Caribbean Initiative


The is the most recent initiative of the IUCN.
The Caribbean Initiative focuses on the Insular Caribbean - an ecologically coherent unit with unique biodiversity where conservation and natural resource management issues are at the heart of the challenge of sustainable development.

How was the Caribbean Initiative started?

Members, councillors, commissions and staff of the IUCN assemble every four years at the World Conservation Congress where the 4-year global program for conservation and sustainable development is established and approved. This determines the global program priorities and actions of the Union. During the 2004 Congress, the members of the Union requested the Secretariat to reinforce IUCN's presence in the Caribbean region. In response, the IUCN formulated a proposition for the Caribbean Initiative. The Initiative benefited from extensive consultations and an evaluation of fundamental themes, needs and opportunities in the wider Caribbean, and between members and key partners. The development of the Initiative was completed with the support of the French Ministry of Ecology, Energy and Sustainable Development and the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The 2009-2012 Caribbean Initiative Strategy was developed, supported and recognized by the members and experts at the October 2008 World Conservation Congress held in Barcelona, Spain. This was also the date of the official launch of the Initiative. Through the Caribbean Initiative, the IUCN aims at strengthening its work in the region and establishing a win-win situation for members and countries. The Initiative offers social and political actors the possibility of sharing a coherent program from the local to global levels that encourages joint and participatory actions.

Headquarters

For an initial period of two years, while the Initiative becomes fully established, IUCN Caribbean has been placed under the responsibility of the , based in Costa Rica, to allow for administrative and management support as well as the development of links within the wider Caribbean region.
The current Coordinator of the Caribbean Initiative is Ms. Deirdre P. Shurland who is native of Trinidad and Tobago.

Members of the Caribbean Initiative

The current members of the Caribbean Initiative are :
Bahamas

Cuba





Sociedad Cubana para la Protección del Medio Ambiente
Dominican Republic





Consorcio Ambiental Dominicano

Fundación para el Mejoramiento Humano-PROGRESSIO

Haïti

Jamaica







Negril Area Environmental Protection Trust

Netherlands Antilles

St. Kitts and Nevis

Nevis Department of Physical Planning, Natural Resources and Environment
Saint Lucia

Trinidad and Tobago