It took friend and colleague, climate change guru Steve Maximay, to remind me last week of an overdue commitment to address the impact of changing climatic conditions on the world of work in the Caribbean. I am coming to what led to this shortly. Stay with me.
This is no new area of global concern. The International
Labour Organization (ILO) and others have been at this for many years now.
In 2004/2005 (20 years ago!) I worked with the Association
of Caribbean MediaWorkers (ACM) and what was then the Caricom Mainstreaming
Adaptation to Climate Change (MACC) project on a climate change handbook for
Caribbean journalists - arguably the first of its kind anywhere. Pacific media
colleagues even wanted one of their own! Credit T&T communication guy, Tony
Deyal, for spawning the idea.
Even then, the subject of the changing world of work was
coming up as experts concluded that “adaptation” to inevitable change had to be
at the forefront of the numerous survival strategies of small vulnerable
countries.
The ILO has also looked, in successive published studies, at
the direct and indirect consequences of a phenomenon whose human contributions
have been almost universally recognised by the scientific community.
In a follow-up to our first publication, with support from
UNESCO in 2020, Maximay, Dr Dale Rankine and I co-authored ‘Reporting the
Climate Crisis, A handbook for Caribbean journalists.’ Some readers thought
“crisis” was an inappropriate descriptor and perhaps remain entitled to their
uninformed view.
Authors of the UK Guardian’s Style Guide were however clear,
and in 2019 mandated internal employment of “climate crisis” and “climate
emergency” as preferred terms to describe the unfolding situation.
Now, back to Steve and our journey through hilly St Joseph
last week. We came across the diligent postal worker who services my area (and
who deserves a special award for her dedication). There she was - seated on a
culvert, mid-morning, with her head down, perspiration dotting the hot pitch.
“Heat,” she muttered. “Heat.” She declined our offer of a lift.
“You know,” Steve suggested, “this is why climate change and
how people work must be urgently put on the agenda. Things will get worse.” We
both understood the symbolism of that simple, brief encounter.
In April there was an ILO press release which described
climate change as offering up a “cocktail” of serious health hazards with the
potential to affect up to 70 percent of the world’s working population.
It might well be that Joint Trade Union Movement (JTUM), the
National Trade Union Centre (NATUC), and non-aligned member unions have found
time in their busy schedules to discuss this matter. But I have not seen the
press releases. Nobody has been making the media rounds. Labour Day came and
went and the only heat I heard about was a threat of rhetorical “fire” in
Fyzabad.
Last year, almost to the day, and hosted by Dr André Vincent
Henry, Director of the Cipriani College of Labour and Co-operative Studies,
Caribbean labour leaders and activists looked at these precise issues at a
Caribbean World of Work Forum. Whatever happened to the agenda set there?
Revised labour standards are clearly needed as a buffer
against the onslaught of uneven climate impacts across regions, countries, and
sectors. Even accompanying measures to address this come with costly price
tags.
The imperative of a “just transition” to low-carbon
realities also has vast implications for workers. Global dynamics affected by
the drive to achieve emission targets are umbilically linked to the future of
workers and the communities in which they live and perform their duties.
In our region, there are already recognisable impacts on the
incidence of heat-related and respiratory illnesses – developments hopefully
being recorded and researched by public health agencies in T&T. A few
months ago, I was a part of a journalistic exercise which looked at the rising
incidence of climate-related illnesses among the elderly of Barbados.
In that instance, we noted a sad paucity of official data
but abundant anecdotal information on growing hospital admissions for the
treatment of patients experiencing higher temperatures and protracted exposure
to the polluting effects of Saharan Dust.
There are also growing concerns related to disease-carrying
vectors that thrive on the combined effects of unseasonal and more intense
weather events. Have you wondered about the intensity of this year’s dengue
outbreak and associated economic costs including those occasioned by workplace
disruptions?
How are our unions contributing to such a discussion? Should
they not be leading the way? Where are they? Where is this frontline of defence
against climate’s rising labour costs?