One reason Pacific Island countries continue to borrow from China is their huge demand for infrastructure.
- Darshana M. Baruah,
- Satyendra Prasad,
- Denghua Zhang
Dr. Satyendra Prasad is a nonresident senior fellow in the South Asia and Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Programs at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Dr. Prasad is the climate lead for Abt Associates based in Australia and is the former ambassador and permanent representative of the Republic of Fiji to the United Nations.
As nonresident senior fellow, Prasad joins the Indian Ocean Initiative and the Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics programs working on issues of climate and sustainability with a special focus on the Pacific region. Prasad’s expertise on small island developing states and Pacific regionalism builds upon the work produced by Carnegie’s Indian Ocean Initiative which convenes an annual summit, Ocean Nations: The Indo-Pacific Islands Dialogue. His work focuses on the nexus between islands, geopolitics, development, and climate change in the maritime domain
One reason Pacific Island countries continue to borrow from China is their huge demand for infrastructure.
In recent years, Beijing has emerged as a key economic and security player for Pacific island nations. At the same time, Pacific island states face a multitude of challenges, from the impact of climate change to rising great power competition.
Four crucial factors could boost the ocean’s ability to play a critical role in stabilizing the climate crisis.
The underwater minerals are needed for the global transition to clean energy, but the effects of extraction may pose major risks to surrounding states.
The third annual Summit of Indian and Pacific Ocean island nations, with a focus on the issues that affect them most.
How small island states in the Pacific are banding together to navigate climate change and other pressing issues.
Join us for a special two-day dialogue on security in the Indo-Pacific and island nations' perceptions of regional priorities and challenges.