SMA highlights digital sovereignty and resilience at global telecommunications forum

At the 30th annual general meeting, business forum, and expo hosted by the Pacific Islands Telecommunications Association (PITA) recently, Jamaica’s Spectrum Management Authority (SMA) brought critical, underrepresented perspectives from small island developing states to a global stage of digital policymakers and industry leaders. Speaking as SMA’s Managing Director during the virtual gathering, Dr. Maria Myers-Hamilton delivered a compelling keynote address centered on the interconnected priorities of digital resilience, national digital sovereignty, and closing persistent investment gaps amid the rapid global expansion of artificial intelligence.

Dr. Myers-Hamilton opened her address by reframing core elements of the digital age, arguing that today’s global digital ecosystem has undergone a fundamental shift. What once were viewed as secondary utilities — data, connectivity, and computing infrastructure — have now emerged as defining strategic national assets that shape a country’s long-term economic and political standing. For small island nations in particular, spectrum management and digital infrastructure development are no longer niche technical concerns confined to regulator meetings; they are central pillars of protecting national sovereignty and carving out a strong position in the competitive global digital economy.

Crucially, Dr. Myers-Hamilton clarified that the push for digital sovereignty does not equate to cutting off small island states from global digital networks or innovation. “Digital sovereignty is not about isolation; it is about ensuring that participation in the global digital economy happens on our terms,” she explained. This framing emphasizes the right of small island nations to retain full control over their domestic data, digital infrastructure, and independent policy decision-making, rather than ceding authority to external commercial or political actors.

The keynote also laid bare the unique structural barriers that continue to hold back digital development in small island states. These challenges include exorbitant upfront costs for building and maintaining digital infrastructure, the inherent limitations of small domestic markets that prevent economies of scale, and widespread overreliance on foreign digital service and infrastructure providers. Combined, these factors have created a widening investment gap that leaves small island nations ill-equipped to meet the surging global demand for high-speed connectivity and AI-powered digital services. As AI adoption accelerates across the world, these pre-existing constraints make proactive resilience planning and strategic investment far more urgent than ever before.

Drawing on decades of practical experience from Jamaica and the broader Caribbean region, Dr. Myers-Hamilton outlined a clear path forward centered on regional collaboration. She noted that aligned, harmonized approaches to spectrum management and licensing across neighboring island states can drive major efficiency gains, cut collective operational costs, and drastically improve the bargaining power of small nations when negotiating with large global technology and infrastructure providers.

She also outlined four core priorities that small island states must prioritize to build robust, inclusive digital ecosystems: First, constructing resilient digital infrastructure that integrates built-in redundancy and explicit disaster preparedness, a critical requirement for geographically vulnerable island nations prone to extreme weather events. Second, establishing clear, transparent, and stable regulatory frameworks that build investor confidence and attract sustained private and public investment. Third, expanding domestic technical capacity to manage and govern emerging technologies including artificial intelligence. Fourth, leveraging innovative spectrum management practices to boost operational efficiency and regulatory oversight.

Notably, Dr. Myers-Hamilton did not dismiss AI as an overwhelming threat to small states; instead, she highlighted its tangible benefits for core regulatory work, noting that AI can transform spectrum management by enabling more accurate real-time monitoring, data-driven predictive planning, and far more efficient allocation of scarce spectrum resources. These improvements in turn translate to faster response to service outages and better digital service delivery for domestic users. At the same time, she emphasized the critical need for responsible AI adoption, stressing that robust governance, strict data protection standards, and regulatory agility must remain front and center as AI technologies continue to evolve.

Closing her address, Dr. Myers-Hamilton rejected the common narrative that small population and geographic size limits small island states’ ability to shape the future of the global digital economy. “Our size does not limit our influence; our strategy determines it,” she said, calling on small island nations across the world to take a more active, unified stance in global digital policy discussions. As global demand for digital services continues its steep upward trajectory, she argued that progress depends on treating resilience, sovereignty, and targeted investment not as separate goals, but as interconnected priorities that require coordinated collective action.

The PITA forum itself serves as a key annual convening point for digital policymakers, regulators, and industry leaders from island economies across the globe. Its core mission is to strengthen cross-national collaboration, expand access to reliable connectivity, upgrade regional digital infrastructure, and address shared challenges ranging from persistent infrastructure gaps and limited investment access to the disruptive impacts of fast-growing emerging technologies like AI.