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Volume 2

Environment Pollution and Climate Change

ISSN: 2573-458X

Climate Change 2018 &

Global ENVITOX 2018

October 04-06, 2018

October 04-06, 2018

London, UK

16

th

Annual Meeting on

Environmental Toxicology and Biological Systems

&

5

th

World Conference on

Climate Change

JOINT EVENT

A climate change vulnerability and capacity assessment (VCA) model for Caribbean Small Island

Developing States (SIDS)

Marium Alleyne

and

John Charlery

The University of the West Indies, West Indies

C

limate change is a high consequence issue for Small Island Developing States (SIDS) due to its proportional impact.

While climate change is expected to aggravate environmental and socioeconomic conditions, SIDS possesses inherent

characteristics which make them highly vulnerable to climate change. Vulnerability is a critical framework used to delineate

the extent of climate change. A comprehensive understanding of the vulnerability of Caribbean SIDS specific to climate change

will become a fundamental factor in ensuring sustainability and viability, as it provides the foundation for the identification

of the optimum restorative action to reduce impacts through effective implementation. Traditional approaches to climate

vulnerability assessment are limited by their ability to be transferred to SIDS, specifically the Caribbean region. Vulnerability is

dynamic and despite strides in research, there is limited knowledge about the manner in which the dynamism of vulnerability

operates, but any assessment methodology or tool must possess the ability to determine a balance in the system and any trends

occurring. As knowledge about climate change impacts increases and changes in socio-economic and political circumstances

occur there will be a continuous demand and need for new vulnerability approaches, tools andmethods. Focusing on Caribbean

SIDS, this research seeks to review the existing climate change vulnerability assessment methodologies, tools and models,

highlighting strengths, weaknesses and resultant gaps, and pays particular attention to the potential elements of transferability

to SIDS, with the aim of these to the Caribbean context. The resultant information will be used to develop a climate change

VCA Model for Caribbean SIDS, based on the adaptation of VCA tools and methodologies for SIDS. This research contributes

a climate change VCA model for Caribbean SIDS which could be applicable to others.

Recent Publications

1. Kelman I (2018) Islandness within climate change narratives

of Small Island Developing States (SIDS). Island Studies

Journal 13(1):149–166.

2. Scandurra G, AA Romano, MRonghi, and A Carfora (2018)

On the vulnerability of Small Island Developing States: A

dynamic analysis. Ecological Indicators 84:382–392.

3. JurgilevichAlexandra, Aleksi Räsänen, FannyGroundstroem

and Sirkku Juhola (2017) A systematic review of dynamics in

climate risk and vulnerability assessments. Environmental

Research Letters 12(1):013002.

4.

Mcleod Elizabeth, Shawn W Margles weis, Supin Wongbusarakum, Meghan Gombos, Angie Dazé, et al. (2015) Community-

based climate vulnerability and adaptation tools: a review of tools and their applications. Coastal Management 43(4):439–458.

5. O'Brien Karen, Siri Eriksen, Lynn P Nygaard and Ane Schjolden (2007) Why different interpretations of vulnerability

matter in climate change discourses. Climate policy 7(1):73–88.

Biography

Marium Alleyne is currently pursuing a PhD in Environmental Studies with specialization in Climate Change Vulnerability at the University of the West Indies, Cave

Hill Campus, Barbados, W. I. She has her expertise in natural resource and environmental management, with an emphasis on climate change and is dedicated to

contributing to the work on vulnerability and adaptive capacity to climate change and disaster risk management and reduction in Small Island Developing States

(SIDS). She has four years’ experience, working on 14 climate change related projects in the Caribbean region. She has comprehensive knowledge of climate

variability and climate change and its impacts on SIDS; experience in designing and structuring solutions that address/mitigate disaster and climate risks and

contributed to increase climate change awareness and capacity at the country level.

marium.alleyne@mycavehill.uwi.edu

Marium Alleyne et al., Environ Pollut Climate Change 2018, Volume 2

DOI: 10.4172/2573-458X-C1-003

Figure 1:

Adapted Conceptual Framework for Climate Change Vulnerability

Capacity Assessment (VCA) for SIDS from O’Brien et al. (2007) and

Nicholls (2003).