On Thursday, Antigua and Barbuda celebrated the official inauguration of the expanded Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority (ECCAA) headquarters located at V.C. Bird International Airport, a milestone that government officials say will solidify the island nation’s standing as the Eastern Caribbean’s preeminent aviation hub.
Addressing attendees at the opening ceremony, which drew senior government officials, key aviation industry stakeholders, and regional diplomatic representatives, Charles Fernandez — the country’s Minister of Tourism, Civil Aviation, Transportation and Investment — emphasized that the regional regulator’s long-term presence in Antigua and Barbuda is a powerful testament to the widespread confidence in the nation’s aviation infrastructure and governance.
“Having ECCAA’s headquarters based here in Antigua and Barbuda speaks volumes about the trust the region places in our country and our growing aviation sector,” Fernandez noted during his remarks. “This expansion only reinforces our position as a strategic connectivity and regulatory hub across the Eastern Caribbean.”
Far from being just a construction project, Fernandez framed the addition of the new headquarters wing as a visible marker of the steady growth and ongoing modernization of civil aviation across the entire Eastern Caribbean. Over the past decade, the regional aviation sector has shifted dramatically: passenger volumes have climbed steadily, commercial airline networks have expanded into new markets, and regulatory requirements for safety and security have grown more stringent, creating new demands for governing bodies.
The ECCAA serves as the primary regional aviation regulator, holding responsibility for safety oversight, security enforcement, and regulatory compliance across six member states of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS). Fernandez reaffirmed the Antigua and Barbuda government’s unwavering commitment to ensuring the authority has the modern infrastructure, resources, and institutional support needed to fulfill its critical regulatory mandate across the OECS bloc.
Beyond supporting the regional regulator, Antigua and Barbuda is advancing an aggressive strategy to expand its overall airlift capacity, with active negotiations already underway to secure new direct air routes from the United Arab Emirates, Latin America and South America. As the nation pursues these ambitious connectivity goals, Fernandez stressed that strong regional institutions like ECCAA become ever more critical to long-term success.
“Safe, consistently regulated aviation systems are non-negotiable for the sustainable growth of the air transport sector, and that is exactly what ECCAA delivers,” he added.
The minister also offered public praise to ECCAA Director General Anthony Whittier and the entire authority staff, highlighting their commitment to upholding strict global regulatory standards for years while operating out of cramped, inadequate facilities at their former Nugent Avenue location before the relocation to the V.C. Bird International Airport campus.
Looking ahead, Fernandez pledged the Antigua and Barbuda government would continue to back future expansion initiatives for the authority, noting that rising aviation activity across the Eastern Caribbean will require ECCAA to steadily scale up its operational capacity and service offerings to meet growing demand.
ECCAA leadership echoed that outlook following the official opening, confirming that the upgraded facility will streamline internal operations, cut bureaucratic delays, and boost the authority’s ability to deliver consistent, effective safety and security oversight across all six of its OECS member states.
