Reconstruction : The State comes to the aid of infrastructure in the Southeast

As Haiti prepares for the upcoming 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, the country’s Ministry of Public Works has ramped up on-site infrastructure assessments and reconstruction work across the Southeast department, focusing on critical energy and flood mitigation projects that address long-standing vulnerabilities in the region.

Following a recent strategic inspection tour of the Palmes region, Minister of Public Works Joseph Almathe Pierre Louis led a ministerial delegation to the Southeast this week, kicking off the visit with a stop at the Gaillard hydroelectric power plant in Cayes-Jacmel. The facility, a key contributor to local energy supply, has been completely shut down for roughly 12 months, creating widespread disruptions to power access for surrounding communities. Minister Pierre Louis emphasized that restoring the plant aligns directly with the Haitian government’s top priority of expanding domestic energy independence, noting that engineering teams will quickly conduct full technical evaluations to launch rehabilitation work and bring the plant back online as soon as possible.

After wrapping up the inspection at the hydropower plant, the delegation traveled to Bassin Caïman, a geographically critical hydrological hub where three major Haitian waterways — the Rivière Gauche, Rivière Gosseline, and Grande Rivière — converge. The site suffered severe damage during Haiti’s last major cyclone, which washed out a large stretch of the country’s national highway that runs through the area. During the visit, the minister reviewed ongoing gabion construction projects designed to reinforce damaged infrastructure and reduce future flood risk.

Against a backdrop of increasing climate-related extreme weather events hitting the Caribbean, Haiti’s public works ministry — backed by the Prime Minister’s Office — has rejected short-term, superficial fixes that fail to address the root of the country’s infrastructure vulnerabilities. With the official hurricane season set to begin on June 1, immediate action is the top priority right now: the ministry will launch intensive operations to correct at-risk riverbeds across the Southeast, including embankment reinforcement, dredging of accumulated sediment, and bank protection work designed to lower the risk of catastrophic flooding as storm activity ramps up.

Over the medium term, the government plans to shift focus to long-term structural improvements for regional watersheds, implementing comprehensive upgrades that will protect both residential communities and critical infrastructure for decades to come. Beyond infrastructure assessments, this cross-country tour of Haiti’s administrative departments has allowed Minister Pierre Louis and his team to gain on-the-ground insight into local infrastructure needs and engage directly with residents to understand their top concerns as the country works toward widespread reconstruction.