Infrastructure is a key element in ensuring Small Island Developing States can weather the impacts of climate change. Here’s why – and how to do it.
Small Island Developing States don’t need to be told that climate change is real – they’re already seeing the impact. Many of these countries are only a few metres above sea level, leaving them vulnerable to and disproportionately affected by climate change-driven shocks and hazards. Many are already feeling these effects first hand.
Rising sea levels and extreme weather already pose serious threats to these nations – and put their infrastructure at risk. Infrastructure that is vital for development.
For example, in September 2017, Hurricane Irma – a category 5 storm – tore through the Caribbean, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake.
The island of Barbuda took a direct hit – approximately 50 per cent of the population was left homeless after more than 90 per cent of buildings on the island were damaged. On Saint Martin, the hurricane left two-thirds of homes uninhabitable, with no electricity, gas or drinking water.
PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
On the low-lying Caribbean island of Saint Lucia, infrastructure is the backbone of the country’s society. It provides essential services – including water, electricity, education, waste management and emergency management – to its residents.
But the island nation’s geography leaves it more exposed to extreme weather events, including hurricanes and tropical storms. And the resulting aftermath of these events, in particular floods and landslides, threatens the very infrastructure that provides vital services.
In 2010, Hurricane Tomas wiped out 43 per cent of Saint Lucia’s Gross Domestic Product overnight. The island saw severe and widespread damage with power lines toppled, bridges destroyed and roads rendered impassable – including part of Saint Lucia’s main highway when landslides tore away large portions of it.
The threats from climate change are having devastating real-world impacts now.
We must enable governments to make better-informed investment decisions when it comes to designing and building infrastructure that can withstand climate change-driven threats.
UNOPS is helping countries like Saint Lucia to protect its people and infrastructure from the threat of climate change and build resilience to its impact.
To better protect Saint Lucia now, and to better prepare for the future, the government is using an evidence-based approach to long-term infrastructure planning, developed by UNOPS in partnership with the University of Oxford.