Research: Migration, Integration, and Diaspora Eng.. – Migration Policy Institute

The Caribbean is commonly viewed as a region of emigration, and some countries do have sizeable diasporas in North America and Europe. But many people also move among Caribbean countriesfor work or study, to join family, or to seek safety from persecution. Climate change and natural disasters have also spurred intraregional migration and are likely to do so with growing intensity in the years to come.

This report explores the many different forms migration takes in the Caribbean, and the policies and institutions in place in the region to manage it. The primary countries of study are The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, the Dominican Republic, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago. To a more limited extent, the study also covers Aruba, Curaao, the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), and the remaining Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Member States.

Among other things, the report offers data on immigrant populations in the region overall and in different countries, and an overview of national migration and humanitarian protection institutions, regional free mobility pathways and agreements, and immigrant integration policies. It also looks at how Caribbean countries have increasingly sought to engage their diasporas, including via remittances and private-sector development efforts.

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Research: Migration, Integration, and Diaspora Eng.. - Migration Policy Institute

Millions of women take to the streets across Latin America and … – Peoples Dispatch

The future is feminist, reads the banner. Photo: Junior Lima via Brasil de Fato

This March 8, on the International Womens Day, millions of women across Latin America and the Caribbean took to the streets to protest against patriarchy in all its forms and manifestations and demand equal rights in all spheres of life. From Argentina to Mexico, women and gender-diverse people demonstrated against gender inequality, gender based violence, femicides, transvesticides as well as the neoliberal economic policies that worsen hunger and poverty in the region.

In Argentina, women and gender-diverse people participated in a national strike, organized for the seventh consecutive year, and mobilized throughout the country demanding an end to gender discrimination and violence against women and members of the LGBTQI+ community. According to official data, in Argentina, a woman or a diverse-gender person is murdered every 29 hours. According to the La Casa del Encuentro organization, between January 1 and February 28, 2023, 56 women were murdered for the simple fact of being a woman.

The feminist movements and womens rights organizations such as the Ni Una Menos collective also rejected the countrys debt with the IMF, stating that its repayment is preventing the growth of women, diverse-gender people and children due to the decrease in the states social policies. They stressed that the countrys historical economic debt is with women and diverse-gender people, not the IMF.

They also demanded the reform of the justice system in the country, pointing out it discriminates against women and LGBTQI+ minorities. They argued that the system is patriarchal and inefficient when it comes to providing responses in terms of protection and justice to victims of gender based violence.

In the capital Buenos Aires, tens of thousands marched to the National Congress in Plaza de Mayo, raising slogans such as We want to be alive, free and debt-free and With this justice system there are no rights or democracy.

Massive, colorful and peaceful marches were carried out in the provinces of Crdoba, Entre Ros, Jujuy, Neuqun, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero and Tucumn, among others.

In Brazil, tens of thousands of women hit the streets of major cities against patriarchal violence, gender inequality and the high rate of femicides in the country. According to a recent report, 1,410 women were killed in gender-based violence in 2022. The number suggest that there was nearly one victim every six hours. In the capital Braslia, women rights organizations marched to the district governments office to demand comprehensive policies to confront gender-based violence.

In Rio de Janeiro, women held a massive march demanding equal rights and reproductive rights. According to Human Rights Watch, Brazilian women workers typically earn 23% less than men, regardless of whether their educational level is higher. Likewise, abortion is illegal in Brazil except when performed to save the womans life or in cases of rape.

The residents of Rio also paid homage to Afro-descendant activist and councilwoman Marielle Franco, who was assassinated on March 14, 2018. Throughout her life, Marielle, a lesbian and human rights activist, fought for the rights of Black people, women and gender-diverse people and the poor living in rural areas.

Demonstrations were also held in Porto Alegre, Teresina, Porto Velho, Crato, Goinia, Altamira, So Lus, Natal and Curitiba, among other cities. The demands included an end to violence against women, in addition to state specific demands such as affordable public services, affordable housing, compliance with conditions for the construction of dams, preservation of the Amazon and food sovereignty.

Additionally, under the banner of Agribusiness profits from hunger and violence, for land and democracy, women in resistance, women workers associated with the Landless Rural Workers Movement (MST) organized different protest actions in 24 states of the country.

In Ecuador, thousands of women mobilized in various cities across the country in rejection of the growing gender-based violence and sharp increase in the number of femicides. According to reports, in Ecuador a woman is murdered every 26 hours on account of their gender. According to data from the Latin American Association for Alternative Development (ALDEA), during 2022, 332 femicides were registered in Ecuador. The year was the most violent year for women since 2014, when femicide was criminalized in the Comprehensive Organic Criminal Code (COIP).

In the capital Quito, despite pouring rain, hundreds of women gathered at Plaza Indoamrica and marched to El Arbolito demanding guarantees of a fear free life for women. Elizabeth Otavalo, the mother of Mara Beln Bernal, also took part in the march. Her daughter was a victim of femicide. She was allegedly killed by her husband Lieutenant Germn Fernando Cceres in the Quito Police Training School in September 2022. Otavalo demanded justice for her daughter and that the government of President Guillermo Lasso provide guarantees of a decent life for the orphans of femicide victims.

Delegations of Indigenous women as well as members of the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE) and the National Confederation of Peasant, Indigenous and Afro-descendant Organizations (FENOCIN) also joined the mobilization.

In Mexico, hundreds of thousands of women rose up against patriarchy, gender inequality and gender-based violence. According to official statistics, between January and December 2022, in Mexico, a total of 968 women were murdered because they are female.

In the capital Mexico City, a massive green and purple tide of women spread through the streets to demand an end to femicides, disappearances of women, rapes, harrasment and gender inequality, as well as justice for their mothers, grandmothers, sisters, friends and colleagues who have been victims of the patriarchal system. The women affirmed that they fight for a life without fear for themselves and future generations.

In Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela, hundreds of thousands of women flooded the streets demanding equality in the worlds most unequal region, refusing to continue being marginalized, discriminated against, excluded, and murdered.

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Millions of women take to the streets across Latin America and ... - Peoples Dispatch

SPACE Caribbean Museum Presents Women Warriors Of Social … – Island Origins Magazine

Island SPACE Caribbean Museum, a museum dedicated to celebrating and preserving the cultural heritage of the Caribbean community, will present a Women Warriors of Social Justice event series. From now through May 14, 2023, Island SPACE will celebrate the accomplishments of exceptional Caribbean women with exhibits and program activities including a fine art show, a one-woman play on the life and times of Shirley Chisholm, and speaker and performance events. The series will be based at Island SPACE Caribbean Museum, Broward Mall, 8000 W Broward Blvd #202, Plantation, FL 33388.

Women Warriors of Social Justice is made possible by the following funds at the Community Foundation of Broward: Mary N. Porter Community Impact Fund, Jack Belt Memorial Fund, Ginny and Tom Miller Fund, Stearns Weaver Miller Fund for the Arts, Harold D. Franks Fund.

Events will be set against the backdrop of two installations. Earth, Water & Skin: Caribbean Women in Art is a fine art show featuring the work of multimedia creatives Michelle Drummond and Krystle Sabdul of Jamaica, and Sonya Sanchez Arias of Trinidad. Their stunning, multidimensional pieces are portrayed in yarn, charcoal, paint and found objects hanging from the walls and ceiling of the Island SPACE gallery. The Caribbean Sheroes exhibition features female leaders of Caribbean descent, including the stories of 14 inspirational changemakers from South Florida and the Caribbean.

