Caribbean Islands Pleaded for Climate Action. Hurricane Irma Shows Why.

September 28, 2020 Off By EveAim

Some of the small Caribbean islands that are expected to suffer the most damage from Hurricane Irma have had some of the loudest voices in recent months regarding the effects of climate change—and the harm being done by leaders including President Donald Trump, who withdrew the United States from the Paris climate accord in June.

Images of the storm’s destruction on St. Martin, Anguilla, and Barbuda on Wednesday confirmed many Caribbean leaders’ concerns:

Last week at a meeting about infrastructure aid, the prime minister of St. Lucia, which lies to the south of Irma’s path and has offered to serve as an evacuation point for its neighboring islands, implored developed nations to help the Caribbean to combat the effects of climate change.

Prime Minister Allen Chastanet said Small Island Developing States (SIDS) stand to sustain some of the most severe damage from climate change if larger, wealthier nations don’t accept climate scientists’ consensus that human activity contributes to global warming, and work to reverse the impact of greenhouse gases.

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“I am going to keep pounding on the table and letting my voice be heard explaining that the SIDS cannot wait,” said Chastanet. He mentioned the catastrophic damage brought in 2016 by Hurricane Matthew, a Category 5 storm that left Haiti with its worst humanitarian crisis since the earthquake that struck the country in 2010.

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