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Caribbean Challenge Initiative to address environmental threats to the region

58b053c805beeea9e04dde1724076741_Mby eTurboNews.com

The Caribbean Summit of Political and Business Leaders, May 17-18, [brought] together heads of state and corporate executives to launch Phase II of the Caribbean Challenge Initiative (CCI) to address environmental threats to the Caribbean region. With the goal of protecting 20 percent of the Caribbean’s marine and coastal resources by 2020, the CCI is among the most ambitious conservation initiatives ever undertaken.

Hosted by Prime Minister Dr. the Right Honorable Keith C. Mitchell of Grenada, Premier Dr. the Honorable D. Orlando Smith, OBE of the British Virgin Islands and Sir Richard Branson, Founder of Virgin Group, the Summit will serve as a forum to announce new CCI partners and large-scale public and private funding commitments to advance the goals of safeguarding the Caribbean region’s tourism-based economy. It will be an opportunity to exchange ideas, share experiences and successful stories, and discuss collaboration mechanisms going forward. Government leaders are also negotiating a Leaders Declaration designed to accelerate Phase II of the CCI.

“Protecting our natural resources is one of the biggest opportunities of our lifetime, and nowhere is it more evident than in the Caribbean,” said Sir Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group. “This Summit is a milestone on the path to protecting the Caribbean’s environment and helping empower the region’s communities and economy.”

The Summit [took] place in the North Sound region of Virgin Gorda and a press conference [was] held Friday, May 17 on Necker Island with key stakeholders, and field visits can be arranged through The Nature Conservancy to see conservation projects including coral reef nurseries and marine protected areas.

“In the Caribbean, the economy and public health of coastal communities, as well as the region’s largest economic sector, tourism, is inextricably linked to a healthy marine and coastal environment. Coral loss and other threats to the coast could cost the local economy up to $420 million each year,” said Glenn Prickett, Chief External Affairs Officer from The Nature Conservancy. “Investing in the sustainable management of these coastal resources will help ensure livelihoods for fishers, a thriving coastal tourism sector, and greater shoreline protection from future storms.”

 

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