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Thursday, May 8, 2025

Inspiring women in climate change–The story of Rueanna Haynes

by

Ryan Bachoo
200 days ago
20241020

Lead Ed­i­tor-News­gath­er­ing

ryan.ba­choo@cnc3.co.tt

Per­haps it was al­ways her des­tiny to be some­one who saves the en­vi­ron­ment. Long be­fore she got in­to cli­mate change, Ruean­na Haynes was a child who loved watch­ing Cap­tain Plan­et.

On a Sun­day, her fam­i­ly took walks as they of­ten spent time in na­ture, and Haynes would sit and draw the trees. It would have a last­ing ef­fect on her. “I still feel hap­py be­ing in na­ture,” she told the WE mag­a­zine in a sit-down in­ter­view last week.

She now trav­els the world speak­ing on be­half of small is­land states and their plight brought on by cli­mate change. Since 2016, Haynes has been work­ing with Cli­mate An­a­lyt­ics, a glob­al cli­mate sci­ence and pol­i­cy in­sti­tute en­gaged around the world in dri­ving and sup­port­ing cli­mate ac­tion aligned to the 1.5°C warm­ing lim­it.

With a com­mit­ment to help­ing the re­gion stave off the ef­fects of a warm­ing world, she pushed for a Caribbean of­fice. In 2021, that wish was grant­ed. Cli­mate An­a­lyt­ics Caribbean was launched with Haynes as its di­rec­tor.

Re­cent­ly, she be­came the new head of the diplo­ma­cy team of Cli­mate An­a­lyt­ics. Yet Haynes’ jour­ney in­to the cli­mate space start­ed rather con­fus­ing­ly. In Jan­u­ary 2009, she joined the Min­istry of For­eign Af­fairs’ Mul­ti­lat­er­al En­vi­ron­men­tal Desk. It was a ma­jor year for mul­ti­lat­er­al diplo­ma­cy in this coun­try. Trinidad host­ed the Fifth Sum­mit of the Amer­i­c­as be­fore wel­com­ing the Com­mon­wealth Heads of Gov­ern­ment Meet­ing.

As world lead­ers, in­clud­ing for­mer US pres­i­dent Barack Oba­ma and for­mer French pres­i­dent Nico­las Sarkozy flew in­to T&T for the con­fer­ence, all eyes were on the Unit­ed Na­tions Cli­mate Change Con­fer­ence set to take place in Copen­hagen mere weeks be­fore Christ­mas that year.

“In 2009, it was a big year for mul­ti­lat­er­al­ism, diplo­ma­cy, and cli­mate change. I en­tered the scene then. It was a big year for every­thing. I think it was one of the first times in the his­to­ry of the cli­mate process where, at a glob­al lev­el, there was this recog­ni­tion of cli­mate change as an is­sue for diplo­ma­cy. It had been seen be­fore as a niche and en­vi­ron­men­tal is­sue for sci­en­tists, but every­thing changed in that year,” Haynes re­called.

She would grow with that new diplo­mat­ic move­ment of which cli­mate change had tak­en on. It was a vast­ly dif­fer­ent ca­reer from what the San Fer­nan­do na­tive had planned for her­self. Hav­ing start­ed study­ing his­to­ry and French at the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies, Haynes would switch her ma­jor to law at UWI and even­tu­al­ly at­tend Hugh Wood­ing Law School.

She would al­so go on to study en­vi­ron­men­tal pol­i­cy at Sci­ences Po Uni­ver­si­ty in Paris be­fore head­ing to George­town Uni­ver­si­ty Law Cen­tre in Wash­ing­ton, DC, to com­plete a Mas­ter’s de­gree in In­ter­na­tion­al Le­gal Stud­ies. She speaks glow­ing­ly of her grand­moth­er, whom she says had an out­sized in­flu­ence on her grow­ing up.

“The home I grew up in was one that was very free to be ex­act­ly who we want­ed to be. I nev­er felt like I had some ceil­ing placed on me. We were free to dream as big as we liked,” she said when speak­ing of her grand­moth­er, who helped raise her and her cousins as chil­dren.

