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UK Small Island Developing States Strategy

Inquiry

Report and Government response published

The House of Commons International Development Committee calls for the FCDO urgently to make a long-term commitment to SIDS. It says the UK Government must not allow funding or political support for SIDS to be de-prioritised, even in an era of multiple and growing global crises.

The Committee calls out the domestic environmental policies it says are threatening the UK’s reputation as a serious partner to the SIDS. The UK is not on track to meet its own net zero targets, and the UK SIDS Strategy lacks concrete commitments or measurable objectives.

The UK should use its senior roles and influence in global development finance institutions – including its current co-chairship of the Green Climate Fund with the Dominican Republic - to improve SIDS access to climate finance, and to push for money from the new Loss and Damage Fund to be disbursed as grants, not loans. SIDS are already heavily indebted and the impact on them of external shocks – whether extreme weather events, pandemics, or global economic volatility - is larger and the recovery process slower. In 2017, Hurricane Maria wiped out the equivalent of 226% of Dominica’s GDP overnight. It is yet to fully recover.

Despite being so vulnerable to the effects of climate change, to which they have contributed so little, some SIDS are classified as too high-income to access Official Development Assistance. Applications for climate finance are prohibitively lengthy and onerous for small states with limited administrative capacity and can consume up to 5% of the total value of a project before it is even implemented.

Read the ReportUK Small Island Developing States Strategy

This inquiry is no longer accepting evidence

The deadline for submissions was Tuesday 5 December 2023.

Reports, special reports and government responses

View all reports and responses
Fourth Report - The UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
HC 476
Report
Response to this report
2nd Special Report - The UK Small Island Developing States Strategy: Government Response
HC 597
Special Report
2nd Special Report - The UK Small Island Developing States Strategy: Government Response
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
HC 597
Special Report
Large Print - 2nd Special Report - The UK Small Island Developing States Strategy: Government Response
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
HC 567
Special Report
Correspondence from the Minister for Development & Africa relating to the Committee visit to Dominica and SIDS Conference - 25 March 2024
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
Correspondence
Correspondence to the Minister for Development & Africa relating to the Committee visit to Dominica and SIDS Conference - 8 March 2024
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
Correspondence

Oral evidence transcripts

View all oral evidence transcripts
23 January 2024
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
Witnesses Mr Andrew Mitchell (Minister for Development & Africa at Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office)
Oral Evidence
24 October 2023
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
Witnesses Cletus Springer (Chair at Caribbean Natural Resources Institute (CANARI)), and UnaMay Gordon (Former Principal Director at Climate Change, Government of Jamaica)
Oral Evidence
5 September 2023
Inquiry UK Small Island Developing States Strategy
Witnesses Christopher Pearce (Principal Marine Geoscientist at National Oceanography Centre), and Martin Chong (Programme Coordinator at Pacific-European Union Marine Partnership (PEUMP) Programme, Pacific Community-SPC)
Oral Evidence
Dr Juan Casado-Asensio (Policy Analyst at OECD) (SIDS0001)
Dr Philippe Duneton, Executive Director, UNITAID (SIDS0019)
Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (SIDS0020)

Other publications

No other publications published.

Contact us

  • Email: indcom@parliament.uk
  • Phone: 020 7219 1223 (general enquiries) |0207 219 8969 (media enquiries)
  • Address: International Development Committee, House of Commons, London, SW1A 0AA