On Sunday, March 19, Island SPACE will host a Womens History Month Celebration featuring guest speaker Dr Patricia Morris, president of Equilo Foundation, presenting a talk on 7 Steps to Womens Empowerment, as well as live dance, spoken word performances and other cultural entertainment. Learn more at http://www.islandspacefl.org/womensmonth.

A second event at Island SPACE on Sunday May 7th, one week before Mothers Day, Honoring HERS will recognize some of the women on display in the museum, feature curated spoken word performances by Caribbean woman poets and help women learn how to take care of themselves. The live segment of this event will be curated by Frankie Red Wordz. Learn more at http://www.islandspacefl.org/sheroes.

Finally, to mark Mothers Day on the afternoon of Sunday May 14, Island SPACE will present a one-woman play titled Unbossed and Unbowed which tells the story of Shirley Chisholms life. The play, performed by Ingrid Griffith at the Pompano Beach Center for the Performing Arts, explores Chisholms pioneering political career and tireless social justice advocacy. Learn more at http://www.islandspacefl.org/mothersdayshow.

As a Caribbean woman who cares deeply about the people who share my heritage Women Warriors of Social Justice at Island SPACE Caribbean Museum means a great deal to me, said Island SPACE board president Calibe Thompson. The event series celebrates women so many of us respect and admire, and it will provide an opportunity for our community to learn about their incredible legacies.

Key Dates:

March 18 May 14: Earth, Water & Skin: Caribbean Women in Art | A fine art exhibition, free with museum entry fee.

March 18 May 14: Caribbean Sheroes | A profile exhibition, free with museum entry fee.

Sunday, March 19 from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m.: Womens History Month Celebration | Inspirational guest speaker and live cultural performances.

Sunday, May 7 from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.: Honoring HERS | Recognizing phenomenal contemporary Caribbean women, with a poetry and music showcase and self care instruction.

Sunday, May 14 from 2:30 5:00 p.m.: Unbossed and Unbowed | A one-woman show on the life of Shirley Chisholm.

For more information about the Women Warriors of Social Justice event series, visit islandspacefl.org or contact 954-999-0989.

About Island SPACE

Island Society for the Promotion of Artistic and Cultural Education (Island SPACE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to the advancement of arts, culture, history, and educational initiatives that represent the Caribbean region, in South Florida and the broader diaspora.

The public is invited to visit the museum Thursdays through Saturdays from 11:00 a.m. through 7:00 p.m. and Sundays from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. General museum entry is $10 per adult and $5 per child. Visit islandspacefl.org to learn more.

Find information on ways to give at islandspacefl.org/giving, GoFundMe, Benevity for corporate giving and Facebook, donate directly through PayPal or Zelle to [emailprotected], or email the museum for details at [emailprotected].

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SPACE Caribbean Museum Presents Women Warriors Of Social ... - Island Origins Magazine

Caribbean Airlines Is Making It Easier to Visit Dominica – Caribbean Journal

Caribbean Airlines is expanding its service to the Eastern Caribbean island of Dominica, making it easier to take a vacation in the nature-filled paradise.

Beginning April 7, the airline will increase its service to Dominica from Trinidad, adding a return service on Fridays.

Right now, Caribbean Airlines runs service from Port of Spain to Dominica on Thursdays, and then onward to Barbados.

The carrier also operates service from Barbados to Dominica on Mondays, onward to Port of Spain.

Travelers can now fly from Trinidad on Thursdays and Fridays, departing Dominica on Mondays, for a total of three weekly flights.

The move also opens up the United States market more for Dominica, with the option for same-day travel to Dominica from New York.

You can leave New York on Friday morning and arrive in Dominica by 6:45 PM; you can then vacation for a week and leave Dominica on Friday, arriving back in New York the following morning.

The addition of this Friday return flight between Trinidad and Dominica not only increases the options of those resident in Trinidad to visit Dominica but also allow our friends from the TriState area to travel inbound sameday to Dominica via convenient service from JFK through POS and outbound on the redeye to return to JFK to begin their day, said Colin Piper, Dominicas Director of Tourism.

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Caribbean Airlines Is Making It Easier to Visit Dominica - Caribbean Journal

Chemical labs in Latin America and the Caribbean prioritise safety … – Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons

THE HAGUE, the Netherlands 10 March 2023 Chemistry professionals from Latin America and the Caribbean enhanced their understandings of safety and security in chemical laboratories during a course held from 24 27 October in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Ambassador Claudio Rozencwaig, representing the Argentinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, stated in his opening remarks that the course is an excellent initiative, which allows knowledge acquisition and sharing, contributing to the implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

During the training, participants examined various policy and practical aspects of the management of chemical lab infrastructure. Particular emphasis was given to waste management, personal protection measures, emergency management, toxicology regulations, management of toxic chemicals, and the Global Harmonized System (GHS).

The event was attended by 14 participants from eight Member States, and a number of local participants. All participants were professional chemists specialised in occupational safety in public and private sector labs attached to such institutions as customs, police, relief agencies, chemical industry and the academia.

The course was jointly run by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the Instituto Nacional de Tecnologa Industrial (INTI), and the Argentinian Government.

As the implementing body for the Chemical Weapons Convention, the OPCW, with its 193 Member States, oversees the global endeavour to permanently eliminate chemical weapons. Since the Conventions entry into force in 1997, it is the most successful disarmament treaty eliminating an entire class of weapons of mass destruction.

Over 99% of all declared chemical weapon stockpiles have been destroyed under OPCW verification. For its extensive efforts in eliminating chemical weapons, the OPCW received the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize.

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Chemical labs in Latin America and the Caribbean prioritise safety ... - Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons

Better Cruise Stock Buy: Royal Caribbean or Lindblad Expeditions? – The Motley Fool

Amid the ongoing consumer preference shift from goods to experiences, the cruise industry enjoyed a record booking season. Cruise operators stand to benefit from historically strong demand levels, provided they can contend with inflation, increased costs, and labor struggles.

Today I'll compare two distinctly different companies to determine which cruise line stock makes the better buy in today's market.

Earning six times more revenue in 2022 than 2021, Royal Caribbean (RCL 0.56%) has observed steady demand amid accelerating onboard revenue generation. In other words, vacationers want to cruise more with Royal Caribbean, and their spending while onboard has intensified.

Fourth-quarter revenue landed at $2.6 billion, a 265% year-over-year improvement. Load factor, or the percentage of occupancy aboard ships, reached as high as 110% during peak holiday sailings last December. Despite definitive revenue growth, Royal Caribbean finished Q4 with a net loss of $500 million.

But compared to the $1.4 billion loss endured in Q4 2021, a half-billion-dollar loss doesn't look quite as bad -- and demonstrates a clear course toward profitability. And the loss actually came in smaller than Royal Caribbean's management team expected.

Similarly, 2022's full-year net loss of $2.1 billion marks a significant improvement over 2021's net loss of $5.3 billion. Undeterred by elevated expenses in fuel, food and beverage, airfare, and labor, Royal Caribbean anticipates adjusted earnings per share to hit $3 to $3.60 for the year -- on 14% higher capacity than 2019.

