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US$10 m fund launch to build resilience in South Oropouche River Basin - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

PLANNING and Development Minister Penelope Beckles has launched a landmark US$10 million project aimed at building climate resilience of the South Oropouche River Basin (SORB) population and ecosystems to flooding, sea level rise and expected increasing water deficit events, on Wednesday.

While these are among some of the most damaging climate risks already being experienced in the Woodland area, Beckles asserted, “This project will not solve the flooding problem and its impacts.

“There is no silver bullet that will climate proof any country. This is the reality. But it will increase resiliency in many areas, which, if properly implemented, will decrease the severity of flooding and climate risks and their associated impacts on livelihoods.

“This project is therefore a good starting point, leading to comprehensive adaptation over time and in the long term,” she said at the Debe Secondary School launch.

Bernardo Requena, Country Representative, Latin American Development Bank (CAF), Requena agreed with Beckles that the success of the four year project will depend largely on community engagement as those who live and work there would be able to contribute to the solutions that work for them.

Beckles said it is the first grant funded national project under the Adaptation Fund - Multi-sectoral Adaptation Measures to Flood Relief in the SORB, the first, and only beneficiary of this landmark grant.

Factors including, vulnerability to flooding and climate risks, population density, commercial, agricultural, and cultural activities, and impacts on citizens, as well as the size of the catchment, led to its selection of SORB for this initiative.

With record breaking temperatures across the world, resulting in floods, droughts, wildfires, heatwaves and at home, consecutive hot days which are having dire consequences on crops, livestock and general comfort, Beckles said climate change is here.

“It is no longer a futuristic phenomenon. The future is already here.

“We are now seeing more intense rainfall where a greater volume of rain is falling in less time,” she observed pointing to increased temperatures that are also causing increased evaporation of water and the expectation if more goes up, then more will come down

She told the mainly local audience that they know more than anyone the perennial flooding that this watershed experiences and the associated suffering that ensues.

“And this is projected to become even worse as climate change continues.”

She noted the damage the frequency and intensity of flooding has caused in the Woodland area, resulting in staggering economic losses and the disruption of the ecological balance with long-term consequences for biodiversity and ecosystems.

[caption id="attachment_1035597" align="alignnone" width="1024"] File photo of a maroon Woodland resident. - Photo by Angelo Marcelle[/caption]

“You would agree that we cannot afford this anymore and for all the obvious reasons which inevitably leads to flooding.”

Over two decades ago, climate models projected le

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