PM Browne intensifies call for global action on the climate crisis at COP28 in Dubai

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DUBAI, UAE –3rd  December 2023…Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister the Hon. Gaston Browne, a staunch advocate for solutions to combat many of the issues confronting small island states, made a fervent appeal for the world to unify as fears intensify about the climate crisis.

Prime Minister Browne was at the time addressing Saturday’s plenary of COP28 now taking place in Dubai where he joined a list of global leaders in sharing their country’s position on the various remedies being considered to reduce the worsening impact of climate change.

But progress, he noted, is lagging and ambition is still well off from the mitigation and adaptation measures that island nations urgently require in driving positive action on the climate front.

“…climate change is fast outpacing the incremental progress we have made since Paris, with potential catastrophic consequences if we overshoot the 1.5 degrees threshold,” Prime Minister Browne told the meeting.

“The irony is, that small island states that contribute the least to global CO2 emissions – a mere 0.5 percent are its greatest victims,” he declared. It’s a cry that rings with familiarity as the Antigua and Barbuda leader has remained constant in his appeal for the industrialised world to scale up their ambitions so vulnerable countries can build the necessary resilience to recover from climate impacts.

Forthright and fearless, he told the summit: “The future weapons of mass destruction will not be bombs or guns; they will be scorching temperatures, persistent droughts, rising tides and ferocious winds.”

“Despite these dire potential consequences to all of humanity; the protection of the fossil fuel industry continues to be a priority in the pursuit of extortionate profits, at the expense of all of humanity, especially people in climate vulnerable countries,” Prime Minister Browne contended in an overt swipe at the industrialised world.

“Is it fair and just, that powerful countries could profiteer from the irresponsible and profligate use of fossil fuels at the expense of the obliteration of vulnerable countries? Is it fair?” he asked.

Prime Minister Browne used the opportunity to press home an appeal for the adoption of the Multidimensional Vulnerabiltity Index so as to increase access by island nations to the financing they need in times of disaster.

He repeated his call for the introduction of a carbon tax and welcomed the proposal by France & Kenya to establish a global tax on green-house gas emissions to scale up climate funding.

“In addition, we support the call for a Fossil Fuel non-proliferation treaty to build momentum to curbing the use of fossil fuels and to accelerate the transition to renewables” he added.

The Global Stocktake is a major undertaking at this year’s COP as it measures the effort by countries to meet their goals in helping to reduce the impact of climate change and keep within the 1.5 warming limit.

The science shows that an overshoot of the 1.5 degree warming threshold will spell untold disaster for small vulnerable island nations like Antigua and Barbuda.

The GST, Prime Minister Browne noted, should reaffirm the commitments to a “1.5 degrees pathway for a just, equitable and accelerated transition, the Capitalization and Operationalisation of the Loss & Damage fund and the Provision of adequate transformational finance for a 1.5 degrees agenda and interim adaptation and mitigation funding.”

Accompanying Prime Minister Browne to the plenary was Minister of Health and the Environment Sir Molwyn Joseph, Antigua and Barbuda’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations Ambassador Walton Webson, Deputy Permanent Representative Tumasie Blair and First Secretary at the Antigua and Barbuda Mission Claxton Duberry.

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10 COMMENTS

  1. Hopefully when Prime Minister Browne returns home, he’ll also show the same CONCERNS and ACTIONS for the wanton damage by hoteliers and companies/corporations to the mangroves that protects our shores.

    As the Jamaicans would say 🇯🇲 “Gaston mout’ a massy!”

    LET’S SEE WHEN HE COMES BACK …

  2. Pretends to fight for the environment while overseas, destroys the environment while at home. Sand mining, dredging, cutting mangroves, etc. hypocrite.

  3. @Brixtonian.
    The PM thinks other countries are not aware of the destruction of the ecology taking place in Antigua and Barbuda while he pontificates at these conferences. May be it’s in one ear and out of the other when they listen to his speeches. Is this prime minister for real, or just a plain buffoon?

  4. @overseeh, it is my opinion that this man is mentally unstable. What, America and the rest of the world are not aware of his hypocrisy?
    Allow dubious “investors ” the freedom to decimate our environment then run off his mouth on the international stage in the hopes of getting his hands on free money? Then Antigua and Barbuda know very little about where the money disappears to? How much of the Irma money did Barbuda actually get? I think buffoon describes him adequately.

  5. @Watching.
    Go easy on your Leader. Remember he is the best PM since Independence (his words). Why not observe the beauty of the hotels, ah, bliss and the symmetry of the golf courses as the Barbudans watch helplessly as their environment is destroyed before their very eyes. Wake up sir, you must break some eggs to make an omelette (his words again). Unfortunately the eggs are the ravished mangroves and wetlands which preserve our coastlines and which in good time will come back to bite us where it hurts most. Antigua and Barbuda have got what they asked or voted for so, you get what you pay for.

  6. @overseeh, can’t argue with you here. Very well stated observations. Big up.
    Indeed, the responsibility lies heavily on those who voted this clown back into office. Barely.

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