Switzerland and the Pacific Islands Region cooperate on climate change and migration

Press releases, 24.11.2020

The Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs and the Secretariat of the Pacific Environment Programme (SPREP) are pleased to announce Switzerland is contributing USD100,000 to build capacity on climate change and disaster related migration, displacement and planned relocation for resilient development in the Pacific.

Tuvalu
Tuvalu, © FDFA

Project partners, including the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat (PIFS) and the Secretariat of the Pacific Environment Programme (SPREP), are working under the Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific, endorsed by the Leaders of the Pacific Islands Forum in 2016.

Project funds are provided as co-financing under the EU-funded Intra-ACP GCCA+ Pacific Adaptation to Climate Change and Resilience Building (PACRES) which aims to deliver better regional and national responses to climate change challenges faced by Pacific ACP countries.

PACRES is being implemented jointly by SPREP, the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat (PIFS), the Pacific Community and the University of the South Pacific.

The challenge of human mobility for Pacific Island countries was noted in the 2008 Niue Declaration on Climate Change, which recognised “the importance of retaining the Pacific’s social and cultural identity, and the desire of Pacific peoples to continue to live in their own countries, where possible”.

This new funding builds on a number of earlier Swiss investments that began under the Nansen Initiative Pacific Regional Consultation in 2013 and has continued under the Platform for Disaster Displacement.

Switzerland’s Special Envoy for the Pacific Region Ambassador Yasmine Chatila Zwahlen said “The Pacific Islands Region is not only very exposed to Climate Change with its adverse effects on all aspects of Human Security, but it also harbours knowledge, tradition, solutions and best practices which the Blue Continent can share with the international community. I am proud that Switzerland can support the leadership in the Pacific Islands Region in this area of growing importance for the world.”

The Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) welcomes the support which will see the growth of work that began under the Nansen Initiative.

“We’re thankful for this partnership which will help bring about a resilient Pacific for us all,” said Ms Tagaloa Cooper Halo, Director of Climate Change Resilience of SPREP.

“We all look forward to the positive impacts and outcomes that will come through PACRES - impacts and outcomes that have been strengthened through the support from Switzerland.”

Project activities will include research to fill knowledge gaps to support policy development and enhancing coordination and communication to support the delivery of human mobility related programmes and policy development.

Activities will be implemented by PIFS in the context of strengthening regional coordination in climate change and disaster resilience through the multi-stakeholder Pacific Resilience Partnership (PRP) for supporting resilience-building as guided by the Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific. To that end PIFS will deliver the activities in close collaboration with the PRP Technical Working Group on Human Mobility.