivered the report of the Conference at its closing.

Other members of the delegation included Karen Cabral, Chief Protocol Officer within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Claxton Duberry, First Secretary at the Permanent Mission of Antigua and Barbuda to the UN, Lance Browne, Consular Officer within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Sheila Roseau, special adviser for the 4th SIDS Conference.

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