The Caribbean region has long benefited from global goodwill in the wake of climate-driven disasters, but decades of on-the-ground experience have revealed a hidden cost of unregulated generosity: uncoordinated, unsolicited donations are turning good intentions into secondary crises that slow life-saving response when every minute counts.
After major storm, flood or volcanic events, local disaster management systems are routinely overwhelmed by inappropriate donations that clog critical port and warehouse infrastructure. Winter coats shipped to tropical zones, expired food supplies, unsorted mixed boxes of goods, and flimsy tarpaulins that cannot withstand heavy rain are just a few common examples. These unnecessary items drain already stretched resources: they consume valuable staff time, limited storage space, and critical funding that could otherwise be directed to meeting the urgent needs of vulnerable communities. Data collected by the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) shows that as much as 60% of unsolicited donated goods end up unused, discarded as waste that adds additional environmental strain to small island nations already at the forefront of climate change.
These challenges extend far beyond operational logistical headaches. When disaster response systems are bogged down processing unusable donations, communities waiting for life-saving essentials such as clean water, food, emergency shelter materials and medical supplies are forced to wait longer for support, putting lives at unnecessary risk.
The urgency of addressing this longstanding problem has grown sharply in recent years. Between 2020 and 2025, more than 2.6 million people across 13 English and Dutch-speaking Caribbean countries were impacted by floods, tropical storms, and volcanic activity. These repeated climate disasters have caused widespread destruction, displaced communities, and put unrelenting pressure on regional social systems and national economies, underscoring the region’s growing exposure to overlapping, complex climate hazards.
As the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season gets underway, and tropical storms continue to grow in intensity due to climate change, targeted preparedness to fix this donation gap is more urgent than ever. CDEMA and response stakeholders emphasize that disaster preparedness cannot be limited to building physical infrastructure or boosting frontline response capacity; it also requires building robust, coordinated public systems that can channel incoming support effectively, so generosity strengthens response efforts rather than overwhelming them.
To address this gap and raise global and regional public awareness of the issue, CDEMA and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), working alongside a network of regional and international partners, have launched a groundbreaking regional Donate Responsibly Campaign. The initiative, funded by EU Humanitarian Aid, is rooted in a simple but transformative principle: all disaster donations must be needs-based, centrally coordinated, and aligned with national disaster response systems.
CDEMA has already laid critical groundwork for this shift through its Comprehensive Relief and Logistics Management Programme, which supports participating Caribbean states to strengthen their national aid management frameworks. This work includes developing customized national logistics plans, establishing formal policies for unsolicited donations, mapping priority community needs, streamlining supply chain infrastructure, and improving coordination through National Emergency Operations Centres. Digital tools such as real-time logistics tracking systems are already helping response teams direct aid based on actual on-the-ground needs rather than global assumptions about what communities require.
Working alongside the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), CDEMA also supports countries to strengthen legal and regulatory frameworks through the International Disaster Response Law (IDRL) initiative. These frameworks both facilitate and regulate incoming international aid, ensuring all support is coordinated, accountable, and aligned with local needs. Key improvements include streamlining customs and border clearance processes for essential relief, and upholding consistent quality and accountability standards for incoming donations. Complementing these national frameworks, regional coordination mechanisms co-led by IOM, CDEMA and IFRC—including the Emergency Shelter and Non-Food Items Technical Working Group and the Relief and Logistics Thematic Working Group—align all participating partners around shared standards and common response priorities.
The campaign outlines three core guidelines that all potential donors should follow before sending support to disaster-affected communities in the Caribbean. First, cash donations are almost always the most effective option. Financial contributions allow local responders and national governments to procure exactly what is needed, when and where it is needed, while also supporting local economies in affected countries. Second, coordination is non-negotiable: before donating, all givers should follow official guidance from national disaster management offices and CDEMA, work through recognized response partners, and align donations with published priority needs lists and established quality standards. Third, supporting national and regional response systems is just as critical: all donations must align with existing plans rather than bypassing formal local systems.
Campaign organizers stress that responsible donating is designed to support long-term community recovery, not create new burdens for frontline states. Donations should address confirmed needs, avoid creating unnecessary waste and additional environmental harm, and prevent adding extra financial strain to small island developing states that are already bearing the brunt of climate change. Context also matters: the Caribbean is a diverse region of 13 nations with varying cultural and climate needs, so donations must be culturally appropriate, climate-relevant, and fit for local conditions. A donation that helps communities in one disaster context may be ineffective or even harmful in another.
As the campaign emphasizes: how we give is just as important as what we give. Every potential donor is encouraged to ask two critical questions before giving: is this donation actually needed by affected communities, and is it being sent through coordinated official channels?
Encouragingly, young leaders across the Caribbean are already driving demand for smarter, more sustainable approaches to disaster response, and their message is clear: responsible giving is informed, coordinated, and environmentally sustainable.
To the Caribbean diaspora, private sector partners, national governments, and global supporters, the campaign reminds stakeholders: generosity has the power to save lives, but only when it meets actual on-the-ground needs. The call to action is simple: support trusted response organizations, use official donation channels, give cash whenever possible, and make your generosity count.
The campaign’s core message rings clear as hurricane season begins: Donate responsibly. Support smarter response. Build stronger regional resilience.