When the 2024 Environmental Performance Index (EPI) released by Yale University placed Jamaica 68th out of 180 nations with an overall score of 48.5, the country’s top environmental official did not downplay the gaps holding the island back from better global standing. While acknowledging solid progress in high-priority environmental sectors, Water, Environment and Climate Change Minister Matthew Samuda emphasized that transformative, systemic change is needed to lift Jamaica’s ranking, during his address to the House of Representatives’ 2026/27 Sectoral Debate on Tuesday.
The EPI, a leading global benchmark for national environmental performance, scores countries on a 0 to 100 scale, where higher marks reflect stronger environmental governance, policy effectiveness, and natural resource protection. Scores between 80 and 100 signal long-standing, robust policies that deliver strong outcomes for environmental health, ecosystem resilience, and climate action. Scores from 60 to 79 mark moderate performance—meaning basic environmental management systems are in place, but clear opportunities for improvement remain. Scores below 30 indicate critical, unaddressed environmental challenges that demand urgent policy intervention. Jamaica’s 48.5 score falls in the moderate-to-low range, leaving significant room for advancement.
To the government’s credit, Jamaica ranks among the top global performers in several key environmental metrics measured by the 2024 EPI. The country secured 30th place for climate change action, 27th for protection of marine key biodiversity areas, 28th for forestry conservation, and 30th for sustainable fisheries management. These strong results reflect targeted investments and policy commitments that have delivered tangible progress for the island’s natural ecosystems.
Despite these wins, Samuda openly acknowledged persistent performance gaps across multiple critical domains. Jamaica ranks far lower in a series of high-priority areas: 126th for biodiversity and habitat protection, 106th for overall environmental health, 127th for species conservation, 147th for protected terrestrial lands, 69th for air pollution control, and 133rd for solid and hazardous waste management. These underperforming areas, Samuda noted, are dragging down the country’s overall EPI ranking and require urgent attention.
Samuda stressed that incremental, small-scale policy changes will not be enough to address these gaps. Meaningful improvement, he argued, requires systemic overhauls, stricter regulatory enforcement, expanded and improved environmental data collection systems, and targeted capital investment to upgrade infrastructure and capacity. Citing that policy crafted without reliable data is little more than guesswork, and enforcement without data remains inconsistent and ineffective, Samuda announced that his ministry had tabled two landmark policy documents in parliament: the Overarching Protected Areas Policy (White Paper) and the draft Cays Management Policy (Green Paper).
The new Overarching Protected Areas Policy will replace Jamaica’s outdated 1997 framework, providing clear, updated policy direction for the sustainable management of the country’s entire Protected Areas System. Currently, Jamaica manages more than 350 protected areas spanning national parks, marine reserves, fish sanctuaries, forest reserves, and managed forest areas, all designated under overlapping pieces of legislation including the Forest Act and the Natural Resources Conservation Authority Act. The updated policy will unify governance and streamline management for these critical conservation lands.
In addition to updating protected area policy, Samuda confirmed that the ministry is working alongside the Forestry Department to repeal and replace the decades-old Forest Act, strengthening the country’s environmental legislative framework. The new bill will include key new provisions outlining processes for land transfer, comprehensive forest and forest land inventory and classification, and the formal establishment of a statutory no-burn season to reduce wildfire risk and air pollution. The draft Forest Bill has already been completed and submitted to the Cabinet’s Legislative Committee for review, and is on track to be tabled in parliament before the end of May.
The policy package represents a major step forward for Jamaica’s environmental governance, as the country works to turn the EPI’s benchmarking into actionable improvement that lifts both its global ranking and on-the-ground environmental outcomes.
