EnvironmentLocal NewsPoliticsWeather $23bn needed to meet 2035 climate goals – finance minister by Lauryn Escamilla 17/06/2026 written by Lauryn Escamilla Updated by Hiltonia Mariate 17/06/2026 4 min read A+A- Reset Centre: Minister of Finance Ryan Straughn speaking at Climate Smart Summit. (Photo Credit: Lauryn Escamilla) FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 78 Barbados will require an estimated $23 billion in public and private investment to achieve its climate agenda by 2035, with the government pursuing new financing mechanisms to strengthen resilience before disasters occur, Finance Minister Ryan Straughn has told a climate forum. He disclosed the figure on Wednesday during the two-day Climate Smart Summit at the Hilton Barbados Resort, outlining what he described as the next major challenge facing small island developing states. โTwo years ago, the Cabinet agreed [on] our climate investment plan, and that rounded off at about US$11.6bn [$23.2bn] as a number that included both public sector investment, as well as private sector investment in order to achieve the climate agenda by 2035,โ he said. While Barbados has already developed its investment blueprint, Straughn argued that implementation remains the critical hurdle. โThe real challenge and the real question is how do we now move from these plans to full implementation and how do we reduce and remove the barriers that prevent investment and essentially drive more resilience or sustainable development into our region.โ Barbados continues to advocate for the proactive use of natural disaster clauses embedded in debt instruments, allowing countries to build resilience before catastrophes strike rather than waiting for relief afterwards, he said. You Might Be Interested In Today’s weather Cabinet approves shutdown procedures Barbados to announce ‘heat wave’ response โWe really donโt want to experience the hurricane or the earthquake or whatever it is to get relief. We really want to be able to drive the building of resilience ahead of the storm or natural disaster.โ According to Straughn, depending on when those clauses are triggered, Barbados could access between $3.2bn and $4bn over a two-year period to support resilience-building initiatives. โThe intention then will be to deploy those resources to build resilience,โ he said. He maintained that creating fiscal space ahead of disasters would allow governments to undertake critical projects while their economies remain productive. โIt allows โฆ any country, any small state, to be able to use the existing resources that it has whilst the economy is actually live and in production to be able to achieve the building of resilience.โ The finance minister also pointed to Barbadosโ use of debt-for-development swaps to advance major projects without worsening the countryโs debt burden. โSo, one of the things that we have been doing over the last years is utilising debt swaps to be able to create space to advance some of these projects,โ he said. He cited the South Coast Sewage Treatment Plant upgrade as one example. โOur South Coast sewage plant right now is being constructed to be debt neutral from the second swap that we did with the [Inter-American Development Bank] IDB and theย [European Investment Bank] EIB, which was also supported by the Green Climate Fund.โ The upgraded facility, he noted, is expected to support both water security and agriculture. โBarbados is water-scarce,โ he said. โHaving done our legislation and the regulations for water reuse, weโre upgrading that plant to tertiary so that the reuse of the water will be reusable with respect to replenishing our aquifers but equally supporting the agricultural sector.โ Beyond climate adaptation, Straughn stressed that resilience must also address social challenges. He revealed that the government is pursuing a third debt swap focused on health outcomes. Part of that effort, he added, will target childhood obesity. โWe have a significant prevalence of NCDs across the countryโฆ reduce the level of childhood obesity, which is now measured at 42 per cent.โ He warned that climate resilience cannot be separated from broader national wellbeing. โFor a small state to have such a high prevalence of childhood obesity is significant and clearly something that needs to be addressed.โ Straughn said financing solutions were not the regionโs greatest obstacle: โI am absolutely convinced that we can financially engineer any solution.โ โWhat we really need is dedicated access to some of the technologies at scale that allows countries to, when their projects are ready, that there is a clear framework that allows us then to achieve [them] at reasonable cost.โ He pointed to renewable energy technologies, particularly battery storage, as an area where Caribbean states struggle due to their relatively small markets. โOur orders are simply too small to even get anybodyโs real attention, and therefore the region needs to be able to work together aggressively.โ The minister also urged investors to partner with Caribbean governments and citizens, arguing that resilience efforts should generate wealth within the region. โThe opportunity for the average citizen to invest in any of these projects is important.โ โAny investment thatโs coming in from the outside, we want them to be able to partner with and mobilise our private capital within the region.โ He added: โIf youโre talking about resilience, not just climate resilience, but youโre talking about how do you generate wealth to move from one generation to the next, that is important for the Caribbean to be able to achieve.โ (LE) Lauryn Escamilla You may also like Lashley insists gun courts will be fully staffed, ready despite concerns 18/06/2026 Class 3 students to begin new path to high school from September 18/06/2026 โMandatory minimumsโ for gun crimes, says senator 18/06/2026