Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Friday, June 18 2021 - 11:00
AsiaNet
'Small Countries are Left Fending for Ourselves,' Says Dominica's Environment Minister Following G7 Summit
LONDON, June 18, 2021, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Last week, leaders from seven of the world's wealthiest countries gathered in 
Cornwall, UK, for the 2021 G7 Summit. The heads of state from Canada, France, 
Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, the US, and representatives of the EU met to 
discuss global challenges – including a response to the COVID-19 pandemic and 
climate change. The leaders reaffirmed their goal to limit global heating to 
1.5C and to protect and restore 30 percent of the natural world by the end of 
this decade. However, CS Global Partners consulted with experts that the summit 
failed to provide developing nations with the funds needed to cut greenhouse 
gas emissions and cope with the impacts of global warming.

The Caribbean is one of many regions globally that has seen the devastating 
impact of climate change. When category 5 Hurricane Maria struck Dominica, an 
island of only 72,000, in September 2017, more than 90 percent of the island's 
structures were destroyed. However, in the face of catastrophe, the country's 
Prime Minister, Dr the Honourable Roosevelt Skerrit, declared that the small 
country would commit to becoming the world's first climate-resilient nation by 
building back better and stronger.

Honourable Cozier Frederick, Dominica's Minister of Environment, Rural 
Modernisation and Kalinago Upliftment, told CS Global Partners 
[http://www.csglobalpartners.com/ ] that "Small countries like Dominica have 
done little to hyperbolise the climate crisis. Instead, we in Dominica are on 
our way to climate resilience because we have no other choice, we are left 
fending for ourselves. Global leaders need to live up to their climate 
commitments, otherwise, climate catastrophe will worsen for us all." 

Today, with the help of the Citizenship by Investment (CBI) Programme 
[http://www.cbiu.gov.dm/ ], Dominica is constructing over 5,000 weather-proof 
homes for its citizens and investing in rehabilitating its agriculture and 
fishing industries. It is also working towards building a geothermal plant 
which will reduce the cost of electricity for consumers and provide electricity 
to the French islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique, which in turn will 
encourage foreign exchange. 

CBI programmes legally grant citizenship status to applicants who invest in a 
host country's economy and do so much faster than traditional immigration 
processes. Dominica's CBI programme provides applicants with a swift processing 
time, thorough due diligence and affordable investment options channelled into 
health, education and employment initiatives on the island. With second 
citizenship from Dominica, individuals and their families can quickly formulate 
a Plan B and obtain global mobility without physically relocating, going 
through extensive interviews or waiting years as commonly associated with the 
traditional immigration process.

pr@csglobalpartners.com

www.csglobalpartners.com 

SOURCE: CS Global Partners