Saturday, April 27, 2024

World Bank approves $100 million for Barbados

Date:

Share post:

The World Bank approved yesterday $100 million in financing to support Barbados’ low carbon economic development and resilience to climate change.

“I cannot underscore enough the necessity of support, such as this, to middle income small island developing states,” said Prime Minister Mia Mottley.

“This loan allows Barbados to advance its efforts to achieve climate resilience, including continuing our shift to clean energy. This ultimately allows us to better shield Barbadians from the worst excesses of the climate crisis while creating opportunities for green and blue jobs and investment as we adapt to our new reality.”

The Barbados Green and Resilient Development Policy Loan has two main pillars. The first focuses on green and blue resilient development, which includes a new law on water reuse, the adoption of a climate change and agriculture policy and the establishment on an Environment Sustainability Fund, all of which are critical since Barbados is a water-scarce country. This pillar also supports the reduction of marine pollution, and management of natural resources, in the context of climate vulnerability.

The second programme pillar facilitates Barbados’ low carbon and resilient infrastructure development through the implementation of new standards for agency-level disaster management plans, institutional reviews of national emergency management agencies, as well as increased renewable energy capacity and support for climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts.

Barbados’ heavy dependence on imported fossil fuels exposes the country to international price fluctuations, thereby impacting the competitiveness of productive sectors. Rising fuel prices also exacerbate the increasing vulnerability of Barbados’ economic recovery, adding to existing environmental vulnerabilities.

“The realities of the Caribbean as one of the world’s most vulnerable regions demands that we take strong action,” said Lilia Burunciuc, World Bank’s Director for the Caribbean.

“The World Bank is pleased to support Barbados – and other Caribbean countries – as they strive for economic and environmental resilience, fully acknowledging that the two are inextricably linked”, she added.

Last year, the World Bank Group provided over $26 billion in climate investments to developing countries – including those in the Caribbean – and is on track to exceed that sum during this fiscal year. The Climate Action Plan commits 35 per cent of the financing to climate action and Country Climate Development Reports are innovative, country-focused diagnostics which support countries in achieving low-carbon, resilient growth. (PR/SAT)

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here
Captcha verification failed!
CAPTCHA user score failed. Please contact us!

Related articles

Britney Spears settles long-running legal dispute with estranged father, finally bringing ultimate end to conservatorship

Britney Spears has reached a settlement with her estranged father more than two years after the court-orderd termination of...

Moore: Young people joining BWU

General secretary of the Barbados Workers’ Union (BWU) Toni Moore says there has been a resurgence of confidence...

Pelosi urges Gaza campus protesters to target Hamas as well as Israel

Nancy Pelosi, the former Speaker of the US House of Representatives, has urged protesters on college campuses to...

Taylor Swift’s Tortured Poets Department hits number one, breaking records as it goes

Taylor Swift's latest album, The Tortured Poets Department, has topped the UK charts with the biggest first-week sales...