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When climate risk becomes financial risk
Justine Powell.
Business
March 29, 2026

When climate risk becomes financial risk

Why Caribbean capital must move now

THE Caribbean does not experience climate change as an abstract concept. We experience it through more frequent and intense hurricanes, flooded roads, damaged property that extends beyond homes, disrupted schools and essential services, and prolonged periods of lost connectivity. We experience it through loss of livestock, rising insurance costs, and lost working days. The recent impact of Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica is only the latest reminder that climate risk in our region is not a future concern — it is a present and compounding financial reality.

Yet, despite this growing exposure, capital deployment into climate resilience and climate-linked projects across the Caribbean remains materially below what is required. The result is a widening gap between risk and readiness, one that neither governments nor donors can close on their own.

This gap has implications far beyond environmental outcomes. It affects economic stability, fiscal resilience, and long-term growth prospects across the region.

 

Climate Risk Is Now Balance Sheet Risk

For Caribbean economies, climate events translate directly into macroeconomic stress. Natural disasters impair infrastructure, disrupt tourism activity, reduce agricultural output, interrupt logistics and transport networks, and pressure foreign exchange earnings. For countries where tourism is a primary economic driver, even short periods of disruption can have outsized fiscal and balance-of-payment consequences.

For businesses, climate shocks mean operational downtime, asset damage, and rising insurance premiums. For households, they mean higher living costs and loss of income. In other words, climate risk has become balance sheet risk at the national, corporate and household levels.

 

Moving From Aid to Investment

Historically, climate financing in the Caribbean has leaned heavily on grants, concessional funding, and post-disaster assistance. While necessary, these mechanisms are reactive and insufficient at scale. What the region needs is a shift toward investment structures that can mobilise private capital alongside public and development funding.

This transition from aid to investment is critical. Climate resilience cannot be built one emergency response at a time. It requires upfront capital, disciplined execution, and long-term commitment. Properly structured climate projects can deliver both financial returns and measurable resilience outcomes, complementing development finance while also being suitable for institutional portfolios.

The challenge has never been a lack of need. It has been the absence of vehicles that appropriately match risk, return, and time horizon for Caribbean realities; and the hesitation of institutional investors to deploy capital beyond short- and medium-term instruments.

 

Why Pension Funds Matter

Perhaps the most important question is not whether climate investment is necessary, but who should be investing.

Pension funds are uniquely positioned to play a catalytic role. They manage long-term liabilities and should therefore actively seek long-duration assets that provide stable, inflation-resilient returns. Climate and resilience projects, when properly structured, offer exactly that.

Beyond duration matching, there are additional benefits. Investing locally in climate-linked assets can enhance portfolio diversification, reduce exposure to climate-related systemic risk, and support domestic economic stability — an outcome that ultimately benefits contributors and beneficiaries alike.

Inaction, by contrast, carries its own risks. Climate shocks erode asset values, strain public finances, and weaken economic growth — all of which undermine long-term investment performance. From this perspective, climate investment is not a concession. It is prudent risk management.

 

Turning Intent Into Action

Across the region there is growing recognition that climate risk must be addressed through capital allocation, not just policy statements. What is now required is execution and platforms that can absorb capital at scale and deploy it into sectors that matter.

Institutional investors in the Caribbean have begun exploring impact-focused investment vehicles that support climate resilience and regional development. These efforts demonstrate how private capital can complement public and donor funding when structures are appropriately designed. Opportunities exist across critical sectors such as renewable energy, sustainable housing, climate-smart agriculture, transport, and the blue economy.

Well-structured vehicles aim to mobilise long-term capital to support regional climate resilience while offering potential returns aligned with institutional investment objectives. Some initiatives also seek to leverage public resources to anchor investments in regional development priorities, further encouraging private participation in addressing climate risk.

 

A Call to Action

Hurricane Melissa should not be remembered solely as another hurricane in an increasingly long list. It should serve as a catalyst for a deeper shift in how we think about capital deployment in the Caribbean.

The region does not lack projects or expertise. What it needs is capital that is willing to engage with climate risk thoughtfully and at scale. Funds such as the CCRF represent one step in that direction but they are only part of a broader solution.

If climate risk is now financial risk, then climate investment must become a core financial strategy. For Caribbean pension funds, insurers and institutional investors, the question is no longer whether to participate, but how quickly.

 

Justine Powell is vice-president of investment management, Sygnus Capital.

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