The **Greater Caribbean**, a mosaic of **biodiversity**, culture, and history, stands at a crucial crossroads that will define its future. While Caribbean states increasingly embrace the **blue economy** as a driver of **sustainable development**, the **ecological foundations** that underpin this vision — coral reefs, mangroves, and sea grass beds — are deteriorating [due to **climate change** and **pollution**](https://noticiasambientales.com/medio-ambiente/alarmante-casi-el-50-de-las-especies-de-corales-tropicales-en-peligro/).
This reality exposes a deeper contradiction: for the **blue economy** to be viable, inclusive, and enduring, it must be **regenerative**, based on participatory socio-environmental systems, nature-based solutions, regional sovereignty over **marine resources**, and a resilient, low-**emission energy transition.
However, this shared heritage faces growing **ecological threats** that jeopardize these aspirations.
## **The blue economy: between promise and peril**
Caribbean governments and multilateral institutions have promoted the blue economy as a new path to **sustainable growth**.
Coastal tourism, fishing, and **marine biotechnology** are emerging as strategies to diversify economies traditionally reliant on international trade and large-scale **tourism**.

For instance, **Barbados** launched the world’s first [**climate-for-debt initiative**](https://noticiasambientales.com/medio-ambiente/bahamas-lanza-canje-de-deuda-por-conservacion-oceanica-con-el-apoyo-del-bid/), creating the Blue Green Bank with support from the Caribbean Development Bank to finance climate-resilient projects in water and sanitation.
In Belize, an alliance with **The Nature Conservancy** led to the conversion of US$364 million of **national debt**, reducing it by 12% of the country’s GDP and allocating US$180 million to **marine conservation**, including a commitment to **protect 30% of Belizean waters**.
Meanwhile, the **Dominican Republic** has integrated the blue economy into its national **climate adaptation** plan, recognizing that its marine ecosystems generate approximately US$1.79 billion annually, around 1.58% of the national GDP.
However, these advancements remain fragile in the face of increasing **ecological stress**. The prevailing global development model continues to be productivity-oriented and ignores the growing fragility of **marine ecosystems**.
Scientific studies warn that without urgent stabilization of **CO₂ emissions**, up to 94% of **coral reefs** will erode by 2050, losing more structural mass than they can build. The paradox is clear: no blue economy can be sustained without a solid **ecological foundation**.

## **Redefining paradise: climate change and the future of tourism in the Caribbean**
Warning signs are multiplying. The region is already experiencing the impacts of the **climate crisis**: more intense hurricanes, **coastal erosion**, and rising **sea levels** threaten Caribbean communities and infrastructure.
The frequency of category 4 and 5 **hurricanes** has increased in recent decades and is expected to continue rising. Between 2000 and 2012, over 100 hurricanes directly hit the **Caribbean**, leaving behind economic, social, and **environmental** devastation. Even without making landfall, Hurricane Dean drastically altered beach profiles in **Trinidad**.
In 2024, Hurricane Beryl became the first category 5 hurricane to hit the southeastern Caribbean in June, causing severe damage. The Atlantic hurricane season ended last year with 18 **storms**, including 11 hurricanes, five of which reached categories 3 to 5, highlighting an increasingly dangerous **climate pattern** for the region.
In the **Bahamas**, much of the **tourism infrastructure** is located in highly vulnerable areas to **sea level rise**. A mere one-meter increase, combined with strong **storm surges**, could affect up to 83% of the country’s **resorts** and hotels.
**Antigua and Barbuda**, along with the Bahamas, are among the countries where coastal tourism represents over half of the GDP. The coasts that currently generate billions in **tourism revenue** could, in a few decades, be **engulfed by the sea**.

Beyond **extreme weather**, the **sargassum crisis** has [become a serious threat](https://noticiasambientales.com/medio-ambiente/sargazo-en-el-caribe-la-invasion-de-algas-que-impacta-el-turismo-los-ecosistemas-y-es-un-fenomeno-recurrente/).
Driven by **agricultural runoff nutrients** and shifting **ocean currents**, these massive accumulations of **algae suffocate coastal habitats**, kill fish, repel tourists, generate significant economic losses, and burden local governments with **clean-up** and **ecological recovery** costs.
The crisis of **coral reefs** is equally alarming. Increasingly frequent **mass bleaching events** have already devastated entire ecosystems in the **Virgin Islands** and southern **Jamaica**.
This is compounded by the spread of the highly lethal **coral tissue loss disease**, affecting multiple species and rapidly destroying what remains of Caribbean **reefs**.
## **Communities on the front line bear unequal burdens**
Like many crises, **ecological collapse** is far from equitable. Coastal communities, mainly composed of vulnerable populations, **indigenous peoples**, artisanal fishermen, and traditional communities, are the most affected and the least prepared to respond.
In countries like **Haiti** and **Dominica**, extreme weather events have triggered internal displacements, worsening **food** and economic **insecurity**.
Impacts on mental health are also on the rise across the region. These stress factors are transforming **coastal life**.
Meanwhile, equitable access to the promised benefits of the **blue economy** remains elusive: investments seldom reach grassroots communities, fail to incorporate **traditional knowledge**, and often exclude local voices from governance processes.
A sustainable **blue economy** must also be a solidarity economy. This entails defending **territorial rights**, integrating local knowledge into decision-making, and ensuring a fair distribution of benefits.
## **Affirming the blue economy: sovereignty and cooperation in the Caribbean**
The **Greater Caribbean** is more than a geographical region. It is a political and symbolic space of resistance, solidarity, and interdependence. Faced with **oceanic challenges**, regional integration becomes a strategy for **survival**, a declaration of sovereignty, and a means to reduce external pressures on **marine resources**.
In this context, strengthening Caribbean **scientific diplomacy** in global agreements such as the **Convention on Biological Diversity** (CBD) and the **United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change** (UNFCCC) is strategic. This requires more than rhetoric: it demands **concrete sovereignty instruments** like **blue bonds** that link financing to **conservation outcomes**, with monitoring mechanisms, transparency, and tangible benefits for local communities.

In this vein, the recent “Montería Declaration” by the Association of Caribbean States (ACS), adopted on May 30 at its [10th Summit of Heads of State and/or Government](https://latinoamerica21.com/es/el-gran-caribe-se-reune-con-un-proposito-impulsar-la-integracion-y-el-cambio/), reaffirms that regional cooperation is key to achieving sustainable development in the Greater Caribbean and meeting the 2030 Agenda and the **Sustainable Development Goals** (SDGs), emphasizing the need for strategic, inclusive, and coordinated partnerships at multiple levels to achieve real and lasting impacts.
Redefining **development models**, rebuilding the relationship between society and **nature**, and adopting a long-term **strategic vision** are essential steps for the **future of the Greater Caribbean**.
The **Caribbean Sea** is not just an economic asset. It is a living territory, a cradle of cultures, ancestral knowledge, and a horizon of possibilities. The region is at a historic moment: to continue on a path of **degradation** or to build a **regenerative blue economy** based on caring for people and **ecosystems**, and on the strength of regional cooperation.
Source: **Larisse Faroni-Perez/Latinoamérica21**



