Day 1 of SIDS4 Conference Concludes with Urgent Calls for Climate Action and Financial Reform

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Secretary-General António Guterres (on screens) addresses the official opening of the fourth International Conference on Small Island Developing States (SIDS4). PHOTO UN

Day 1 of SIDS4 Conference Concludes with Urgent Calls for Climate Action and Financial Reform

Antigua and Barbuda, May 2024 – The fourth international meeting of Small Island Developing States (SIDS), known as SIDS4, commenced with powerful speeches from key leaders, underscoring the critical challenges and opportunities facing these vulnerable nations. The conference, held in Antigua and Barbuda, brings together representatives from across the globe to address the pressing issues of climate change, financial instability, and sustainable development.

Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda, Gaston Browne, highlighted the unique vulnerabilities faced by SIDS, stating, “This is a crucial gathering at a time of unprecedented global challenges in which SIDS find themselves on the frontline of a battle against a confluence of crises, none of which they have caused or created.”

He emphasized the responsibility of large-scale emitters to compensate for their contributions to climate change, advocating for a global carbon tax on oil companies. Browne called for immediate action, saying, “We stand at the juncture where our actions and failure to act will dictate the fate of SIDS, as well as the legacy we leave for future generations.”

Prime Minister Gaston Browne delivering opening remarks at SIDS 4 in Antigua & Barbuda

UN Secretary-General António Guterres echoed these sentiments, praising the resilience of SIDS while stressing their exceptional vulnerability. “Your unique geography puts you at the mercy of climate chaos, rising sea levels, and land degradation. We cannot accept the disappearance of any country or culture under the rising waves,” Guterres stated. He urged developed economies to fulfill their pledges for climate financing and advocated for deep reforms to the global financial architecture to better serve developing countries.

President of the General Assembly, Dennis Francis, reinforced the need for financial inclusion and substantive reform of the international financial framework. He lauded the leadership of SIDS in advancing global climate conversations, citing the recent historic ruling by the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea, which recognized carbon emissions as a sea pollutant.

“This historic ruling obliges countries to mitigate their effects on oceans – potentially creating an important basis for future climate jurisprudence,” Francis remarked.

The SIDS4 conference aims to produce the Antigua and Barbuda Agenda for SIDS (ABAS), a renewed declaration for resilient prosperity. This agenda will address the multifaceted crises SIDS face, including climate change, economic repercussions from the COVID-19 pandemic, and mounting debt. The conference serves as a platform for proposing new partnerships and solutions to support SIDS in their pursuit of sustainable development goals.

As the conference progresses, leaders will continue to deliberate on innovative financing mechanisms such as the Debt Service Support Initiative (DSSI), which includes debt for climate swaps, green and blue bonds, and leveraging public-private partnerships. The adoption of the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index will also be crucial in enabling SIDS to access much-needed concessional financing and grants.

Day one of SIDS4 has set a decisive tone for the conference, emphasizing the urgent need for global solidarity and action to ensure the resilience and prosperity of Small Island Developing States.

About SIDS4:
SIDS4 is the fourth international meeting of Small Island Developing States, focusing on sustainable development progress and proposing new partnerships for resilient prosperity. Previous conferences were held in Barbados (1994), Mauritius (2005), and Samoa (2014). SIDS face unique economic, environmental, and social vulnerabilities, exacerbated by climate change and global crises.

SIDS Facts:

  • Scientists forecast that a 2°C increase in temperature will lead to significant sea level rise, consuming 13,000 km² of Caribbean land.
  • The Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre estimates continued climate inaction could drastically impact the region’s GDP.
  • Globally, SIDS contribute less than one percent of greenhouse gas emissions yet face disproportionate climate risks.
  • Tourism is vital to many SIDS economies, representing 20% of GDP in two out of three SIDS.

The SIDS4 conference continues to highlight the resilience and leadership of SIDS while calling for greater international support to address their unique challenges.

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8 COMMENTS

  1. Good to see a bunch of entitled politicians and bureaucrats from tiny islands spending tax money on 5 star accommodation and getting chauffeured around in Bentley’s telling the world they should give them lots of money to protect their way of life.

    What an obscene waste of money.. How far would just the freight on those 2 Bently cars go towards changing some ordinary people’s lives on any of the sides islands?

  2. I noted with interest, that the king of England opened this “talk about talks”; but what intrigued me the most, was here’s a man whose family; travel and wealth has caused more climate damage than Antigua & Barbuda could EVER cause in 100 years, is now LECTURING small island countries!

    YOU COULDN’T MAKE THIS CRAP UP IF YOU TRIED.

    In addition, if you measured the amount of pollution and climate damage caused by the delegates, hangers on, and boot-lickers in attendance here, Antiguans would realise what a waste of time and money this conference is.

    And do not forget about the many food vendors who’d set themselves up at/around this SIDS4 conference, only to return home with unsold stock. Scandalous!

  3. I swear Antiguans are their own worst enemy and just don’t love anything positive. No matter what they find to be negative and criticaland political. I bet had this conference been hosted in Barbados or St. Kitts these same people would be saying nothing can be hosted in Antigua cause we are so backwards. Now we hosting the conference here comes them being negative. OMG I’m sure if Antigua would.havw found a way to bring water from the moon our own people would find something to be negative about. What a set of miserable people. SMH them sickening now.

  4. Saw 2 big black Bentleys in Jolly Harbour on Sunday, pretty hard to mistake them for something else

  5. @ Bitter Badminded, sounds like you aren’t a critical thinker, and you just go with the flow and believe any and everything that you are told – hence, the problems this great country has been experiencing for so long.

    I’ll repeat myself once more @ Bitter Badminded. I will not be lectured by anyone whose “green” and “climate change’ credentials are suspect – and let alone a English king whose ancestral ties to slavery has given him wealth beyond measure.

    I can recommend an amazing book on how the English monarchy benefitted from the above.

    JUST LET BRIXTONIAN KNOW 👍🏾

  6. Well, this conference was going to happen somewhere, so why not here?
    Why not let 5000 participants occupy our hotel beds, Airbnb’s, apartments and guest houses. Hire our taxi drivers, rent our cars, patronise our bars, cafes and restaurants, shop in our grocery stores and market stalls? IN MAY!
    Not sure about the Bentley fact, but how are we to transport the UN Secretary-General? In a bus? Can you imagine the international headlines?
    Is it all a bit hypocritical? Probably. But if we can pull off a conference of this magnitude successfully, then that brings kudos to our small nation and frankly, you can’t buy that.

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