Jamaica is moving forward with landmark climate governance reforms that could reshape the country’s approach to environmental action and economic development, according to top government official Matthew Samuda, Minister of Water, Environment and Climate Change.
Samuda outlined the government’s climate agenda Tuesday during his address to the 2026/27 Sectoral Debate held in Jamaica’s House of Representatives, highlighting two core initiatives that frame the country’s long-term climate vision: pending national climate change legislation and the recently finalized Long-Term Emissions Reduction and Climate Resilience Strategy (LTS 2050).
The proposed climate legislation, developed in partnership with the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, will mark a major leap forward in strengthening Jamaica’s national climate governance framework, Samuda emphasized. Once enacted, the law will formalize legal foundations for national climate policies, enforce cross-sector accountability, and deliver a range of systemic benefits ranging from greater policy transparency to more consistent, measurable climate action outcomes. It will also streamline policy implementation and boost confidence among private and institutional investors looking to support Jamaica’s transition.
Beyond immediate governance improvements, Samuda noted that embedding climate action into formal law will institutionalize sustainable development efforts across successive governments, ensuring long-term continuity regardless of political shifts. This robust legal foundation will also position Jamaica to unlock billions in additional international climate finance and expand strategic global partnerships, he added. Per the government’s current timeline, the legislation is on track to be finalized and passed within the ongoing 2026/27 fiscal year.
Alongside the legislative push, Samuda highlighted the recently completed LTS 2050, which was finalized in July 2025, as a blueprint for Jamaica’s transition to a climate-smart, climate-resilient national economy. The strategy lays out a clear pathway for Jamaica to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by no later than 2060, while tying climate action directly to inclusive, sustainable economic growth that benefits all Jamaican communities.
Unlike traditional climate plans that focus solely on environmental targets, the LTS 2050 is framed as a holistic cross-sector development strategy that takes a whole-economy approach to planning. It maps out required transitions for eight key sectors that underpin Jamaica’s economy and environment: energy, transport, agriculture, infrastructure and urban development, and forestry and ecosystems, among others.
The economic case for the long-term strategy is unambiguous, Samuda told lawmakers. LTS 2050 projections estimate that the plan will deliver approximately US$13.9 billion in net economic benefits to Jamaica by 2050, while generating more than 26,000 new jobs, concentrated primarily in fast-growing green and emerging climate sectors.
These projections are more than just economic modeling, Samuda explained: they reflect a fundamental repositioning of Jamaica within the global low-carbon economy, shifting the country from a climate-vulnerable developing nation to a leader in sustainable Caribbean development. The strategy also explicitly maps out high-priority investment areas that will drive innovation, growth and resilience, including utility-scale renewable energy development, climate-smart sustainable agriculture, and flood and storm-resilient public infrastructure.
By formalizing this long-term transition pathway, Samuda added, the LTS 2050 sends a clear, predictable signal to global investors and international development partners that Jamaica is fully committed to its climate and development goals. This certainty, he noted, is a critical prerequisite for attracting the large-scale financing, cutting-edge clean technology, and strategic global partnerships needed to turn the strategy’s vision into tangible action for Jamaican people.