While the company enjoys a record-breaking 2023 booking season and onboard spending skyrockets, Royal Caribbean stock still trades 47% below its pre-pandemic January 2020 high.

Delivering 80% year-over-year revenue growth last quarter, Lindblad Expeditions (LIND 0.57%) benefited from relentless adventure-travel demand. The New York City-based operator's net revenue of $118 million last quarter also marked a 56% improvement over 2019 levels.

An expanded fleet that includes the newly refurbished National Geographic Islander II ship, as well as enhanced land-based offerings, both served as major revenue drivers for the fourth quarter. Having acquired a string of land companies over the past seven years, Lindblad has balanced its ocean expedition offerings with adventures on the ground.

While revenue soared, however, so did expenses. Ultimately, Lindblad ended Q4 2022 with an adjusted loss of $2.7 million on the basis of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA). But the loss does mark an $11 million improvement over 2021's fourth-quarter loss.

Surging costs in fuel, labor, and land-based operations all impacted Lindblad's profitability throughout 2022. Overall, last year resulted in 88% higher expenses than 2021. Company initiatives such as digital marketing and fleet improvements also added to expenses.

As of Lindblad's earnings call late last month, bookings for 2023 outpaced the same point in 2019 by 47%. And company guidance for 2023 shows a positive EBITDA range of $70 million to $80 million. Meanwhile, Lindblad stock trades 58% below its March 2021 high.

Although Royal Caribbean and Lindblad Expeditions are technically in the same sector, they are considerably different entities. For one, Royal Caribbean's market cap is roughly 35 times that of Lindblad Expeditions, making Royal Caribbean a generally more stable, less risky investment.

Since both cruise operators posted a net loss last year, I've compared their price-to-sales ratios (P/S) and one-year revenue forecasts.

Data source: WallStreetZen.

While Lindblad Expeditions sports a lower, more appealing price-to-sales ratio, Royal Caribbean shows a better one-year revenue estimate, according to WallStreetZen analysts.

Since it's a more established company with a much larger market cap, the nod today goes to Royal Caribbean. However, if Lindblad Expeditions continues on course toward profitability, its stock price could also see some upside. After all, a rising tide lifts all boats.

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Better Cruise Stock Buy: Royal Caribbean or Lindblad Expeditions? - The Motley Fool

03/10/23 NEW CORAL DISEASE IS KILLING CORALS QUICKLY … – Department of Land and Natural Resources

JOSH GREEN, M.D.GOVERNOR

DAWN CHANGCHAIRPERSON

For Immediate Release: March 10, 2023

NEW CORAL DISEASE IS KILLING CORALS QUICKLY IN FLORIDA AND THE CARIBBEAN

Hawaii Planning Action to Prevent Spread to Pacific Corals

To view video please click on photo or view at this link: https://vimeo.com/766719685

(HONOLULU) Insidious is the best way to describe Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease (SCTLD). First discovered off the coast of Florida in 2014, it has now spread along the entire coast of the Sunshine State and has been detected in 23 countries and territories in the Greater Caribbean Basin. This disease kills coral tissue at a rate of 1 to 2 inches per day, which quickly kills the coral, and can affect more than 30 different species of coral.

Brian Neilson, Administrator of the DLNR Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR) said, The coral loss that Florida and the Caribbean are experiencing is devastating. We want to take every measure we can to prevent this coral disease from spreading to Hawaiis reefs.

Research has shown that disease-bearing microbes can be carried in vessel ballast water and that ballast water management systems that use ultraviolet lightthe most commonly-used system to sterilize ballast waterare only 50% effective at killing the pathogen. The pathogen can also remain alive in sediments and may potentially be transported to Hawaii if vessels dont fully remove sediments from anchors, as an example.

With this new information, it is prudent for the State to take action to mitigate the risk of SCTLD entering Hawaii waters. DAR is proposing that vessels that have been to a SCTLD-affected area within the last five ports, to not discharge ballast water within State Waters, and to also send prior notification of arrival, with information about the vessels biofouling prevention practices, so a risk assessment may be conducted.

Biofouling occurs when microbes, plants, and animals attach to the wet surfaces of a boats hull and other areas. Organisms in these biofouling communities may be carriers of this disease, causing SCTLD to be transported with the vessel. Ballast water is the seawater taken up by a vessel to regulate weight and balance and can be discharged in new ports. There is a small number of commercial vessels that arrive in Hawaii that would be subject to any new requirements. The requirements would also apply to private, non-commercial vessels.

There are several standard State and Federal requirements that vessel operators must already follow, Neilson said. These additional measures, narrowly focused to further mitigate risk, will help vessel operators help us protect Hawaii. If a vessel is considered to be a potential spreader of SCTLD, based on risk assessments, it will be red-flagged for further monitoring and preventative actions.

At the 45th U.S. Coral Reef Task Force meeting in Kona in the fall of 2022, Dana Wusinich-Mendez of the NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program presented an update on SCTLD, calling it likely the most lethal coral disease ever. Select clips from her presentation are included in the video noted below.

# # #

RESOURCES

(All images/video courtesy: DLNR)

HD video Taking Action to Address SCTLD presentation (Sept. 1, 2022): https://vimeo.com/766719685

Photographs Taking Action to Address SCTLD presentation (Sept. 1, 2022): https://www.dropbox.com/sh/5fnm2ndx3wct4xx/AAAS6a0s1qW4GrpYvt9arr8na?dl=0

Media Contact:

Dan Dennison

Senior Communications Manager

[emailprotected]

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03/10/23 NEW CORAL DISEASE IS KILLING CORALS QUICKLY ... - Department of Land and Natural Resources

Smelly seaweed sargassum headed toward Florida, the Caribbean … – USA TODAY

8.7 million tons of seaweed headed to Florida waters this summer

An 8.7 million ton seaweed blob is expected to arrive on Florida beaches ahead of the summer tourist season.

Anthony Jackson, USA TODAY

Beachgoers in Florida and the Caribbean could be greeted by heavy blankets of smelly seaweedin the weeks ahead as a 5,000 mile swath of sargassum drifts westward and piles onto white sandy beaches.

Sargassum, a naturally-occurring type of macroalgae, has grown at an alarming rate this winter.The belt stretches across the Atlantic Ocean from Africa to Florida and the Yucatan Peninsula and is as much as 200-300 miles wide.

"This year could be the biggest year yet," even bigger than previous upticks,said Brian Lapointe,an algae specialist and research professor at Florida Atlantic University's Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute.

It's already beginning to wash upin the Florida Keys and Barbados and elsewhere in the region, but researchers don't know where the bulk of it could wind up.

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The monstrous seaweed bloom is just one more example of a growing global invasion of macro and microscopic algal blooms thriving on an increasing supply ofnutrients such as nitrogen in freshwater and marine ecosystems.

In addition to the unsightly piles of sargassum along the coast, some species produce toxins that affect the food chain or deplete the oxygen in the water when they start to decay, causing fish kills and the die off of other marine species.

Here's what to know:

Not all algal blooms are bad. Many can occur naturally, and can havepositive effects.

FOR SUBSCRIBERS: Huge seaweed blob on way to Florida is 'like a Stephen King movie'

Yes. Christopher Columbus wrote about floating mats of it in the Atlantic Ocean.

