As the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season got underway on June 1, Haiti’s interim government under Prime Minister Fils-Aimé has rolled out a coordinated national preparedness strategy, urging collective action to mitigate avoidable harm from extreme weather that routinely devastates the Caribbean nation. Key cabinet departments and public disaster management agencies laid out their operational plans during a press briefing hosted at the General Directorate of Civil Protection headquarters in Clercine, marking a unified push to address longstanding climate vulnerability.
The multi-agency effort brings together a wide range of stakeholders: beyond the prime minister’s office, participating bodies include the Ministries of the Interior, Environment, Public Works, Public Health, Economy and Agriculture, alongside technical agencies such as the Haiti Hydro-Meteorological Unit, National Risk and Disaster Management System, and National School Canteens Program.
Leading on-the-ground pre-season interventions, Haiti’s Ministry of Public Works has already kickstarted a nationwide campaign to clear clogged gullies and river channels ahead of projected heavy rainfall events. Clearing operations are prioritizing high-risk zones in major population centers including Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haïtien, Petit-Goâve, Léogâne, Jacmel, Les Cayes and Ouanaminthe, with supplementary drainage improvement projects underway in the capital cities of all 10 of Haiti’s administrative departments.
Despite the aggressive proactive push, ministry officials acknowledged deep structural challenges that put communities at continued risk. Years of environmental degradation have left nearly all of Haiti’s watersheds, rivers, and ravines in compromised condition, meaning even with full mobilization, the goal of eliminating flood risk entirely is out of reach for the 2026 season. In light of this, officials emphasized that public vigilance remains a critical line of defense.
To support emergency response and pre-season work, the ministry has deployed a fleet of 162 fully operational heavy machinery units across every region of the country, including excavators, bulldozers, graders, compactor rollers, loaders, bobcats, and transport trucks. Parallel to the clearing campaign, key subsidiary agencies under the ministry’s oversight – including the National Directorate of Drinking Water and Sanitation (DINEPA), Haiti’s Maritime and Navigation Service (SEMANAH), and the National Telecommunications Council (CONATEL) – have been directed to activate their own tailored emergency response plans.
The ministry has also bolstered staffing and operations at Emergency Operations Centers at both the national and departmental levels, enabling real-time information sharing and rapid response coordination if a storm makes landfall. In a closing appeal to local stakeholders, officials called on mayors, municipal section coordinators, and private sector actors to mobilize available local labor, materials, and technical expertise to support preparedness efforts. Leadership stressed that the success of all hurricane season mitigation measures depends on broad collective mobilization across national authorities, international financial partners, local media, and individual Haitian citizens.
Finally, the ministry urged the public to maintain a strong spirit of mutual solidarity and pay close attention to all official guidance and safety instructions issued throughout the hurricane season, which runs through November. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has forecast a below-average 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, though disaster officials warn that even one major storm can have catastrophic consequences for Haiti’s vulnerable infrastructure and population.
