As the 2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season officially kicked off on June 1, the Dominica Association of Industry and Commerce (DAIC) has launched a urgent call to action for businesses, government bodies, public institutions, and all national stakeholders to ramp up disaster preparedness measures and build greater capacity to withstand the full range of climate and operational threats facing the Caribbean island nation.
In an official press statement, the leading private sector trade group emphasized that while hurricanes remain the most high-profile natural hazard for the region, modern businesses now face a rapidly expanding list of risks that extend far beyond tropical storm systems. These growing threats include widespread flooding, record-breaking extreme heat events, accelerating coastal erosion and storm surge damage, catastrophic landslides, chronic water scarcity, extended power and telecommunications outages, unexpected supply chain disruptions, macroeconomic instability, and a host of other operational challenges that can bring business activity to a halt. Against this backdrop, DAIC stressed that traditional preparedness focused solely on hurricane response is no longer sufficient to protect the private sector and national economy.
The organization noted that this expanded planning requirement applies to every segment of Dominica’s business ecosystem, from small micro-enterprises and local small businesses to large national corporations and critical infrastructure industries. All business types are urged to take intentional, proactive steps to boost their readiness for potential disruptive events, regardless of their scale or operating sector.
DAIC also underlined the central role that the private sector plays in sustaining national progress, supporting widespread employment, attracting foreign and domestic investment, maintaining critical supply chains, and leading effective post-disaster recovery. The group warned that unprepared businesses do not only face individual losses – disruptions to private sector activity ripple outward to harm local communities, undermine household livelihoods, and drag down the performance of the entire national economy.
Under the new leadership of recently elected President Olive Strachan MBE and DAIC’s newly seated Board of Directors, strengthening business resilience and long-term sustainability has been positioned as a top core strategic priority for the organization. To advance this goal, DAIC maintains ongoing collaborative partnerships with a network of regional and international disaster risk reduction bodies, including the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, the Caribbean Chambers of Commerce network, and the ARISE (Private Sector Alliance for Disaster Resilient Societies) Network. DAIC serves as the official ARISE national focal point for Dominica, working to expand private sector engagement in Multi-Hazard Early Warning Systems (MHEWS) and other cross-cutting disaster resilience initiatives across the country.
Through these strategic partnerships, DAIC is actively contributing to regional policy discussions focused on improving public and private risk communication, supporting the development of robust business continuity plans, strengthening cross-sector coordination mechanisms, and ensuring the private sector is formally integrated into national and regional resilience governance frameworks.
Speaking on the organization’s new priority focus, DAIC President Olive Strachan MBE emphasized: “Preparedness is no longer optional for our business community. Today’s enterprises must plan for multiple hazards that can disrupt daily operations, harm employee safety, break critical supply chains, and slow decades of national development. The private sector has an irreplaceable critical role to play at every stage of disaster management – before, during, and after a hazard event. Every business, no matter how large or small, contributes to building a more resilient Dominica. DAIC is fully committed to strengthening business resilience and sustainability through cross-sector partnerships, targeted advocacy, public awareness campaigns, and hands-on practical support for private enterprises across the country.”
Strachan and DAIC have also called on all national stakeholders to continue making incremental improvements to cross-sector coordination, public communication systems, critical infrastructure resilience, and integrated preparedness planning. The organization stressed that building effective, country-wide disaster resilience cannot be achieved by a single group – it requires sustained, aligned cooperation between government agencies, the private sector, civil society organizations, and regional partner bodies.
As part of its formal recommendations for the 2026 hurricane season, DAIC has outlined concrete actions for both businesses and households: review and update existing emergency response and business continuity plans, refresh internal and external communication and contact systems, secure critical operational data and physical infrastructure, conduct full audits of supply chain vulnerabilities, deliver disaster preparedness training to all staff, run regular preparedness simulation exercises, maintain consistent engagement with official information channels and early warning systems, and plan for a full spectrum of hazards rather than focusing exclusively on hurricanes.
To support businesses in implementing these steps, DAIC announced that it will make a full suite of practical preparedness and business continuity planning resources available to private sector stakeholders throughout the 2026 hurricane season. All DAIC member organizations and local businesses are invited to contact the DAIC Secretariat to access these free planning materials.
In closing, DAIC reaffirmed its long-term commitment to supporting Dominica’s private sector through targeted advocacy, public awareness initiatives, open information sharing, cross-sector engagement, and expanded access to regional resilience programs and planning tools. The organization stated that it will remain a consistent partner for the Dominican business community, standing alongside enterprises through all stages of emergency and disaster events.