Carlon Knight, Senior Projects Officer in the Project Management Office of the Ministry of Finance and Corporate Governance, has been selected to participate in the Sustainable Finance Executive Programme at the University of Oxford — ranked the world's number one university for ten consecutive years by the Times Higher Education World University Rankings.
Running from 6 to 10 July at Oxford's Rhodes House, the programme is delivered by the Oxford Sustainable Finance Group, the world's largest research and teaching centre dedicated to sustainable finance, under founding Director Dr Ben Caldecott and Senior Associate Dr Alex Money. Mr Knight is the sole representative from a Small Island Developing State (SIDS) and the only participant from the Caribbean in this year's cohort, joining a select group of finance, policy and sustainability leaders from institutions including the International Sustainability Standards Board, Fidelity International, GFANZ, WWF-UK and the Bank of England.
As Senior Projects Officer, Mr Knight works closely with the Director, Gail Imhoff-Gordon, to oversee and coordinate Antigua and Barbuda’s portfolio of externally funded infrastructure and development projects, including climate finance initiatives supported by the World Bank, the Caribbean Development Bank, the Saudi Fund for Development, and other multilateral and sovereign financing partners. He also serves as the PMO’s Chief Risk and Compliance Officer.
Mr Knight is also an Adjunct Lecturer at The University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus, where he teaches undergraduate economics courses and convenes a graduate course in Sustainable Finance. In 2024, he was selected as an Alliance of Small Island States Fellow, supporting Antigua and Barbuda’s climate finance negotiating team at COP29 in Baku.
"Programmes like this at a world-leading institution such as Oxford are enormously important for small island developing states like Antigua and Barbuda," Knight said. "We are on the front line of climate risk, yet we are too often on the margins of the conversations shaping global sustainable finance. Building technical capacity at this level allows us to bring that expertise home and put it to work for our country. I am deeply proud to represent Antigua and Barbuda, and small island states more broadly, as the lone participant in this cohort."








