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Jamaica's $10B Hurricane Hit: Only 5% Covered by Reserves
19 Nov
Summary
- Hurricane Melissa caused $10 billion in damage to Jamaica.
- Jamaica's climate preparation reserves covered only $500 million.
- The nation seeks grants and investments, not loans, from wealthy countries.

Jamaica faces a staggering $10 billion in damages following Hurricane Melissa, with only $500 million covered by its climate preparation reserves. Minister Matthew Samuda stated the devastating storm crippled key sectors like tourism and agriculture, damaging 192,000 buildings. The nation is urging wealthy countries at the COP30 summit to provide grants and concessional finance rather than debt-inducing commercial loans.
Samuda emphasized that Jamaica, a victim of climate change driven by others' emissions, has diligently improved its financial health over decades. He expressed frustration that progress was undone by a single storm that scientists confirmed was exacerbated by global warming, making it stronger and more likely to occur. The hurricane's impact has been described as seismic, exceeding the economic damage of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The country had previously bolstered its defenses with a catastrophe bond and parametric insurance, totaling approximately $500 million. However, this buffer is insufficient against the $9.5 billion remaining gap from the disaster. The situation underscores the urgent need for increased adaptation funding for developing nations, estimated by the UN to reach $310 billion annually by 2035.