"It's not a bad thing to have the sargassum in the ocean," said Brian Barnes, an assistant research professor at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Sea turtle hatchlings swim from Florida beaches to the Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic where they spend their early lives floating and foraging in the grass.

"If it all stays offshore , we wouldn't really have a problem," Barnes said.But the macroalgae has mushroomed in size, over the past12 years or so, making it more likely to see large piles of seaweed that make it difficult to walk, sit or play onbeaches.

The trend was first documented on satellite in 2011.

In some cases, there's so much seaweed, local governments must useheavy equipment anddump trucks to haul it away, LaPointe said.

He has linked the surge in sargassum to flow from the Mississippi River, extreme flooding in the Amazon basin, as well as to themouth of the Congo where upwelling and vertical mixing of the ocean can bring up nutrients that feed the blooms. He said deforestation and burning also may contribute.

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Blooms of much smaller algae amicroscopic species known asphytoplankton increased in size and frequency around the world between 2003 and 2020, the researchers concluded in the Nature study.

"Weve seen something pretty similar ina lot of the things we study," saidBarnes."Were seeing such massive blooms now."

The coastal phytoplankton study, by Lian Feng at the Southern University of Science and Technology in China, and others, used images from NASAs Aqua satellite. They found:

Blooms have been at least indirectly linked to climate change in several ways, but especially to thewarming temperatures that bring more extreme rainfall that washes silt and pollutants into waterways.

FOR SUBSCRIBERS: Saving endangered right whales pits advocates against lobstermen

GREEN ENERGY: Growing group of mayors at odds with experts over whale deaths and offshore windmills

The authors of the coastal phytoplankton study, Lapointe and other researchers have found the following:

"We can't really say which particular beach at which particular time," Barnes said. The University publishes a regular update on the status of the sargassum bloom.

"We can get an idea of when it will be fairly close," he said. "In general, everything flows west. It will come across the Central Atlantic and into the Caribbean, and into the Gulf of Mexico through the straits of Florida."

Winds, currents and even small storms can influence where the sargassum moves.

Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands could get hit pretty hard, Barnes said. But the floating matsalso wind up on beaches in Jamaica and all around the coast of Florida.

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Smelly seaweed sargassum headed toward Florida, the Caribbean ... - USA TODAY

How French-Caribbean Artist Julien Creuzet Uses Creole Hymns and Digital Avatars to Retrace African Ancestry – artnet News

Virginie Ribaut. Courtesy High Art, Paris/ Arles

On the wall of Julien Creuzets exhibition at High Art in Paris is a 1976 newspaper article about the only voodoo temple in Europe. Published in Le Monde, the story describes a dinner at a time where white Parisians were served by Black boys and girls before participating in a frenetic, drum-beating voodoo ceremony. The event took place in the Pigalle district, where High Art is coincidentally located.

This article, with its condescending tone of exoticism, is one of two references points in Creuzets exhibition title, The Possessed of Pigalle or the Tragedy of King Christophe. The second is a satirical 1963 play by Aim Csaire, the Martinican poet, playwright, and politician, which focuses on a Haitian hero who is crowned king following the countrys independence from France in 1804. In his quest to imitate the ruling style of a European monarch, he becomes despotic and, faced with an uprising, takes his own life.

Through these disparate points, the 36-year-old Creuzet, who was recently named to represent France at the Venice Biennale in 2024, has reflected upon the the painful colonial history, landscape, and culture of the Caribbean, from Haiti to Creuzets homeland, Martinique, one of Frances 12 overseas territories. The large solo exhibition (running until April 8) is nuanced and multilayered, and as brightly colored and exuberant as it is poignant and disquieting.

What I found interesting is how making a gallery exhibition can be something much richer and more intense, almost like a film, with landscapes and characters like in literature, Creuzet told me as we meandered through the exhibition that seems to hover between the past, present, and future. I like the idea that the exhibition can be a sprawling cinema [narrating] a documentary fiction between whats real and what isnt.

Installation view of Julien Creuzets The Possessed of Pigalle or the Tragedy of King Christophe at High Art, Paris. Courtesy the artist.

The nature of Creuzets work, which is personal, political, and biographical, has caused him to ponder as he faces the major platform of the Venice Biennale. He is carefully evaluating what he wants to share in an exhibition. I didnt expect it, he said of his nomination. The Venice Biennale is above all a complex economic montage and Im not an artist whose economy is speculative. Its something that one needs to think aboutwhat does that mean for me [], what do I want to profoundly share with the public coming to Venice.

In his Paris show, Creuzet has been open-hearted. In the first of the four rooms, Creole singing and pulsating rhythms emanate from a turntable and large black heads that are festooned with fragments of raffia bags. Nearby, two conjoined forms of concentric circles fashioned from plastic, threads, and beads allude to clouds being bombed with silver iodide molecules to summon the rain during a drought.

In the adjoining rooms, suspended sculptures filled with grains, rice, and beans recall offerings to Demeterthe Greek goddess of the harvest, while amorphous sculptures with trailing threads evoke the detritus, pollution and seaweed of fishing villages and fishing nets. Roosters, which are emblematic of France, have settled on, or become trapped in, one of these intricately-made pieces.

Some of the sculptures on view gestated in Creuzets studio in Montreuil, a commune east of Paris, for three or four years before coming into being. Its as if the studio were a place of experimentation [and some pieces] need time to find their resolution, Creuzet said. One day, suddenly there are elements that take on all their meaning and end up organizing themselves and writing things. Theres a moment when the sculpture escapes me and I almost no longer have the impression of having been its author. This is the moment when the sculpture is finished and becomes a work for me.

Installation view of Julien Creuzets The Possessed of Pigalle or the Tragedy of King Christophe at High Art, Paris. Courtesy the artist.

Born in 1986 in Le Blanc Mesnil, a suburb north-east of Paris, Creuzet moved to Martinique with his parents at the age of four. His father, an assistant nurse, loved art and took the artist and his younger brother to see exhibitions and cultural events taking place on the island. At the age of 20, Creuzet returned to France to study art. An epiphany was visiting Documenta 13, curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev in 2012, featuring works by, among others, Ryan Gander, Anri Sala, and Pierre Huyghe. I discovered the curatorial beauty of an exhibition and it made me want to do my job, he reminisced.

Over the last decade, Creuzet has developed a transdisciplinary practice that encompasses poetry, performance, singing, and composing as well as visual art. An early start was his exhibition Opra-archipel at Frac Basse Normandie in 2015, named in homage to the Martinican poet douard Glissant; in the show, Creuzet explored how the ocean links the archipelago of Caribbean islands.

A big break came in 2021, when he was nominated for the prestigious Prix Marcel Duchamp. For the show, he presented a sweeping installation at the Centre Pompidou that reflected upon slavery while interweaving vibrancy and poetry. Then last December, Creuzet won the first edition of the tant Donns Prize awarded by CPGA (French Professional Committee of Art Galleries) and Villa Albertine to a living artist active in France and exhibiting at Art Basel Miami Beach. Creuzets work was on display at High Art and Andrew Kreps Gallery from New York.

Installation view for Prix Marcel Duchamp at Centre Pompidou in 2021. Photo: Bertrand Prvost

Concurrently with the show at High Art, Creuzet has an exhibition view at Luma Westbau in Zurich (running until May 21). He will also participated in the Liverpool Biennial, opening in June.

