Video credit: Commonwealth Foundation, Climate Reparations: Opportunities and Obstacles for the Commonwealth’s Small Island States
Climate finance, particularly compensation for ‘loss and damage’, is a critical issue for the Commonwealth’s small and vulnerable states.
These states have felt the catastrophic effects of global heating, including the increasing intensity and frequency of hurricanes, cyclones, and flooding. Climate finance offers small and vulnerable states protection and mitigation from these threats—if they can access it.
With limited resources of their own, small and vulnerable states are naturally dependent on larger ones for the financial support they need. The great irony, and tragedy, is that they are dependent on the very nations who have benefited from decades of high energy use and carbon pollution.
Despite the urgency of the situation, compensation for loss and damage remains a contentious issue in multilateral forums and funding has not been forthcoming. All the while the citizens of small and vulnerable states remain at risk.
As carbon emissions continue at alarming rates, the movement for holding polluters financially accountable for the damage they have caused is growing. But without significant political or economic leverage, small and vulnerable states have struggled to make climate reparations a reality. So, what options do small and vulnerable states have?
This Critical Conversation will bring together a panel of climate negotiators, climate justice activists, small island decision-makers, climate policy thought leaders and legal experts to answer this question and more:
- Can multilateralism deliver the necessary compensation owed to the people bearing the brunt of the climate crisis?
- What approaches must leaders and activists now utilise to build their power?
- Can initiatives such as debt cancellation or debt-for-climate swaps yield just results?
- Could the recent establishment of a Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law, with the power to make legal claims against ‘polluters’, be the answer?
Read: The Agreement for the Establishment of The Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law
Climate finance, particularly compensation for ‘loss and damage’, is a critical issue for the Commonwealth’s small and vulnerable states.
These states have felt the catastrophic effects of global heating, including the increasing intensity and frequency of hurricanes, cyclones, and flooding. Climate finance offers small and vulnerable states protection and mitigation from these threats—if they can access it.
With limited resources of their own, small and vulnerable states are naturally dependent on larger ones for the financial support they need. The great irony, and tragedy, is that they are dependent on the very nations who have benefited from decades of high energy use and carbon pollution.
Despite the urgency of the situation, compensation for loss and damage remains a contentious issue in multilateral forums and funding has not been forthcoming. All the while the citizens of small and vulnerable states remain at risk.
As carbon emissions continue at alarming rates, the movement for holding polluters financially accountable for the damage they have caused is growing. But without significant political or economic leverage, small and vulnerable states have struggled to make climate reparations a reality. So, what options do small and vulnerable states have?
This Critical Conversation will bring together a panel of climate negotiators, climate justice activists, small island decision-makers, climate policy thought leaders and legal experts to answer this question and more:
- Can multilateralism deliver the necessary compensation owed to the people bearing the brunt of the climate crisis?
- What approaches must leaders and activists now utilise to build their power?
- Can initiatives such as debt cancellation or debt-for-climate swaps yield just results?
- Could the recent establishment of a Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law, with the power to make legal claims against ‘polluters’, be the answer?
Read: The Agreement for the Establishment of The Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law
Panellists:
Moderator: Dr Tara Shine - co-founder and Director of Change by Degrees.
Honourable Kausea Natano - Tuvaluan politician who is serving as the 13th Prime Minister of Tuvalu, in office since September 2019.
Honourable Mohamed Nasheed - Often dubbed the ‘Mandela of the Maldives’ Mohamed Nasheed was the Maldives’ first democratically elected president.
Dr Payam Akhavan - Professor of International Law and Senior Fellow at Massey College, University of Toronto and Member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Hague.
Dr James Fletcher - the former Minister for Public Service, Sustainable Development, Energy, Science and Technology (2011 – 2016) in Saint Lucia.
H.E Sabra Ibrahim Noordeen - the first Special Envoy for Climate Change in the Maldives.