No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsCosta RicaCentral America hopes to resume climate agenda

Central America hopes to resume climate agenda

Central American countries hope to resume environmental talks in their relations with the United States when Joe Biden takes office, says Costa Rican Foreign Minister Rodolfo Solano. “We are very confident that issues that had been left aside, such as the strengthening of the multilateral system and climate change, will return to the forefront” in Central America’s relations with the United States, Solano said in an interview with AFP.

“The Central American region is one of the most vulnerable to climate change, and (it is important) to have an ally like the United States to understand that, with climate change, concrete actions must be taken to mitigate it and generate the conditions for adaptation,” the chancellor added.

In November, the Central American region suffered the double scourge of major hurricanes Eta and Iota, which left hundreds of deaths and millions in damages to infrastructure, aggravating an already precarious economic situation provoked by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Outgoing President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the 2015 Paris Agreement, in which the world community outlined a path to combat climate change and accelerate actions necessary for a sustainable future.

However, President-elect Biden announced that on the first day of his term, January 20, he will bring the North American country back into the deal.

Costa Rica & US as allies

Solano highlighted that Costa Rica has been a leader in the agenda for reducing emissions that cause global warming. At least 98% of its electric grid is powered by renewable electricity, and the country’s decarbonization plan seeks to eliminate fossil fuels by 2050.

The foreign minister is confident that this plan will serve as the basis for identifying cooperation agreements with Washington and the European Union.

The United States is a historical ally with enormous political and economic influence in Central America.

Given this, Trump’s refusal to accept the electoral result of November’s election raised concern about the United States’s position as a promoter of democracy in regions such as Central America.

But the Costa Rican minister expressed his confidence “in the solid, historic democratic institutions of the United States.”

Regional relationships

For Solano, who became foreign minister in February, a solid relationship with Central America is essential to Costa Rican diplomacy. The minister has even tried to improve relations with Nicaragua — still tense after a 2010 border dispute, when Nicaraguan troops occupied a small Costa Rican territory that they claimed as their own.

The case was resolved in 2015 by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which recognized the sovereignty of Costa Rica in the disputed territory.

“The Central American region and the Caribbean is a priority for our administration since I took office,” says Solano, noting that he has already met twice with his Nicaraguan counterpart, Denis Moncada. The foreign ministers of the neighboring countries had not met since 2010.

Solano considers it important that the region strengthen its integration ahead of the bicentennial of its independence, in 2022.

“Countries like Costa Rica, with 5 million inhabitants, and Panama (…) are very small economies. But the region as a whole has 50 million inhabitants and is a market that draws attention from the European Union and Asian markets,” he said.

Trending Now

High Surf hits Costa Rica’s Caribbean Coast with Rip Current Risk

If you're planning beach days on the Caribbean side over the next several days, plan for rough water. Waves are running above two meters...

Costa Rica Capital Reverses Course on Restaurant and Bar Restriction

San José’s municipal government is moving to discard a proposed entertainment regulation that would have restricted dancing, live music, DJs and karaoke at restaurants...

Costa Rica Approves Budget Shift From Childcare and Housing Programs

Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly has given final approval to an extraordinary budget that redirects ₡70 billion (about $154 million) previously assigned to childcare, nutrition...

Costa Rica Colon Hits Record High as Dollar Falls to All Time Low

The U.S. dollar closed the week at its cheapest level in the history of Costa Rica's official currency market, capping a four-year slide that...

A Little-Known Tick Virus Turns Up in Costa Rica for the First Time

Costa Rican scientists have detected the Jingmen tick virus in the country for the first time, the earliest confirmed presence of the pathogen anywhere...

How Costa Rica’s Forest Recycled a Dead Deer in Just Two Weeks

I probably shouldn’t have done this. That’s what I was thinking as I lay, flat on my back, in the middle of a trail...

Could Costa Rican Farmer Be the Oldest Person Alive?

José Flores Flores, a Guanacaste farmer whose reported birth date is supported by Costa Rican civil and church records, celebrated his 119th birthday Saturday...

Costa Rica Tightens Immigration Enforcement in the Central Valley

If you live in or are passing through Costa Rica's Central Valley, keep your immigration papers on you. Migración has announced a fresh round...

How to Avoid Fake Weight-Loss Injections in Costa Rica

If you are shopping for a weekly weight-loss shot in Costa Rica, start with one fact that changes everything else: the drug most people...
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel