In a landmark decision during its 44th board meeting in Songdo, South Korea, the Green Climate Fund (GCF) has greenlit a transformative US$50 million initiative to bolster climate resilience among small-scale farmers in Jamaica’s most vulnerable agricultural regions. The ADAPT Jamaica project, co-financed through a strategic partnership between international and local entities, represents the nation’s first single-country climate investment from the GCF.
The funding structure comprises a substantial US$35 million grant from the GCF, supplemented by US$15 million in counterpart funding from the Jamaican Government. This collaborative effort brings together the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF), the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Mining, and the Development Bank of Jamaica (DBJ) as executing partners.
The initiative will concentrate its efforts across six central parishes—Clarendon, Manchester, St Ann, St Catherine, St Elizabeth, and Trelawny—which collectively produce approximately 70% of Jamaica’s domestic food supply. These regions face escalating climate vulnerabilities including intensified hurricane patterns, prolonged droughts, and increasingly erratic rainfall, all of which have significantly compromised agricultural yields and threatened rural livelihoods.
Minister of Water, Environment and Climate Change Matthew Samuda emphasized the project’s critical timing, noting recent devastating climate events including Hurricane Beryl (2024) which caused over US$30 million in losses, and Hurricane Melissa (2025)—the first Category 5 storm to make direct landfall in Jamaica—resulting in billions of dollars in damage.
The comprehensive program will implement multifaceted interventions including climate-resilient farming practices, enhanced water management systems, post-harvest infrastructure, and improved climate information services. Demonstration sites will feature hurricane-resistant protected agriculture infrastructure capable of withstanding Category 4-5 storms, solar-powered irrigation and storage systems, and agroforestry practices to combat soil erosion.
With an expected reach exceeding 736,000 beneficiaries—including 334,421 women—the project aims to significantly reduce post-harvest food losses (currently estimated at 30-40% for many crops) while stabilizing farmer incomes through strengthened market linkages and financial access.
