Panos Caribbean launches new climate justice campaign
ON the eve of the global climate change conference to be held in Poland starting next week, and following the release of a special report by the International Panel on Climate Change that highlights the urgent need for action by governments, industries and individuals to contain global warming, Panos Caribbean is launching a new regional campaign to support the Caribbean and other vulnerable countries in the fight against climate change.
The face of the campaign is a painting by Saint Lucian-American artist Jonathan Gladding. It pictures a young girl with her body almost entirely submerged by the sea, and with her fingers sending the desperate message that she needs #1point5tostayalive.
The message is in reference to the theme adopted by Caribbean and other small island nations in the run-up to the the climate conference in Paris in 2015 — 1.5 to stay alive — where they maintained that temperature increase more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial average would be disastrous.
Saint Lucian poet and playwright Kendel Hippolyte, who played a lead role in the campaign to secure the historic Paris Agreement in 2015, has called on Caribbean artists to add their voice to the call for decisive global action against climate change.
“We cannot look at our children and grandchildren and say we did nothing or we did not know what to do. Whatever artistic gift we have — and whatever rewards it brings or we hope it will bring — will not mean a thing if all we hand over to our descendants is a planet that is their funeral pyre even while they are alive,” says Hippolyte.
Hippolyte has also revealed that he is working on a new theme song, entitled 1.5 Is Still Alive, in collaboration with musician and humanitarian Taj Weekes. As was done in 2015 with the theme song of the campaign leading to the Paris conference, this project will bring together a number of well-known Caribbean singers.
“In a campaign such as this,” says Panos Caribbean’s coordinator Yves Renard, “artists play a pivotal role, because their voices are known and credible, and because they are able to convey messages in ways that resonate with the culture, feelings and concerns of people and communities. We encourage all organisations to reproduce Jonathan Gladding’s beautiful painting and use it to convey the urgency of action.”
The Paris Agreement signed at the historic climate conference in 2015 called on all countries “to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase… to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial average”. Climate change experts now confirm that global warming is on track to break the 1.5°C mark by around 2040.
Experts agree that an increase of average global temperature above 1.5°C will have disastrous impacts on the Caribbean and other vulnerable regions of the world, but they also believe that it is possible to contain global warming, that we have the technology to reduce our impact on the climate.