JAMAICA – Project launches in Caribbean to build climate resilience by using nature to reduce risks

Following one of the most devastating hurricane seasons in recent history, a four-year initiative launched to help Caribbean islands prioritize and invest in natural ecosystems that reduce their risks from climate related disasters.

The Resilient Islands project, led by The Nature Conservancy and the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), combines cutting-edge conservation science with the world’s leading expertise in disaster response to develop tools and test solutions that use nature to protect communities in the Dominican Republic, Grenada and Jamaica.

While islands continue to recover, the region is reaffirming its commitment to climate adaptation and seeking ways to protect coastal areas from flooding, erosion and other impacts which disproportionately put small islands in danger.

“The use of biodiversity and coastal ecosystems to help people adapt to climate change is an urgent priority that must be embedded into national and regional tools, policy and planning,” said Eddy Silva, Project Manager from the Conservancy at the launch ceremony in Jamaica on April 12. A launch will also be held in the Dominican Republic this week.

With funding from the International Climate Initiative under the German Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety’s (BMU), The Conservancy will incorporate ecosystem-based adaptation into tools used to assess vulnerability and add island-specific data to their award-winning interactive mapping website. The Conservancy will also develop a mobile app to help visualize how ecosystems reduce risks. For example, maps will allow users to calculate the physical protection provided by healthy reefs or mangroves under possible flooding scenarios and select habitat for restoration.

Ecosystems, like reefs and mangroves, are gaining recognition as national resources worthy of investment. These habitats support fisheries, attract tourists, and physically protect beaches from erosion and flooding.  A healthy reef reduces waves energy by up to 97 percent, and just 100 meters of mangroves can reduce wave height by 66 percent. These numbers are significant in a region where the majority of homes, roads and businesses are located along the coast.

“Our understanding of the extent of climate change continues to evolve and with that so is our methodology,” said IFRC Project Manager, Marisa Clarke-Marshall. “We are expanding our strategies to include nature-based solutions and redefining how we think about resilience and disaster preparedness.”

“The International Climate Initiative funding, made available by the government and people of Germany, recognizes that Caribbean islands states are among the most vulnerable when it comes to the negative and even destructive influence of adverse climate phenomena,” said Mr. Helmut Domas, Chargé d’ Affairs a.i. German Embassy in Kingston during the launch ceremony in Jamaica.

Specific interventions have already been selected by community and government stakeholders in Grenada under the Conservancy’s At the Water’s Edge project, including a climate-smart fisher facility, water quality remediation, and environmental education. These activities complement extensive mangrove restoration and the installation of engineered reef structures that reduce wave energy, two previously successful nature-based solutions that are replicable in vulnerable islands throughout the world.

In the Dominican Republic and Jamaica, project partners will collaborate with local government ministries and Red Cross societies to complete vulnerability assessments and identify communities with which to develop a portfolio of nature-based solutions that reduce their specific risks and build local resilience.

“I am pleased this project will be working closely with coastal communities and agencies to design tools, reduce vulnerability, and improve adaptability. This hands-on approach will help targeted communities think, plan and act to ensure resilience and seize opportunities to integrate climate considerations into their communities, businesses and lives in a transformative way,” said Daryl Vaz, Jamaican Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation.