April 10, 2008 - The environmental dimensions within the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME), Climate
Change and Disaster Management, are high on the
agenda of a Special Meeting of the Council for Trade
and Economic Development (COTED) on the Environment
on 17-18 April 2008.
Jamaica will be in the chair for this the
Twenty-Fifth Special COTED which will be convened at
the Guyana International Convention Centre,
Liliendaal, Greater Georgetown, Guyana. It will be
preceded by a two-day Meeting of Officials from
14-15 April, also in Georgetown.
The meeting coincides with focused attention on
the environment and sustainable development and
comes in the wake of the observance on 7 April of
World Health Day 2008 under the theme `Protecting
Health from Climate Change’.
With the continued degradation of the environment
and manifestations of the resultant havoc that could
be wreaked on Caribbean territories, resolution of
environmental issues is central to the effective
functioning of the CSME. It is in this regard that
the meeting is to consider the development of a
regional Environmental Policy.
The Climate Change issues will include a report
on the activities of the Belize-based Caribbean
Community Climate Change Centre in 2007, and the
outcome of the 2007 Bali Negotiations. The Bali
Conference in December 2007 focused on a set of
ground rules and benchmarks to initiate the next two
years of negotiations for a post-2012 multilateral
agreement on climate change. At the Conference much
emphasis was given to concluding an agreement that
includes a strict timetable and inter-Sessional
meetings to complete negotiations by 2009, and to
ensure enough time to ratify the post-2012 agreement
before the first commitment period of the Kyoto
Protocol expires in that year.
Issues related to water management, marine
resource management, disaster management, renewable
energy and the sustainable management of energy
resources in the Caribbean will also be discussed.
Among the other agenda items the Ministers will
consider are financing environmental management in
the Caribbean, Multilateral Environment Agreements
and opportunities for sustainable bio-energy in the
Region.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org