USP calls for bold vision and collective resolve at PIF Leaders Meeting

 

For nearly six decades, The University of the South Pacific (USP) has produced close to 70,000 graduates whose impact resonates across our 12 member countries and beyond.

This reflects the transformative of education in shaping villages, classrooms, hospitals, businesses, industries, governments, and communities throughout the region.

USP Pro-Chancellor and Chair of Council, Siosiua ‘Utoikamanu highlighted the University’s significant role at the Leaders Dialogue with CROP session this morning at the 54th Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) Leaders Meeting.

The week-long Leaders Meeting is currently underway in the Solomon Islands.

‘Utoikamanu added that education is a public good and must be made more affordable and accessible.

“We do not lack talent in the Pacific – talent is everywhere. But across our region, there are 1.86 million young people aged 15 to 24, and less than 5 percent of them are estimated to be engaged in formal tertiary education. The challenge before us is to build the bridge between this vast ocean of talent and the opportunities that can unlock it, so that the next mind to cure disease, engineer climate resilience, or design a governance model for our region is not lost to circumstance but empowered to rise,” he said.

“We see the challenges clearly: climate change, the rise of non-communicable diseases, and persistent inequality. Emerging technologies are also reshaping our world. Artificial intelligence, in particular, will transform how we learn, work, and govern. We must adapt and shape how they are used in ways that reflect our cultures, our values, and our sovereignty.”

“The ambitious 2050 vision for our Blue Pacific Continent demonstrates that we have already imagined a different future. But imagination alone is not enough. It must now be matched by resolve – by a willingness to reshape our institutions and confront the risks of fragmentation.”

In reaffirming the University’s role as a unifying force for the region, ‘Utoikamanu emphasised the importance of a shared vision and collective responsibility for the Pacific’s future.

“Our vision for the Pacific must be as bold as our potential. That must be our spirit. Our unity is our strength, and our future depends on it.”

“Of the Pacific, for the Pacific, by the Pacific – this is how we protect our collective vision so that our priorities are set by us, not for us.”

The Council of Regional Organisations of the Pacific (CROP) includes USP, PIF and The Pacific Community (SPC), Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP), Pacific Tourism Organisation (SPTO), Pacific Islands Development Program (PIDP), Pacific Power Association (PPA), Pacific Aviation Safety Office and the Forum Fisheries Agency.

Click here to access the Pro-Chancellor’s full remarks.