His attachment to poetry leads him to intertwine stories and navigate in time and space, said Bernard Blistne, who was director of the Centre Pompidou when Creuzet was nominated for the Prix Marcel Duchamp. Colonial history is [] underground, unforgivable, and unforgiven, leading Creuzet to combine politics and poetry through stories from the past and stories to be written.

Creuzet flew back to Martinique for the first time in a decade that same year. Seeing how much it had changed and realizing how out-of-step he felt linguistically was like a shock, he said. I understood that I should go home more often, because thats where my emotions, imagination, and family come from, he noted.

For his exhibition at High Art, Creuzet has returned to his contemplation of the ocean with regard to the displacement and migration of the African diaspora. In his hybridized painting-sculptures, the cruciforms of the chassis have been removed and replaced with vegetal forms, featuring barely perceptible, indistinct figures among swirling aquatic shapes, threads, and beads. Creuzet likens the figures to extras in a filmunknowable, background characters who are nonetheless crucial to a scene.

Installation view of Julien Creuzets The Possessed of Pigalle or the Tragedy of King Christophe at High Art, Paris. Courtesy the artist.

From a distance, I manage to identify or project myself into the stories or lack of them [of the figures], Creuzet said. When I say lack, Im thinking of this unresolved quest of an Afro-descendant who cant trace his family tree. Its as if my forefather were the sea, mon arrire-arrire-arrire-la-mer, mon arrire-arrire-arrire-ocan, he said mournfully. The poetic words translate to my great, great, great sea, my great, great, great ocean, in reference to ancestry.

It was perhaps thinking about a figure who traverses time and space that inspired Creuzets avatar-like character that reappears and evolves in his exhibitions. At Camden Art Centre in 2022, where Creuzet had a show after winning its Emerging Artist Prize during Frieze London, it also appeared. Martin Clark, director of Camden Art Centre, noted that the character was pulling books from their head that formed a bibliography of diaspora, African, and Caribbean writers which had informed Juliens thinking in one video work and dancing a very particular Caribbean dance of protest, independence and resistance in another.

At High Art, this as-yet-unnamed character, which has grown protrusions of feathers at the tips of their hands, appears in a wallpaper piece and an animated video work. In the latter, the figure performs the bl dance, which developed in Martinique during slavery, against a changing, blue-hued backdrop interspersed with bountiful flowers and man-made elements. It is accompanied by Creuzet singing in Creole.

Julien Creuzet The Possessed of Pigalle or the Tragedy of King Christophe: RAFT-KEEPER CAPTAIN: Well its there that we have to push hardest. And we got no choice. On the Great Salty, someone will throw you a rope. If you catch it, thats fine, youll reach land and moor there. If you fail, God help you! Then all you can do is throw yourself in the arms of Mama Water., (2023). Courtesy of the artist and High Art, Paris / Arles

Creuzet is evidently excited by the new exhibition. Yet he regrets that some of his works cannot easily reach a public in Martinique. For instance, in 2019 he made a video work, Mon corps, carcasse [], about chlordecone, a pesticide that was used in banana plantations in the French Caribbean from 1972 until 1993, three years after it was banned in France in 1990. According to Frances health ministry, around 90 percent of the population in Martinique and Guadeloupe were contaminated. Following a 16-year-long investigation, a French court decreed the closure of proceedings in a case about contamination in January.

It would have been good if this work about chlordecone had been visible to people who were contaminated, Creuzet said. Referring to how a limited-edition work acquired by a museum tends not to be diffused via YouTube or other virtual channels, he added: These systems could be tested and modified. Im interested in NFTs in terms of how a work has a digital code and identification that enables it to be shown more widely.

For now, at least, he focuses on his largely European and American-based audience. As Creuzet surveyed the show at High Art, he emphasized how he wanted visitors to live an experience in his exhibitions. When one leaves, one will have gone through sensations and emotions, joyful and tense moments, without it becoming something heavy and sad, he said. Theres joy and emancipation in the atmosphere that I want to share.

The Possessed of Pigalle or the Tragedy of King Christophe is on view at High Art, Paris, until April 8, 2023.

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How French-Caribbean Artist Julien Creuzet Uses Creole Hymns and Digital Avatars to Retrace African Ancestry - artnet News

The Caribbean’s Hottest Culinary Event Is Coming to Antigua – Caribbean Journal

Whether youre having sushi by the pool at Rokuni, savoring Venetian cicchetti on the beach at Wild Tamarind or enjoying grazing boards at the Antigua Vintage Tea House, Antigua and Barbuda is filled with exceptional, unforgettable culinary experiences.

Indeed, Antigua and Barbudas dynamic food scene might just be one of the Caribbeans best-kept secrets.

But now Antigua and Barbuda is letting the secret out with a major new Caribbean culinary experience: Antigua and Barbuda Restaurant Week a 14-day culinary event celebrates the destinations spectacular food scene.

The landmark new event covers 14 days in May, from May 7 to May 21, with eateries all over the island participating.

Throughout the two weeks, eateries on the island, from fine-dining restaurants to delicious local food spots, will be offering prix fixe lunch and dinners with set prices of either $25, $50 or $75.

And thats just the beginning: many eateries will be creating special menus, adding new tasting options and bringing in celebrity chefs for the occasion.

Participating restaurants include Wild Tamarind, Rokuni, Like a Latte, Sheer Rocks, Maia, The Chimney, The Larder, Big Banana, Catherines Cafe, Spices of India, the Vintage Tea House Cafe and Anas on the Beach.

RestaurantWeekis an exciting opportunity for Antigua to showcase and celebrate its various culinary experiences, at a wide range of prices, said Alex Grimley, managing partner of Rocks Group, which has three restaurants participating: Sheer Rocks, Catherines Cafe and Rokuni.

All three of Rocks Groups eateries, for example, are putting their own spin on the event: at Catherines Cafe, the eatery will showcase ifs French-inspired dishes on the beach. Rokuni, the spectacular new Asian fusion eatery on the island, will offer Asian-inspired sharing menus.

Experiences will be available at a variety of price points and we will be running some exclusive special events with guest chefs and winemakers throughoutRestaurantWeek, Grimley told Caribbean Journal.

The event culminates with the Antigua and Barbuda Food and Art Experience on May 21, which will fuse cuisine and art native to Antigua with a multi-sensory event.

A number of the destinations top hotels and resorts are also getting in on the action, including the Elite Island Resorts portfolio, which includes Antiguas Hammock Cove, St Jamess Club, Galley Bay, The Verandah and Pineapple Beach Club.

May is a fantastic time visit Antigua. The water is spectacular, the scenery is amazing and enjoying the islands best restaurants during an event like Restaurant Week is just a great opportunity for travelers to get the most out of their Caribbean vacation, said Larry Basham, chief operating officer of Elite Island Resorts. Antigua is one of the best culinary destinations in the Caribbean.

Elite Island Resorts is including a $500 air credit valid for Antigua Restaurant Week vacations if reserved before the end of March. For more, call 800-858-4618.

For more, visit Antigua and Barbuda Restaurant Week.

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Families in Latin America and the Caribbean are still struggling to recover from the pandemic – World – ReliefWeb

UNICEF survey finds half of households with children in the region are putting less food on their plates.

