PRIME MINISTER OF THE BAHAMAS: COMMONWEALTH NEEDS TO BE A LOUD VOICE FOR ACTION ON CLIMATE

Prime Minister Philip Davis (right) and Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell, who are in London for the third Marlborough Dialogue, are pictured with Baroness Paatricia Scotland, Secretary General of the Commonwealth.

LONDON, England — The third Marlborough Dialogue welcomed The Honourable Philip Davis QC MP, Prime Minster of The Bahamas, to speak on the importance of climate action within the Commonwealth family. This discussion is especially important ahead of the upcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Kigali, Rwanda, this June and in preparation for COP27 in Egypt, AFRICAN EYE REPORTS reported on Wednesday, May 11, 2022.

This Marlborough House Dialogue was titled “Commonwealth Leadership in Accelerating Climate Action for SIDS: including for Sustainability and Tourism”.

Small Island Developing States (SIDS) continue to face the most devastating impacts of climate change, resulting in limited economic space to protect themselves and bolster their resilience efforts.

The Commonwealth family has been pushing for collective climate action since 1989, when leaders committed to protecting the environment in the Langkawi Declaration. This was one of the world’s first collective statements to name greenhouse gas emissions as one of the leading problems facing the planet.

Speaking at the dialogue, the Prime Minister of The Bahamas, the Hon Philip Davis QC MP, said: “We cannot do this alone. We are in an inequitable position on climate change so it is important that the Commonwealth lends its voice. And the time has come that the voice is turned up to ensure that we get the proper response from the world on this existential threat.

“One area we need to tackle vigorously is access to climate funding. The process for accessing climate financing is so tortuous that many small island states like ours have not been able to access funds we need.

“So, the voice of the Commonwealth of Nations needs to be a loud voice sufficient to bring awareness and the need for action not tomorrow but today.”

The discussion was moderated by His Excellency Manoah Esipisu, High Commissioner of Kenya to the United Kingdom.

In her remarks at the Dialogue, the Commonwealth Secretary-General, the Rt Hon Patricia Scotland QC, said: “Climate change is rightly understood as the defining challenge of our times – both an existential threat and a multiplier of existing social and economic inequalities, which will bring forward the tipping point for conflict.

See complete AFRICAN REPORTS article at https://africaneyereport.com/prime-minister-of-the-bahamas-commonwealth-needs-to-be-a-loud-voice-for-action-on-climate/