A Review of Chinese Climate Assistance in the Caribbean
This report offers an assessment of the depth, breadth, and comparative nature of China’s direct climate cooperation with the Caribbean from 2013 to 2023.
This report offers an assessment of the depth, breadth, and comparative nature of China’s direct climate cooperation with the Caribbean from 2013 to 2023.
The Inter-American Dialogue’s Asia and Latin America Program consider key features in China’s climate assistance to the Caribbean.
On July 1, 2025, the Inter-American Dialogue hosted a public panel on the U.S.–Caribbean relationship.
The event will examine how recent shifts in U.S. policy on foreign assistance, trade, and migration could reshape relations with the Caribbean. Speakers will address shared security challenges, energy opportunities in Guyana and Suriname, and rising geopolitical competition in the region. The discussion will highlight pathways for the United States to deepen cooperation with Caribbean partners amid evolving regional dynamics.
On January 30, 2025, the Inter-American Dialogue hosted the online discussion “Tracking China-Caribbean Relations, New Tools and Takeaways,” in partnership with the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI) to explore the evolving nature of Chinese engagement in the Caribbean and to introduce a new analytical resource, CAPRI’s China-Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Portal.
On January 30, 2025, from 1:00 to 2:00 PM EST, the Inter-American Dialogue’s Asia & Latin America Program is pleased to partner with the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI) to publicly launch CAPRI’s new China-Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Portal, an online tool that monitors and measures Chinese trade, aid, and diplomacy across nine CARICOM countries and in five economic sectors.
El Diálogo Interamericano, la Fundación Propagas y la Universidad Central del Este se complacen en invitarle a la Cuarta Edición de la Cátedra Magistral Ambiental, dedicada a la señora Rosa Margarita Bonetti de Santana, destacada medioambientalista de la República Dominicana.
The energy transition has to involve electrification of transport and zero-carbon sources of electricity. It is the only way to address climate change.
Caribbean islands are in many ways ideal markets for electric vehicles, and several Caribbean jurisdictions have made significant advances in promoting electric mobility. Examining five case studies—Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Jamaica, and the Dominican Republic—this report identifies the key challenges and recommends actions that Caribbean governments and other stakeholders can take to stimulate EV adoption.
Electric mobility is gaining ground globally as technology costs fall, awareness is improved, and policies are increasingly aligned with environmental goals. Caribbean nations are well positioned to reap the benefits of electric mobility, concluded panelists at an event hosted by the Inter-American Dialogue and New Energy Events, in collaboration with the Inter-American Development Bank and the Organization of American States.
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