Against the backdrop of the 2026 Berlin Climate Mobility Forum, a top Caribbean official is amplifying a long-silenced call: Small Island Developing States (SIDS) like Antigua and Barbuda must be granted far greater influence in global climate governance, rather than being sidelined from decisions that shape their very survival.
In a post-forum interview, Michael Joseph, who serves as Antigua and Barbuda’s Minister of Health, Wellness, Environment and Civil Service Affairs, drew a stark contrast that underscores the injustice at the heart of the global climate crisis. While Caribbean nations collectively contribute less than a fraction of one percent of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions, they bear a wildly disproportionate share of climate harm, from crippling extreme weather to slow-onset disasters like rising sea levels that threaten to erase entire territories.
Joseph emphasized that this gap in responsibility is matched by a gap in representation: even as climate-induced displacement and mobility emerge as defining global challenges of the 21st century, Caribbean voices remain drastically underrepresented in international negotiations focused on adaptation and climate-driven migration. “Caribbean voices are diminished even more,” Joseph noted, arguing that the region cannot afford to be an afterthought in policy processes that will directly determine the future of its people and nations.
The region’s unique vulnerability is on clear display every year, Joseph pointed out: for six months annually, Caribbean communities brace for the destructive force of Atlantic hurricanes, which can wipe out years of development gains in a matter of hours. He cited recent examples across the region, including Antigua and Barbuda and Dominica, where single storm events have caused catastrophic damage to infrastructure, crippled local economies, and reversed hard-won progress in poverty reduction and public service expansion.
For SIDS across the Caribbean, climate risk is not a distant hypothetical. “For many of us, it is not a matter of if, but who is going to be impacted,” Joseph said, framing the urgency of the region’s demand for a permanent seat at the table when global leaders negotiate climate financing and resilience-building measures. Without a direct voice in these discussions, he argued, policies are often designed that fail to address the unique needs of small island nations, leaving communities more exposed to preventable harm.
To address the systemic barriers that block SIDS from accessing critical climate support, Joseph renewed calls for the broader adoption of the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index (MVI) by international financial institutions. The minister explained that traditional metrics used to determine eligibility for grants, concessional loans, and other climate-related funding often fail to capture the full scope of small island states’ inherent vulnerability. These outdated frameworks force many SIDS into unfair disadvantage, locking them out of the affordable support they need to prepare for and recover from climate disasters.
Joseph closed by reiterating the region’s core demands: increased climate finance tailored to the needs of SIDS, formal and meaningful representation in global climate decision-making bodies, and targeted international support to protect the livelihoods, distinct cultures, and traditional ways of life that are now at risk due to rising global temperatures.
Held in Berlin, the annual Climate Mobility Forum gathers policymakers, academic researchers, and leaders of international organizations to address the rapidly growing challenge of displacement and migration triggered by climate change, a crisis that is projected to displace hundreds of millions of people globally by mid-century if decisive action is not taken.









