CARIBBEAN-Barbados urges SIDS to champion energy transition.

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ABU DHABI, CMC—Barbados Energy and Business Minister Lisa Cummins urged small island developing states (SIDS), including those in the Caribbean, to lead globally and use their collective voices to champion the energy transition and climate action.

“Even though SIDS are varied and diverse in their global distribution, cultures, economic and political structures, languages, and as many parameters as can be used to assess and categorize, the challenges we face are similar,” she said.

Cummins addressed the “SIDS Ministerial—Charting a Resilient and Sustainable Energy Future for SIDS” on the sidelines of the 14th Session of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) Assembly here.

The meeting discussed updating the approach for development partners to ensure initiatives like the SIDS Lighthouses remain effective in mobilizing necessary finance and boosting decarbonization, with an emphasis on inclusivity and strong partnerships.

It aimed to set a direction for the 4th International Conference for SIDS, which will be held in Antigua next month, by focusing on sustainable development and climate priorities.

“Our small sizes and limited resource bases, coupled with our high dependencies on foreign trade, result in our susceptibility to external economic shocks and natural hazards. As a result, the high debt to GDP ratios classify us as high-risk territories, which translates to a high cost of capital—a key barrier to attracting investments,” Cummins said.

She said SIDS faces specific vulnerabilities, such as the challenges of energy security and affordable energy services and adaptation and mitigation to climate change.

“Despite this, SIDS have added a total renewable energy capacity of approximately 7.6 GW by the end of 2022. Despite the challenges of COVID, the high debt-to-GDP ratio, and the natural disasters we are exposed to annually, we have collectively doubled our renewable energy capacity over the last ten years.”

Cummins said that partnering with international entities and investors can lower debt financing and that such relationships are crucial for funding renewable energy projects and their associated infrastructure.

“However, access to long-term investments is critical, and financing is a complex issue that requires a revolutionary approach for SIDS.”

The ministerial featured an address by IRENA Director-General Francesco La Camera and interventions by representatives from several Caribbean countries and extra-regional island states.

Cummins said SIDS’ commitment to accelerating their energy transitions has been heavily focused on the electricity sector, “but the resilience and sustainable development demand that we agitate for the decarbonization of the transportation and other end-use sectors.”

She said SIDS could not rely on “the same systems and methodologies if we are to chart a resilient and sustainable energy future for SIDS,” adding that new paradigms and innovative solutions are required, “or we will reach so far and no further.”

The Barbados minister said that coming out of the global climate change talks, the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP 28), held here last year, the countries of the developing world, and SIDS in particular, breathed a collective sigh of relief.

“Funding arrangements were pledged for the Loss and Damage Fund, which offers protection for the poor and the most vulnerable, who will benefit from relief for addressing the impacts of climate disasters.”

Cummins said it was “a momentous occasion” as the first-ever international arrangement to transition away from fossil fuels was signed.

She said progress has been slow and hard, “but we are here to capitalize on the momentum gained and to advance further as we seek to restrict the increase in temperature to 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels”.

SIDS has said that limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrialisation levels is a must to avoid the catastrophic impact of climate change. Cummins told the conference, “This is not just an important moment for us as SIDS, but a pivotal moment in the energy transformation.”

She said that since the first global conference on sustainable development, held in Barbados in 1994, SIDS has been “on the forefront fighting: fighting to save our environment, fighting to save our nations, fighting to not be erased from the world map by rising sea levels and unnaturally powered natural disasters.”

Cummins noted that in the Declaration of Barbados signed at the 1994 conference, Member States said the international community should “build new and equitable partnerships for the sustainable development of Small Island Developing States through the implementation of the Programme of Action and should send a powerful message to the world’s peoples on the possibilities of joint action undertaken with a sense of common purpose and partnership.”

“As I speak to you 30 years later, I believe we can all agree that the SIDS Lighthouses Initiative (LHI) has been a significant advancement of that bold declaration,” she said, referring to the LHI, which is a framework for action to support SIDS in their energy transition efforts from fossil fuel dependence to renewables.

Cummins said that the success of the LHI speaks for itself.

“Over the past ten years, the success of this initiative speaks for itself: the 2020 target of mobilizing US$500 million, deploying 100 megawatts of new solar photovoltaic capacity, 20 MW of new wind power, significant quantities of small hydropower and geothermal energy, and requiring all SIDS to develop renewable energy roadmaps, as well as the 2023 target of 5 GW of installed renewable energy capacity were both achieved ahead of time.”

However, Cummins warned that this is “not a time for nostalgia or to rest on our laurels.

” It is a time to reaffirm our commitment and reassess our strategies for much remains to be done. The global stocktake calls for a tripling of renewable energy capacity and a doubling of energy efficiency by 2030,” Cummins said.

Quoting the theme of the two-day assembly, which begins on Wednesday — “Outcome of COP28: Infrastructure, Policies, and Skills for Tripling Renewables and Accelerating the Energy Transition” — Cummins said this would be SIDS’ focus over the next two days.

She noted that the Bridgetown Initiative, which addresses financing for climate resilience, is designed to reform the way wealthy countries finance poor countries in a climate crisis by preventing spiraling debt crises from successive natural disasters such as droughts, floods, and hurricanes.

“It addresses the inherent imbalances hindering international financing arrangements as they relate to SIDS and poor and vulnerable countries. It acknowledges that change in developmental financing is a requisite and allows the international community to focus on the humanity of SIDS and their economic realities.”

Cummins said that targeted solutions, comprising modern, flexible policy, regulatory, and legislative systems that are responsive to technological advancements and bespoke financial models, are necessary.

“Technical assistance, knowledge transfer, and capacity building of our human resources need to be the nucleus of the transformation. The continuous development of these systems is vital to facilitate SIDS’ access to appropriate financing for implementing renewable energy projects.”

She said this would assist SIDS in better managing their high debt profiles and channel investments to modernizing archaic infrastructure, facilitating the onboarding of renewable energy and innovative solutions such as storage onto electricity grids without compromising stability and reliability.

“We have the determination, passion, and ability to overcome any challenge, and today, we stand at the precipice of what portends to be the most significant period in the fight for the future of our planet.

“We have witnessed the first official acceptance and agreement on the role of fossil fuels in climate change and the operationalization of a mechanism that addresses loss and damage due to climate change. Let us not pause to gaze on the significance of this moment but take the baton we have received and advance the flag for the cause of our peoples and nations,” Cummins said.

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