PANAMA CITY, 17 October 2022 Three years on, many families in Latin America and the Caribbean are still struggling to bounce back from the pandemic, according to a regional survey conducted by UNICEF. During the pandemic, half of households with children in Latin America and the Eastern Caribbean reduced food portion sizes for adults, and one in ten reduced portion sizes for children.

Families are not only eating smaller portions but also skipping meals. In the survey, 15 per cent of households with children reported eating less than three meals per day, up from 8 per cent in 2019, before the pandemic.

The shock of the pandemic is far from over. Many parents are still struggling to recover the jobs they lost during the pandemic and cant afford to put enough food on their childrens plates. The most vulnerable families havent bounced back, putting childrens health and wellbeing at risk, said Youssouf Abdel-Jelil, UNICEF Regional Director a.i. for Latin America and the Caribbean.

According to the survey, just 60 per cent of adults in households with children are working, down from 67 per cent before the pandemic. For many the work is precarious: 37 per cent of households with children rely on informal income.

While the most vulnerable families needs persist, the survey found that just 24 per cent of households with children currently receive some form of government support, down from 43 per cent in 2020. Food, employment, and medical attention are the main demands of families.

Families in Latin America and the Caribbean have been hit several times, not just by the socioeconomic impact of COVID-19, but also by rising inflation due to the crisis in Ukraine. Without support, even more families will be pushed into poverty. Children must be at the heart of national social protection policies, to help them and their families recover and thrive, Abdel-Jelil added.

UNICEF calls on governments to continue investing in children and giving their families the support they need to reduce the lifelong effects of poverty.

Media contacts

Sendai ZeaCommunication Specialist (Emergencies)UNICEF Latin America and the CaribbeanTel: +507 6821 0843Email: sczea@unicef.org

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Families in Latin America and the Caribbean are still struggling to recover from the pandemic - World - ReliefWeb

Coral reefs in the Caribbean continue to be under bleaching conditions | Loop Caribbean News – Loop News Caribbean

The Barbados-based Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology (CIMH) Tuesday said that the coral reef in the entire region continues to be under bleaching watch conditions and that warning conditions are becoming more prevalent.

In its latest edition of the Caribbean Coral Reef Watch, CIMH said the bleaching outlook for the Caribbean indicates that the Windward Islands Dominica, Grenada, St Lucia and St Vincent and the Grenadines as well as the Leeward Antilles including Antigua and Barbuda, St Kitts-Nevis, Montserrat, Anguilla and Trinidad and Tobago will be experiencing Alert Level 1 and 2 conditions fromOctober, extending into December.

It said waters around the Windward Islands are at Alert Level 1, which means that bleaching is expected. According to CIMH, Alert Level 2 means there is widespread bleaching and some mortality is expected.

In its four-month outlook, CIMH predicts that coral bleaching heat stress will be at bleaching levels from October to December

Heat stress conditions now predicted to be at Alert Level 1 and 2 throughout the Caribbean basin, October and November, the CIMH added.

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Why You Should Book Your Trip Now For This Caribbean Island – TravelAwaits

Thinking about a winter trip to the Bahamas? Now would be a good time to plan and book that vacation. Tourism in the Bahamas is currently booming, and further growth is predicted for 2023. According to the countrys Ministry of Tourism, air and sea arrivals to the Bahamas are up 515.6 percent this year compared to the same period in 2021. This boom comes as the country works hard to return to pre-pandemic levels.

Overall, the country is seeing a tourism boom two years after the pandemic began. Indeed, 2019 was a banner year for the Bahamas tourism industry, with the country attracting 7.2 million visitors, including nearly five million cruise passengers and two million stopover visitors.

Bahama tourism officials expect 2023 tourism will exceed 2019 levels. They plan to increase the number of stopover visitors who are drawn by new and renovated hotels, i.e., the expansion and relaunch at Sandals Royal Bahamian, the relaunch of Club Med in San Salvador, the new Ritz-Carlton Reserve in South Eleuthera, and the return of Grand Bahama Grand Lucayan.

The biggest growth area may come from Florida, the Bahamas largest and closest source market. Each year, the Bahamas welcomes approximately 500,000 stopover visitors from Florida. The goal is to double that number.

Why target Florida? There are 22 million Floridians, and Its a 30-minute flight to the Bahamas. The Bahamas is an easy destination, and the new and renovated hotels will make the trip even more attractive.

Who knew that the Bahamas has 16 full-fledged island destinations? The plan is to spread the growth of tourism across the archipelago. To accommodate the expected boom in tourism, the country is making big investments in infrastructure, including destinations like Exuma, which is seeing a new wave of development.

The Bahamian people are expected to be the stars of this burgeoning tourism. Officials will promote a vibrant future focused on the Bahamian people, culture, and heritage. The plan is to step up meaningful investments and sustainability, including the return of cultural events and festivals.

Want to learn more about what the Bahamas has to offer? Check out these articles:

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Why You Should Book Your Trip Now For This Caribbean Island - TravelAwaits

Beyond Boundaries: Seeing Art History from the Caribbean – iBerkshires.com

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. On Thursday, Oct. 20, and Friday, Oct. 21, the Research and Academic Program at the Clark Art Institute hosts a Clark Conference, Beyond Boundaries: Seeing Art History from the Caribbean.

The conference begins at 9 am in the Clark's auditorium. The program is free and open to the public.

Included in a press release: Why has art historya discipline often defined by its relationship with shifting terrains of theoretical critique and analysisbeen slow to engage with Caribbean writers and thinkers, to take seriously their multidisciplinary, multi-theoretical, and multi-lingual voices? This conference asks what a deep engagement with the nuances of Caribbean intellectual thought could mean for art history.

Speakers include:

This program has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy Demands Wisdom. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in these programs do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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6 Destinations In The Caribbean With Overwater Bungalows – Travel Off Path

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Have you ever dreamed of staying in an overwater bungalow on the beach?

These are the most beautiful underwater bungalows in the Caribbean to escape to on your next vacation!

Staying in an overwater bungalow in the Maldives or Bora Bora is a bucket list item for many travelers. But you dont have to fly halfway across the world to experience an overwater bungalow.

These Caribbean overwater bungalows are much closer for American travelers, and many are more affordable too.

Some of the best overwater bungalows in the Caribbean are at Sandals Royal Caribbean in Montego Bay, Jamaica.

This all-inclusive resort offers a collection of South Pacific-style overwater bungalows where you can wake up and go for a swim in the crystal-clear turquoise waters around you before taking advantage of the many activities, amenities, and dining options included in your stay.

Check Prices At Sandals Royal Caribbean

The Bitter End Yacht Club in the British Virgin Islands has recently reopened after several years of closure due to Hurricane Irma, and they are welcoming back guests with the introduction of their all-new overwater bungalows.

This resort, which has long been popular with sailing and yacht enthusiasts in the Caribbean, is only accessible by boat, making it a secluded hideaway in one of the most beautiful parts of the world.

Another great choice for overwater bungalows in the Caribbean is Palafitos Overwater Bungalows, located in Tulum, Mexico. This resort is set on exclusive Maroma Beach, known for its white sand and crystal-clear water.

Guests can enjoy the stunning beauty of Mexicos Caribbean coast in this enclave of 30 luxury overwater bungalows. You can watch the sunrise and sunset from your bungalow, some of which include private plunge pools.

