Barbados has strengthened its arsenal in the fight against the climate crisis with the signing of a landmark debt-for-climate swap agreement, Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office Senator Dr Shantal Munro-Knight announced Wednesday.
The deal will see the country using $40 million in grant resources to enhance the South Coast Sewage Treatment Plant, ensuring water resources remain sustainable amid growing climate threats.
Speaking at a discussion on climate reparations hosted by the Office of Reparations and Economic Enfranchisement and the Barbados Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD) Commission, the minister highlighted the significance of the agreement.
“Just yesterday, under the Green Climate Framework, the government signed what is seen as a historic agreement, a debt-for-climate swap,” she said.
“This would allow us, again, not to use new debt, but include $40 million in grant resources in order to enhance our South Coast Sewage Treatment Plant, to upgrade and also make sure that we can have continued water resources that are under threat because of the climate crisis.”
This development follows similar efforts by the government to address the escalating impact of climate change.
Debt-for-climate swaps are a variation of debt-for-nature swaps, allowing countries to lighten their financial burden by tapping into affordable debt for conservation and climate initiatives.
Last year, the country successfully negotiated a debt-for-nature swap, leveraging existing obligations to establish an environmental trust focused on addressing threatening environmental issues.
Also, in 2022, it exchanged $150 million in international bonds, resulting in $50 million for marine conservation.
Senator Munro-Knight stressed the need for immediate financial resources to tackle the multidimensional effects of climate change.
Citing the most recent Bridgetown Initiative report, she said: “The Bridgetown Initiative 3.0 indicates that we need another $1.8 trillion in resources in order for us to address the multiplier impact of the climate crisis.
“The big question is, where is that $1.8 trillion in resources that need to be delivered not yesterday, not in the future, but now?”
Noting the interconnectedness of climate and social issues and an urgent need for more creative financial instruments to combat the climate crisis and its impacts, the minister also revealed that the government has started discussions on a debt-for-social-justice swap.
These actions, according to Senator Munro-Knight, come as part of a broader call for climate reparations, which she described as a critical component of social justice.
“The call for reparations is a call for social justice… It is not about going and begging, but about acknowledging that there has been some trauma, that there has been some distress, and that there has been some big impact,” she said, tying the reparations movement to the historical and current impacts of environmental degradation on developing countries. (SM)
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