KINGSTON, Jamaica — As Jamaica struggles to move forward with recovery efforts in the wake of Hurricane Melissa, a top opposition official is sounding the alarm over a persistent national cement shortage, urging immediate parliamentary intervention to address a crisis that threatens both reconstruction work and broader national economic progress.
Anthony Hylton, the opposition’s spokesman on Investment, Trade and Global Logistics, laid out his call for urgent action in an official press release issued Tuesday, pushing for the crisis to be immediately referred to parliament’s Economy and Production Committee. Hylton says the full parliamentary body must conduct a complete, transparent probe into the root causes of the shortage, evaluate whether the current government’s response to the disruption has been sufficient, and work out targeted policy interventions that will lock in stable cement supplies for Jamaica’s medium and long-term needs.
In the days leading up to his formal request, Hylton has held a series of consultations with core stakeholders across Jamaica’s construction sector, from independent contractors and domestic manufacturers to hardware retail operators and major infrastructure investors. Across these conversations, stakeholders have repeatedly shared urgent concerns: the ongoing shortage has already thrown construction project timelines off schedule, eroded confidence among local and foreign investors, put thousands of sector jobs at direct risk, and driven up input and consumer costs across the entire construction ecosystem.
“You cannot credibly promise to ‘build back better’ if we cannot even begin building at all,” Hylton emphasized in his statement. “Cement is the non-negotiable foundational input for every part of our work, from post-disaster reconstruction to upgrading national infrastructure and building long-term economic resilience. Relying on last-minute imports as a stop-gap is not a meaningful strategy — it is just a temporary band-aid that does nothing to guarantee long-term supply security or protect domestic Jamaican jobs down the line.”
Hylton added that the widespread destruction caused by Hurricane Melissa should serve as a critical wake-up call for policymakers to shift away from reactive crisis management and toward proactive, forward-looking planning. “Hurricane Melissa has made it painfully clear that Jamaica needs to be prepared to rebuild quickly and effectively when disaster strikes. That level of preparedness depends on planning and action today, not scrambling for reactive fixes after a crisis hits,” he said. “Parliament has a core constitutional and public responsibility to make sure the right systems and stable supply chains are in place to support national recovery and drive long-term inclusive development.”
Hylton went on to note that a comprehensive national strategy to guarantee stable, reliable cement supply is no longer a secondary policy concern — it is an urgent priority. This urgency is amplified by multiple overlapping demands: the ongoing need for post-Hurricane Melissa reconstruction, the national government’s own commitment to building back stronger and more climate-resilient infrastructure, and rapidly rising demand from major new projects spanning housing development, tourism infrastructure, manufacturing facilities, and national climate resilience upgrades.
The crisis has not come without explanation. Carib Cement, Jamaica’s dominant domestic cement manufacturer, released a public update last week confirming that weeks of unusually heavy rainfall across the island have severely disrupted its operations. The adverse weather has created major challenges for raw material extraction and processing, and contributed to unplanned equipment breakdowns and process disruptions that have pulled down temporary production levels.
While the company acknowledged that some supply delays persist, driven by both elevated post-reconstruction demand and ongoing adverse weather conditions, Carib Cement gave public assurances that cross-functional teams are working around the clock to restore full, optimal production levels as quickly as possible.
