A Caribbean debrief of COP27 that goes beyond the historic loss and damage fund

On my two-day journey back from the land of Koshary (Egypt) to the land of Doubles (Trinidad and Tobago), I reflected on the opportunity I had through Climate Tracker to work with and support a team of 22 journalists from the Global South at COP27.

Yet, throughout my reportage on this critical climate conference, I was bombarded by messages and videos about the destruction back home — the worst floods the country has experienced since 2018.

... As Mohamed Adow, Executive Director of Power Shift Africa, stated: “COP27 has done what no other COP has achieved and created a Loss and Damage fund to support the most impacted communities of climate change. However, on a global fossil fuel phase down, it’s sad to see countries just copying and pasting the outcome from last year’s COP26 in Glasgow."

Previous
Previous

African countries are tapping their fossil fuel wealth. Why aren’t they getting rich?

Next
Next

Fossil fuels, fairness, finance: Climate fights to watch in 2023