Haynes was at COP26 in Glas­gow when she re­ceived the news her grand­moth­er had passed on. At the time, the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic was still hav­ing its ef­fects on air trav­el and fu­ner­als, and so she would take a day off the con­fer­ence to de­liv­er the eu­lo­gy of her grand­moth­er Mar­got Gibbs vir­tu­al­ly.

De­spite her con­sis­tent climb in the cli­mate change move­ment and her im­pres­sive aca­d­e­m­ic CV, noth­ing could pre­pare her for the mul­ti­lat­er­al en­vi­ron­ment she was en­ter­ing.

Haynes would en­counter sev­er­al chal­lenges in her ear­ly years in the glob­al cli­mate change process. She was a woman. She was a black woman. And she was a black woman from a small is­land hard­ly any­one knew.

Al­most im­me­di­ate­ly, Haynes was about to be a ne­go­tia­tor for the Al­liance of Small Is­land States.

The St Joseph’s Con­vent, San Fer­nan­do alum­nus re­calls, “It was very dif­fi­cult to be tak­en se­ri­ous­ly in those rooms. At the time, those rooms were dom­i­nat­ed by white men, and cli­mate change was gen­er­al­ly seen as a more Eu­ro­pean pri­or­i­ty, so me en­ter­ing that space as a young black woman from a ran­dom coun­try, I had chal­lenges. I was asked which part of Africa I’m from. When I said I was from Trinidad and To­ba­go, they’d re­ply, ‘Yes, but where in Africa is that?’”

Haynes said she would de­scribe the in­ter­na­tion­al process of cli­mate change as “in­her­ent­ly male, white, and vi­o­lent, so it’s a space where op­er­at­ing as a young woman of colour from a coun­try con­sid­ered to be mar­gin­alised and ir­rel­e­vant eco­nom­i­cal­ly was very in­tim­i­dat­ing.”

She said she has been shout­ed at on nu­mer­ous oc­ca­sions by her male coun­ter­parts and asked to stay qui­et. “You’d be sur­prised at the kinds of things men usu­al­ly feel free to say to you as a woman that they don’t con­sid­er an equal,” Haynes added.

She would bat­tle through the chal­lenges at the glob­al ne­go­ti­at­ing ta­ble, and as she did that, a gen­er­a­tion of young, black Caribbean women were watch­ing her rise and be­ing in­spired by her.

She is some­what obliv­i­ous to the ad­mi­ra­tion she re­ceives from young women across the re­gion, but when asked about it, she replies, “I live for this. All of my men­tors have been men, and I am very grate­ful to them for men­tor­ing me, for push­ing me and help­ing me be­lieve in my­self. How­ev­er, I did not have, when I was younger, a woman as an ex­am­ple of who I would want to be in this space. I cre­at­ed a space for my­self, so for me it’s re­al­ly im­por­tant to be the per­son I didn’t have for oth­er peo­ple.”

Since en­ter­ing the cli­mate space 15 years ago, Haynes was pre­sent­ed with the op­por­tu­ni­ty to work abroad on sev­er­al oc­ca­sions, but she had made a com­mit­ment to her coun­try that she was not pre­pared to break.

“I de­cid­ed to come back to do what I said I was go­ing to do, which was to work at the re­gion­al lev­el to try to bridge some of the gaps I see be­tween what ac­tu­al­ly hap­pens with­in the re­gion and what’s said and agreed at the in­ter­na­tion­al lev­el,” Haynes ex­plained.

Her de­ci­sion would ul­ti­mate­ly re­dound to the ben­e­fit of the re­gion, as Haynes has led nu­mer­ous projects that have helped com­mu­ni­ties across the is­lands. As the Caribbean stands on the front­lines of the cli­mate fight, Haynes had the op­tion of trav­el­ling to safer pas­tures; in­stead, she chose to stay and fight for those liv­ing on small is­lands. 


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