PR – Minister for Finance, Honourable Dennis Cornwall, departed the State on Sunday, June 21, 2026, to represent Grenada at the 2026 OPEC Fund Development Forum in Vienna, Austria.

Minister Cornwall is accompanied by Mrs. Tonia Adams Samuel, Head of the Macroeconomic  Policy Unit within the Ministry of Finance.

The Forum, held on June 23 at the historic Hofburg Palace, brings together heads of state,  ministers, policymakers, development finance institutions and private-sector leaders to explore  practical solutions to some of the most pressing development challenges facing vulnerable  countries.

Convened under the theme, “A Transition That Empowers Our Tomorrow,” the Forum focuses  on strengthening global partnerships, mobilising capital for priority development needs and  advancing sustainable, inclusive and climate-resilient development.

A major area of discussion is the growing financing gap affecting climate-vulnerable developing  countries, particularly in critical sectors such as water, education and health. Many of these  countries continue to face high borrowing costs, limited fiscal space, unsustainable debt burdens  and financing arrangements that do not adequately reflect their vulnerability to climate-related  shocks.

The Forum will also advance discussions surrounding the Vulnerability to Viability Compact, a  joint initiative involving the OPEC Fund for International Development, the Government of  Barbados, as Chair of the Climate Vulnerable Forum and V20 Finance Ministers, and participating  development finance institutions.

The Compact is intended to improve the availability, affordability, predictability and effectiveness  of development financing for the 74 countries represented by the CVF-V20.

Its work is centred on four key pillars: increasing access to concessional financing; mobilising  private and philanthropic capital; strengthening country ownership of development priorities; and  expanding shock-responsive debt and financing instruments.

Attention will also be given to blended financing, guarantees, local-currency solutions, political risk mitigation, debt suspension clauses, emergency liquidity facilities and other mechanisms that  can help vulnerable countries maintain essential public services following natural disasters and  other economic shocks.

Grenada’s participation provides an important opportunity to contribute the perspective of Small  Island Developing States, which remain highly exposed to climate-related disasters while  operating within narrow fiscal and borrowing constraints.

The engagement also supports the Government’s continued efforts to secure affordable and  sustainable financing for national development, strengthen fiscal and climate resilience and build  partnerships capable of supporting investments in essential services and productive sectors.

The Ministry of Finance remains committed to advocating for a more responsive international  financial architecture that recognises the unique vulnerabilities of small states and provides fairer  access to long-term development financing.

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