Press Release

Caribbean Airports Boost Disaster Readiness Ahead of Hurricane Season

02 July 2025

Regional disaster management officials gear up for the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season.  

Caption: Participants in the DHL Get Airports Ready for Disasters workshop conducted practical exercises at the airport to provide recommendations for improvements.

Photo: © WFP/Carla Alleyne

Bridgetown, Barbados -  The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), in collaboration with the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), Grantley Adams International Airport (GAIA) Inc., DHL, and the European Union, successfully completed the first-ever ‘Get Airports Ready for Disasters’ (GARD) Workshop in the Eastern Caribbean.

The workshop, held at the Grantley Adams International Airport in Barbados, marks a significant step in strengthening regional disaster preparedness ahead of the 2025 hurricane season. This crucial three-day  initiative brought together 22 participants, including airport authorities, national disaster management agencies, security forces, regional airlines, and disaster response agencies from Barbados, Antigua and Barbuda, and Trinidad and Tobago. 

The workshop focused on assessing airport infrastructure, coordination mechanisms, and logistical capacities to manage the surge in humanitarian cargo and passengers that typically follows a major disaster.
 

Caption: WFP Representative and Country Director Brian Bogart encouraged all to embrace the training as they prepare for the 2025 Hurricane season.
Photo: © WFP/Carla Alleyne

Brian Bogart, Representative and Country Director for the World Food Programme Caribbean noted: "Airports are critical in emergencies. They often are the epicentre for coordinating supply chain elements of a response. At WFP, we continue to explore additional options to support maximizing the region's capacity and infrastructure for crisis response."


Frank Losada, DHL Go Help Leader USA & Caribbean and one of the lead trainers for the workshop, emphasized the training's importance for the hurricane-prone Caribbean region. "When there is a disaster, like a hurricane or a tsunami, the airport usually becomes a chokepoint," he explained. "It is critical that airports are ready to receive that cargo and ensure aid gets to people in need as fast as possible."
 

 Reflecting on his experiences during events like the La Soufriere volcano eruption and recent hurricanes in the Caribbean, Hadley Bourne, Chief Executive Officer of GAIA Inc., also welcomed the timely training. "This is very integral to national safety and national development. Disaster management and preparedness is nothing to be taken lightly in any form," he maintained. 
 

Meanwhile, speaking on behalf of CDEMA, Kevon Campbell highlighted the indispensable role of partnerships in supporting communities during crises.  "We have seen time and again how disasters, pandemics, and other emergencies test the limits of our regional systems," he said, "But we have also seen how preparatory actions, planning, and partnerships—especially those forged in workshops like this—can make a profound difference in saving lives and restoring order."

With a prediction for 17 named storms during the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane season, this workshop sought to better position airports, humanitarian organizations, and private sector agencies to collaborate effectively should the need arise. The GARD workshop is one of several joint activities between WFP and CDEMA, who engage in year-round trainings and simulations across the Caribbean to assess and address gaps in disaster preparedness, ensuring people quickly get the help they need when crisis strikes.


WFP remains committed to strengthening regional logistics and supply chain readiness in the face of growing climate threats across the Caribbean.
 

#########

The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.
 

For more information please contact: carla.alleyne@wfp.org

Follow WFP on X, formerly Twitter, via @wfp_media @wfp_Caribbean 

 

WFP Communications Officer

Carla Alleyne

WFP
Communications Officer

UN entities involved in this initiative

WFP
World Food Programme

Other entities involved in this initiative

BRB CDEMA
Barbados Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency

Goals we are supporting through this initiative