If youre looking for a romantic and secluded getaway, the overwater bungalows at Amanyara in Turks & Caicos will not disappoint.

Set against an 18,000-acre nature preserve on one of the islands most beautiful beaches, this luxury resort offers overwater bungalows that will become your own personal paradise.

Check Prices At Amanyara

Thatch Caye Resort in Belize offers some of the most affordable overwater bungalows in the Caribbean if you are looking to experience tropical luxury on a smaller budget, with rates starting at $699 USD per night for a couple.

This resort, which is located on a tiny island off the coast of Belize and only accessible by boat, is also all-inclusive. Youll be able to enjoy meals and activities like kayaking, paddleboarding, and snorkeling in your own secluded island getaway.

Check Prices At Thatch Caye Resort

Another one of the best overwater bugalows in the Caribbean is the collection at Royalton Antigua in Antigua & Barbuda.

This all-inclusive resort is known for being one of the most luxurious on the island, and their overwater bungalows are held to the same high standard. Each one includes a private plunge pool and additional exclusive amenities to make your trip as relaxing as possible.

Check Prices At Royalton Antigua

These are the best overwater bungalows in the Caribbean that are only a short flight away for American travelers.

While overwater bungalows are a luxury travel experience, some of these Caribbean overwater bungalows offer more affordable rates than those in the Maldives or Bora Bora.

Rates at these overwaters bungalows start at:

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This hurricane-hit Caribbean community has an innovative new way to keep the lights on – Environmental Defense Fund

Video by Leslie Von Pless

Caribbean islands contribute just a fraction of a percent of global climate pollution, yet they are among the hardest hit by climate impacts, including more intense hurricanes.

At the Victory Center, a special needs school in St. Johns, Antigua, Environmental Defense Fund and the Antigua and Barbuda Department of Environment are working together to see how an electric school bus can help the school stay up and running, even if a hurricane knocks out the power.

If schools are closed for an extended period of time, a lot of our students can really struggle, says Victory Center principal Kelly Hedges. Its important to get the power back on so they can return to normalcy as quickly as possible.

When equipped with two-way chargers, large electric vehicles like trucks and buses become mobile battery packs. They can plug directly into a building, such as a school, hospital or emergency shelter, and provide enough power to keep the lights on and run critical equipment.

In places that are vulnerable to power outages, bidirectional charging could be a lifeline for local communities.

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This hurricane-hit Caribbean community has an innovative new way to keep the lights on - Environmental Defense Fund

Latin America & The Caribbean Weekly Situation Update (10-16 October 2022) as of 17 October – Colombia – ReliefWeb

Attachments

REGIONAL: HURRICANE JULIA

KEY FIGURES

38 PEOPLE KILLED IN CENTRAL AMERICA

1.6M+ PEOPLE AFFECTED ACROSS CENTRAL AMERICA AND COLOMBIA

The death toll from Tropical Storm Julia has risen to at least 38 people in northern Central America. The devasting storm has affected more than 1.6 million people across Central America and Colombia. In affected countries, humanitarian coordination teams have been activated and continue to provide support to government-led response efforts. The humanitarian community remains concerned about the impacts on an already precarious livelihood and food security situation as well as housing and shelter needs and protection for displaced populations.

In Nicaragua, where Julia made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane, more than 800 homes have suffered varying degrees of damage while some 200,000 people were temporarily left without electricity and access to drinking water. Julias impacts have been devasting across large swaths of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, compounding the impacts of an already active rainy season. More than 24,600 people in these countries were forced to seek refuge in emergency shelters after Julias passage.

These three countries have multi-year Humanitarian Response Plans (HRP) that cover many of the areas affected by Julia. However, these HRPs remain significantly underfunded, making it difficult for response efforts to keep pace with mounting needs and creating greater risks for the accumulation of unmet needs that will leave affected populations even more exposed to future shocks.

In El Salvador, preliminary estimates from the World Food Programme (WFP) indicate that around 180,000 people already facing acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 3 or above) have been affected by heavy rains. More than 1.3 million people have been affected by Julia in Guatemala, adding to the over 5.7 million affected during the rainy season. In Honduras, more than 148,000 people have been affected by Julia, bringing the total population affected during the rainy season to more than 188,000 people.

Before battering Central America, Julia passed over northern South America, where La Nia-driven rains have wreaked havoc in recent weeks and months. In Colombia, more than 150,000 people were affected by floods and strong winds in the northern region of La Guajira, home to extremely vulnerable indigenous populations that face high levels of food insecurity and malnutrition.

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Latin America & The Caribbean Weekly Situation Update (10-16 October 2022) as of 17 October - Colombia - ReliefWeb

Juan Carlos Salazar: Latin America and the Caribbean have particularly favourable conditions for the production of SAF – Aviacionline

During the Open Meeting of the 2022 edition of the ALTA AGM & Airline Leaders Forum held in Buenos Aires, the Secretary General of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), Juan Carlos Salazar, spoke about the challenges facing the industry as it moves out of the pandemic.

The first point made by the executive was related to the tension created between the need for continued growth and long-term sustainability. Specifically, from the point of view of sustainable and environmentally friendly tourism, Salazar pointed out that this requires tourists who can arrive at their destination on zero-emission flights. This poses challenges for those who design and manufacture aircraft and for those in charge of managing company fleets. Fleet management will have a huge impact on the chances of reaching the zero emissions target by 2050, the Secretary added.

FlyZero: Green hydrogen is key to zero-emission aviation future

He also stressed the importance of global cooperation and collaboration to achieve the goal. We need to harmonise the regulatory framework globally. I believe that the way to achieve emission reductions is through our CORSIA programme. The Organisation has a central role to play here, and it must work with all private actors. ICAOs CORSIA programme is the first global measure that represents a cooperative approach, moving away from isolated initiatives that may be taken by national or regional regulators. In other words, it offers a harmonised way to reduce emissions while minimising market distortions and respecting the unique circumstances of ICAO member states.

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In addition, Salazar indicated that the Assembly (ICAOs sovereign and most important body) stressed the importance of using SAFs to achieve carbon neutrality. On this point, he stressed that Latin America and the Caribbean have particularly favourable conditions for the production of SAF. We can become world leaders. This is why I encourage everyone to join our SAF programme.

Another issue he addressed was the resilience of air transport during the pandemic. Salazar said that ICAO decisions were a very important factor in how governments handled the pandemic. For example, the use of digital technologies to minimise contact, the implementation of digital health passports and our master health list -which allows for the validation of vaccination credentials and health passports- provided security at the most critical moments of the pandemic. Given the ever-present possibility of another event similar to 2020, he said the organisation must formulate a new strategy for the future. We must establish a comprehensive framework for crisis management.

On another point, he noted that the Global Aviation Security Plan (GASeP), which aims to improve the effectiveness of global aviation security, is being implemented. The plan aims to bring the international community together to analyse the ever-evolving threats and risks facing the civil aviation community.

Finally, Salazar said that all member states recognise that aviation is a powerful motor of economic activity. They also recognise that air transport services should be liberalised. On the industrys role during the pandemic, he added that it showed us the strategic factor that aviation matters in helping to overcome crises such as COVID-19.

