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MOBILIZING DEVELOPMENT

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27 Mobilizing Sustainable Transport for Development<br />

Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience Building for Transport Infrastructure in Small Island Developing<br />

States – the Cases of Saint Lucia and Jamaica<br />

In Saint Lucia and Jamaica, like in many other small island developing states (SIDS), ports and airports constitute<br />

critical transport infrastructure, for food, energy, trade and tourism, which contributes significantly to the national<br />

GDP. The Hewanorra International Airport in Saint Lucia is the primary international access point for international<br />

tourists. In Jamaica, over 80% of international tourist arrivals are through the Sangster International Airport. Cruise<br />

ship tourism in both countries also depends crucially on ports (Castries and Falmouth).<br />

Recent extreme climatic events have shown the vulnerability of ports and airports to a variety of climatic factors,<br />

such as heavy downpours, flash floods and storm surges. These have had very significant impacts in both countries,<br />

flooding of key infrastructure and access roads, severely impairing transport connectivity. Such impacts are likely to<br />

be exacerbated by the projected climatic changes in the region; extreme precipitation is projected to intensify, as are<br />

mean sea level rise, storm waves and surges.<br />

Based on an assessment of criticality and vulnerability of key transport assets, in Saint Lucia and Jamaica, the<br />

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) is developing a methodology to enable transport<br />

policymakers, planners and operators to assess vulnerabilities, set effective priorities in adaptation planning and take<br />

appropriate adaptation response measures. The methodology takes into account available climate data, historical<br />

information on asset damage, as well as projections of future climatic factors under different scenarios, and includes<br />

recommendations for effective adaptation planning. The methodology will, subject to location-specific adjustments,<br />

be transferable for use in other SIDS in the Caribbean region and beyond.<br />

Connected to Recommendations: 1, 2, 4<br />

Stakeholder engagement and public awareness<br />

Transport policies shape and are shaped by a wide<br />

range of stakeholders, including governments, transport<br />

authorities and operators, financial institutions,<br />

businesses and enterprises of all sizes, community<br />

organizations, research institutions and individual<br />

experts. Public consultation is a mandated element<br />

of transport legislation in many countries, and some<br />

countries are pursuing participatory budgeting. Most<br />

basically, stakeholder engagement helps to identify need<br />

and demand for transport services. These approaches<br />

also help ensure that a range of perspectives is<br />

considered, adding legitimacy to decisions, enabling<br />

co-decision making and creating a sense of ownership<br />

among stakeholders and citizens.

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