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#11 - Small Island Communities Leading Global Climate Technology Adaptation image

#11 - Small Island Communities Leading Global Climate Technology Adaptation

S1 E11 · Blue Economy Primer
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167 Plays1 year ago

In this episode, we speak with Lelei LeLaulu, a preeminent thought leader, diplomat, and pioneer in the realm of United Nations sustainable development policy, island state climate resilience, renewable energy independence, and cultural preservation. Lelei shares his keen understanding of how island and coastal communities can harness the benefits of sustainable tourism, zero carbon ocean-based renewable energy technologies, and debt relief, while leveraging the transformative potential of the incumbent “bad boy” forces of extractive mining and fossil fuel industries.

From his diverse experience, Lelei gives us glimpse into the challenges and opportunities confronted by at-risk island and coastal communities seeking to effectively navigate existential climate-induced threats to their cultural heritage, economy, and way of life; exacerbated by the accelerating loss of landmasses that they have called home for countless generations. Originally from Samoa, he is a highly respected point of reference for government and industry leaders across the broad reach of Pacific, Polynesian, and Caribbean communities, helping them realize what might be the opportunities of “ocean gain”; Lelei’s alternative way of looking at the challenges of net global “land loss”.

Please visit the episode 11 webpage to find additional links, references and background information.

GUEST BIO:
Lelei LeLaulu
Development Entrepreneur

Lelei LeLaulu is a development entrepreneur working at the confluence of climate change, tourism, food security and renewable energy. Lelei’s career roamed across journalism, diplomacy, international development, sustainable tourism, and consulting governments and corporates on strategic planning. He is president of the Earth Council Alliance, a member of the High Level Group reviewing the 10-year development plan of the Asian Development Bank, and set up the Global Partnership for Oceans of the World Bank. At the International Finance Corporation he advised on sustainable development, and represented the World Bank on the Blue Guardians.

Lelei co-founded the World Tourism Forum in Brazil, the Global Sustainable Tourism Alliance with USAID, the Oceania Sustainable Tourism Alliance,  the Caribbean Media Exchange and the Global Ocean Energy Alliance. In addition to the Pacific Leadership Program of the Australian Government, he advised the Pacific Ocean Commissioner and the Secretary-General of the Pacific Islands Forum of government leaders.

For over a decade he was Chairman of the Foundation for the Peoples of the South Pacific the oldest and largest non-profit development network in the Pacific islands, and for another decade he was President/CEO of the development and humanitarian agency, Counterpart International, expanding its operations to the Caribbean, Latin America and Africa.

Lelei was a member of the small team which gave the UN its first major reform, was Secretary of the Task Force to Re-orient UN Public Information Activities, and Chairman for a decade of the Committee for the Security and Independence of the International Civil Service working on the release of hostages and detained people. He was a member of the team that organized the series of summits and global conferences in the 1990s known as the "Development Continuum" which defined the global agenda which led to the Sustainable Development Goals. In addition to working for the Hudson Institute think tank, Lelei served as a correspondent in Africa and the Middle East, and edited the Middle East Newsletter out of New York.

Lelei’s LinkedIn

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