“One of the things that we found is that everybody that we have met, without exception, has been supportive of the Low Carbon Development Strategy,” Dr Hardcastel said.
President Bharrat Jagdeo speaking with forester and consultant Pete Hardcastel (left), Political Scientist Dr. Deborah Davenport (second from right) and Forest Ecology Specialist, Dr. Phillipa Lincoln.
Its wide-based concept, Dr Hardcastel, said is enough conviction for the strategy to be genuinely and universally accepted as an initiative good for Guyana.
“We feel that’s a good starting point and its implementation is something that we should all need to learn about as things start moving forward,” Dr. Hardcastel.
He was accompanied in his visit to the President by Political Scientist, Dr. Deborah Davenport, and Forest Ecology Specialist, Dr. Phillipa Lincoln.
The visit to Guyana is one of a series of five national level assessments to determine Norway’s impact on climate change and forestry at the sub-national, national and global levels. The other countries include Brazil, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania and Indonesia.
Norway has partnered with Guyana to achieve one of the first attempts between a developed and a developing country to work together to implement a national scale model on how forests can be deployed to address climate change without compromising sovereignty or national development priorities.
Norway has promised up to US$30M this year, and within a matter of months the money will be coming to Guyana.
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