Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands

Abstract Small island developing states face particular challenges to ensure their infrastructure promotes social, economic, and environmental well‐being. Closing the achievement gap for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) involves prioritization and coordination across multiple sectors. With a...

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Main Authors: Daniel Adshead, Orlando Roman, Scott Thacker, Jim W. Hall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-02-01
Series:Earth's Future
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2020EF001699
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author Daniel Adshead
Orlando Roman
Scott Thacker
Jim W. Hall
author_facet Daniel Adshead
Orlando Roman
Scott Thacker
Jim W. Hall
author_sort Daniel Adshead
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Small island developing states face particular challenges to ensure their infrastructure promotes social, economic, and environmental well‐being. Closing the achievement gap for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) involves prioritization and coordination across multiple sectors. With an application to the country of Saint Lucia, this paper develops a stakeholder‐driven analysis framework integrating four interdependent infrastructure sectors (electricity, water, wastewater, and solid waste). Drawing on extensive consultation with decision‐makers in‐country—134 stakeholders from 18 government ministries, agencies, academia, or the private sector—the analysis identifies specific interventions that could be implemented over the next decades to meet future needs for sustainable infrastructure services. These interventions are congruent with the government's development plans. Long‐term, cross‐sectoral portfolios of investments and policies (“strategies”) are developed which demonstrably reach the targets of the SDGs and Saint Lucia's emissions reduction commitments under the Paris Agreement. The sequencing of these investments or policies is designed to optimize their efficiency and impact over time, identifying “quick wins” while ensuring that there is sufficient action to provide services in the long‐term sustainably. A comparison of costs associated with each strategy suggests that accounting for interdependencies and taking a long‐term perspective can save costs over the life of infrastructure investments. This process of infrastructure assessment is applicable beyond the small island context, allowing practitioners a means to undertake systematic assessment of a country's future infrastructure needs and to develop appropriate solutions aligned with its national objectives and international commitments.
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spelling doaj.art-0ec168d13c43419c8ee7c6e2c56d6f882022-12-22T00:50:59ZengWileyEarth's Future2328-42772021-02-0192n/an/a10.1029/2020EF001699Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small IslandsDaniel Adshead0Orlando Roman1Scott Thacker2Jim W. Hall3Environmental Change Institute University of Oxford Oxford UKCentre for Sustainable Development University of Cambridge Cambridge UKEnvironmental Change Institute University of Oxford Oxford UKEnvironmental Change Institute University of Oxford Oxford UKAbstract Small island developing states face particular challenges to ensure their infrastructure promotes social, economic, and environmental well‐being. Closing the achievement gap for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) involves prioritization and coordination across multiple sectors. With an application to the country of Saint Lucia, this paper develops a stakeholder‐driven analysis framework integrating four interdependent infrastructure sectors (electricity, water, wastewater, and solid waste). Drawing on extensive consultation with decision‐makers in‐country—134 stakeholders from 18 government ministries, agencies, academia, or the private sector—the analysis identifies specific interventions that could be implemented over the next decades to meet future needs for sustainable infrastructure services. These interventions are congruent with the government's development plans. Long‐term, cross‐sectoral portfolios of investments and policies (“strategies”) are developed which demonstrably reach the targets of the SDGs and Saint Lucia's emissions reduction commitments under the Paris Agreement. The sequencing of these investments or policies is designed to optimize their efficiency and impact over time, identifying “quick wins” while ensuring that there is sufficient action to provide services in the long‐term sustainably. A comparison of costs associated with each strategy suggests that accounting for interdependencies and taking a long‐term perspective can save costs over the life of infrastructure investments. This process of infrastructure assessment is applicable beyond the small island context, allowing practitioners a means to undertake systematic assessment of a country's future infrastructure needs and to develop appropriate solutions aligned with its national objectives and international commitments.https://doi.org/10.1029/2020EF001699interdependenciesmitigationparticipatory modelingSDGsSIDSsustainable infrastructure
spellingShingle Daniel Adshead
Orlando Roman
Scott Thacker
Jim W. Hall
Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands
Earth's Future
interdependencies
mitigation
participatory modeling
SDGs
SIDS
sustainable infrastructure
title Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands
title_full Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands
title_fullStr Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands
title_full_unstemmed Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands
title_short Infrastructure Strategies for Achieving the Global Development Agendas in Small Islands
title_sort infrastructure strategies for achieving the global development agendas in small islands
topic interdependencies
mitigation
participatory modeling
SDGs
SIDS
sustainable infrastructure
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2020EF001699
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