Climate change training session to help representatives from Seychelles at international meetings
General |Author: Daniel Laurence Edited by: Betymie Bonnelame | January 22, 2019, Tuesday @ 09:58| 9172 viewsMinister of Environment, Energy and Climate Change, Wallace Cosgrow addressing the high-level segment of the Conference of the Parties 24 in Poland in December last year. (Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change)
(Seychelles News Agency) - Government officials and members of civil society from Seychelles are learning more about climate change in order to be better equipped to negotiate at international meetings following a training session last week.
The group took part in the training on Friday aimed at familiarising participants with the basics of climate change diplomacy and building knowledge and skills for more effective negotiation.
“The impact of climate change is becoming more apparent in Seychelles. As a small country, we continuously need support and make our voice heard internationally. For that to happen those dealing with climate change have to be skilled in various areas such as advocacy and negotiation,” said Ronny Jumeau, Seychelles' permanent representative to the United Nations.
Jumeau said that an important factor that negotiators need to take into account when they attend international climate change meeting is how to get access to financing.
“Now that Seychelles has become a high-income country it is more difficult to get access to finance to support local climate change adaptation projects. Therefore, negotiators need to be skilful and know what they are talking about to lure donors,” he said.
Climate change is adversely affecting the economic development of Seychelles, an archipelago in the western Indian Ocean. This is having a direct impact on the livelihoods of the islanders, and getting access to finances is vital to the island nation’s survival.
The workshop comes right after a capacity needs assessment recently completed by the Global Climate Change Alliance Plus Initiative (GCCA+) programme in which the need for strengthening the knowledge and skills of Seychellois climate change negotiators was identified.
The facilitator of the project, Angelique Pouponneau, said Seychellois negotiators “wanted to know more about climate change diplomacy and how to engage in negotiations surrounding climate change.”
Some of the participants in the workshop had already attended the Conference of the Parties (COP) meetings and those who will be attending the next meeting wanted to be better prepared.
Pouponneau added that after taking part in the workshop funded by the European Union, participants “will be equipped with basic skills to engage in negotiations surrounding climate change in international space.”
A participant in the workshop, Elissa Lalande, who is the senior policy analyst for climate change, said that the workshop has been very enriching and will prepare her in the “future to represent Seychelles at any international meeting on climate change.”
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