CLIMATE CHANGE CATASTROPHE THREATENS TOURISM
                                                                                       Caribbean Media Exchange
                                                             by "Bevan Springer" <bevanspringer@nj.rr.com>

RODNEY BAY VILLAGE, St. Lucia (December 16, 2009) - A Board Member of the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF), urged
participants at the Caribbean Media Exchange to launch campaigns similar to those waged against HIV/AIDS to warn people of the dangers of climate
change and how it could affect tourism and sustainable development in the region.

Noting tourism accounts for about 25 to 35% of the total GDP of the Caribbean and provides about one-fifth of all jobs, Isaac Anthony, CCRIF board
member and Permanent Secretary of St. Lucia's Ministry of Finance, lauded the Caribbean Media Exchange (CMEx) for highlighting how climate
change posed a "
serious threat to the environment as well as to economies and societies - the impacts of which are likely to adversely
affect the tourism sector
."

Anthony, who also serves as the Registrar of Insurance with responsibility for supervising and regulating St. Lucia's insurance industry, called on
CMEx and regional media to help countries better understand "
hazard risk, climate change and climate change adaptation strategies," adding,
"You have already played a fundamental and effective role globally in using your powerful tool - communication - in the war against HIV/AIDS: You
can do the same for climate change."

Urging the media to focus more on climate change and its impacts on socio-economic development, Anthony, who also is Chairman of the Caribbean
Public Finance Association, identified the changing climate as a "
global driver of increasing disaster risk and threatens to undermine the
critical development gains made by the most vulnerable countries, including small island developing states such as those in the
Caribbean. Hazard impacts resulting from climate variability have exposed the vulnerability of key economic sectors such as tourism,
agriculture, fisheries, and water resources
."

For small island countries, he stressed,
a single-event catastrophe can have a "devastating effect both on physical infrastructure and the
economic fabric of the country. The small economies of the region combined with physical vulnerabilities often results in an
amplification effect on the impact of natural hazards.
"

Noting the difference between a rich country and a smaller nation, Anthony recalled Hurricane Ivan in 2004, "caused almost 200% of annual GDP
impact in each of two Caribbean islands, Grenada and the Cayman Islands, as well as significant damage in Jamaica. By contrast, Hurricane Katrina's
impact in the United States was less than 1% of annual US GDP and only about 30% of Louisiana's annual GDP."

In the devastation left in the wake of Hurricane Ivan in 2004, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Heads of Government set up the Caribbean
Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility with three priorities:
First, to cover the post-disaster liquidity gap faced by governments between immediate,
emergency aid and long-term redevelopment assistance.
Second, to enable governments to receive money quickly, and third, to minimize the
burden of governments to provide exposure information prior to coverage being initiated and loss of information after a disaster.

Through the pooling of capital into a collective reserve and spreading of risks geographically, the Facility provides cost-efficient coverage options for
its participants against extreme natural events, the socio-economic impacts of which are beyond the management capacity of any individual country.

The Caribbean Media Exchange on Sustainable Tourism (CMEx) has hosted 18 conferences and symposia throughout the Caribbean and North
America to underscore the value of the region's largest industry, tourism, in bettering the health, education, culture, environment and wealth of
communities in a climate friendly fashion.

The CMEx meeting - held December 3 to 7, 2009 in St. Lucia - was supported by Almond Resorts, American Airlines, American Eagle, Anse
Chastanet Resort, Association of Caribbean Media Workers, Barbara Pyle Foundation, Bay Gardens Resorts, Calabash Cove Resort and Spa, Cap
Maison Luxury Villa Resort and Spa, Caribbean Business Enterprise Trust, Caribbean Broadcasting Union, Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance
Facility, Caribbean Tourism Organization, CaribWorldNews, Carnival Sailing, Coco Palm, Community Benefit Development, Cotton Bay Village,
Counterpart International, East Caribbean Financial Holding Company Limited, Jade Mountain, LUCELEC, Marketplace Excellence, Max Micoud
Designs, Palm Haven Hotel, Rendezvous, Ruder Finn, Saint Lucia Ministry of Tourism and Civil Aviation, Saint Lucia Tourist Board, Sandals Resorts,
Sensible Development Corporation, Soufrière Regional Development Foundation, SpeakEasy M.E.D.I.A. Foundation, Stephen Paul's Photographic
Images, St. Maarten Tourist Bureau, Ti Bananne Caribbean Bistro and Bar, Tourism Development Company of Trinidad and Tobago, and Tropical
Shipping.
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