To this end, he also appealed to innovation and the opportunities it creates: During the innovation forum we noted that, not surprisingly, the world at large expects aviation, due to its nature and function, to evolve and adapt better and faster than other industries. Expectations are high and the new normal demands a transformed industry and a more effective ICAO. I will seek to make it a solutions provider, said Salazar, closing his presentation.

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Juan Carlos Salazar: Latin America and the Caribbean have particularly favourable conditions for the production of SAF - Aviacionline

UNGA showcases the benefits of collaboration Caribbean Life – Caribbean Life

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) came to a close last month with the unexpected but highly encouraging move by the Danish government to put forward $13 million USD towards loss and damage. With global communities still reeling from the impacts of Hurricane Ian, causing 137 deaths (to date) and estimated over 50 billion USD in damage in the US, after hitting Jamaica, Cayman and Cuba and Hurricane Fiona hitting Bermuda, Dominican Republic, Turks and Caicos, Guadeloupe, Puerto Rico and Canada and deadly floods in Pakistan, a resolution on loss and damage has been at the top of the agenda for at-risk communities. Denmarks contribution is meant to kickstart, or further ignite after Scotlands initiation at COP26, a constructive conversation towards finding an equitable solution. COP27 must advance not just the discussion but further action. Yet this was not the only development at UNGA civil society descended en masse to New York to find opportunities to collaborate on resilience-building projects, and even before Denmarks announcement, there was optimism that the world adjacent to the right track for climate action.

The Caribbean on the World Stage

New York Climate Week, which coincided with UNGA, saw multiple side-events and discussions held that furthered conversations on public-private partnerships towards climate finance and sustainable development. Stakeholders from around the world were present and keen to find opportunities to collaborate. Knowledge-sharing events turned into pathways to unlock grants and financing for projects in the Caribbean, and allowed for constructive conversations with representatives from the private and public sectors. A key consideration that was often brought up throughout climate week and UNGA, was the need to complement the innovation we are seeing especially in the global South as well as the North with more sources of catalytic funding.

Bahamas Prime Minister, Philip Davis had some very pragmatic recommendations, including Let those who pledge write the cheque as we are heading into COP27 where there are often many announcements the details matter. Michael Bloomberg at his event announced the need for and their plan to implement greater tracking mechanisms so that amidst the announcements we are also seeing the action being realized. What we know is that there is momentum and the capacity to take action. Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley highlighted how international financial structures can and have in the past been altered to respond to crises. The same changes should be made now, she argued, to support vulnerable communities on the frontlines of climate change in future-proofing their infrastructure and institutions. With the power of the pen, we can change the capital that is available to multilateral development banks that will remove the barriers that currently exist for us to fight poverty, she expressed, With those commitments, we can make a difference in todays world.

Unlocking private finance has been a rallying call for us at the CCSA as we continue to match investors with local projects across the Caribbean, and hearing the discussions carried out at the sidelines UNGA have left us with a sense of hope heading into COP27. At UNGA, the Caribbean was firmly on the world stage. From speeches made by the leaders of Barbados, Antigua & Barbuda, Jamaica, Guyana and St. Lucia all advocating for stronger international cooperation at a financial and governance level, to discussions held between civil society and policymakers on advancing loss and damage, the Caribbean communitys interests were well represented.

Building on UNGA

We are now in a critical moment between UNGA and COP27 where there must continue to be discussions, negotiations and progress made on key issues. UNGA has provided multiple avenues for new solutions especially on loss and damage. The opportunities created at UNGA can be further developed through regional meetings such as the 2nd Hydrogen Congress for Latin America & the Caribbean (H2LAC) or the Barbados Chamber of Commerce & Industrys Renewable Energy Expo. Likewise, we need to take the time to build bridges with other communities in similar situations, as Prime Minister Mia Mottley expressed recently, The ability for leaders and experts of island nations to come together on the basis of our shared experiences during this climate crisis, is a moment that is of great importance not just to us who live in island nations, but indeed to the entire world.

This is where the power of UNGA lies in its ability to bring world leaders, civil society, and the private sector together in order to further the conversations that spark action necessary to build a better world. Climate action requires global effort and commitment, as well as local innovation the only way to meld these together is by collaborating, sharing knowledge, and having hard discussions in order to confront the challenges ahead. Building on UNGA means building on loss and damage for communities in the Caribbean and elsewhere with the support of countries like Denmark, or finding new opportunities for resilience-building and climate financing with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The solutions for a better world are available through collaboration, following UNGA and into COP27, these pathways form and develop, eventually leading to the outcomes we seek.

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UNGA showcases the benefits of collaboration Caribbean Life - Caribbean Life

Spotted: Royal Caribbean teases Icon of the Seas reveal later this week – Royal Caribbean Blog

Could this finally be the week Royal Caribbean finally pulls back the curtain on its next new cruise ship?

Guests on at least one cruise ship got a tease that Royal Caribbean will provide more information about Icon of the Seas.

Betty Lou posted in an unofficial Icon of the Seas Facebook group a photo of the Monday edition of the Cruise Compass from Anthem of the Seas that indicates more information will be available in just a few days.

"Introducing Icon of the Seas in 3 days" is what the graphic says. Since this is the Monday edition of the Cruise Compass, that would indicate Thursday could be the day.

To be clear, the Cruise Compass makes no promises of anything. It simply teases some sort of information coming in three more days.

There is also a QR code, which brings users towww.royalcaribbean.com/icon.

Visiting the website, Royal Caribbean says, "On Thursday, October 20th, were unveiling our newest class of ship and the worlds greatest vacation Icon of the Seas".

From here, guests can sign up for an email update when more information is available.

If you look closely, you can also see what appears to be a rendering of the aft of Icon of the Seas in the background of the image.

It's also worth noting the web page's metadata contains the text, "Presenting the largest cruise ship to ever touch water, Icon of the Seas".

While we don't yet know by which metrics Icon will be the largest, Royal Caribbean has hinted Icon could be larger than the Oasis Class.

Royal Caribbean also posted a new video teaser with new looks at icon of the Seas renderings.

No matter what is announced later this week, it seems Royal Caribbean is going to share more information of some kind.

To say Royal Caribbean has been tight-lipped about Icon of the Seas would be an understatement.

With the ship set to debut likely little more than a year from now (late 2023 is the target date), Royal Caribbean has provided little details about the ship.

There's been no reveal of what the ship even looks like, let alone what features it will have. There's no official word where the ship will sail from, itineraries, or any other pertinent information.

Royal Caribbean has been keeping the entire project as secretive as possible up to now in order to maintain a competitive edge, as well as to likely drum up intrigue among cruise fans eager to know more.

Icon of the Seas is the first of its kind for Royal Caribbean and the first of a new class of ships. Royal Caribbean has not released a new ship class in over a decade; instead, the company has continued to expand its Oasis-class and Quantum-class ships, including Wonder of the Seas in 2022 and Odyssey of the Seas in 2021.

Icon of the Seas is set to debut in late 2023.

There's about 3,000 people working on the ship every day. At its current pace, Icon of the Seas will be 80% complete in December from a construction perspective.

Icon of the Seas will become the cruise lines first LNG powered ship in its fleet.

LNG powered cruise ships feature dual engines that utilize liquified natural gas to propel the ship. This makes the ships more efficient and environmentally friendly.

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Spotted: Royal Caribbean teases Icon of the Seas reveal later this week - Royal Caribbean Blog