In a formal virtual diplomatic ceremony held on July 2, 2026, Her Excellency Fiona Ramsey, the newly appointed European Union Ambassador to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean, officially presented her credentials to Dr. Didacus Jules, Director General of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), marking a new chapter in the long-standing collaboration between the two blocs. The event, detailed in an official OECS press release, not only signaled the formal launch of Ramsey’s tenure working with the regional integration body but also reinforced the European Union’s unwavering commitment to advancing shared priorities across the Eastern Caribbean.
Welcoming Ramsey to her new post, Dr. Jules extended his congratulations and reflected on the decades-long collaborative bond between the OECS and the EU. He emphasized that the European Union stands as one of the OECS’ most steadfast development partners, with a relationship rooted in mutual respect, shared democratic values, and a joint dedication to advancing sustainable development, multilateralism, and improved quality of life for the people of the Eastern Caribbean.
In her remarks, Ambassador Ramsey celebrated the OECS’ 40-plus year track record of driving regional integration and cooperation across its 11 member states. She also offered a unique perspective on the geographic and strategic closeness of the EU and the Caribbean region, noting that Europe is not merely a distant transatlantic partner. Through French overseas territories of Martinique and Guadeloupe, as well as other EU-affiliated overseas countries and territories in the region, Europe is an immediate neighbor sharing the same maritime space, facing many of the same transboundary challenges, from climate impacts to maritime management. This proximity, Ramsey argued, makes deep, coordinated cooperation between the EU and OECS both a natural alignment and a strategic necessity.
The ambassador brought official greetings from two of the European Union’s top leaders: European Council President António Luís Santos da Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. She used the occasion to reaffirm the EU’s commitment to expanding its partnership with the Caribbean bloc through the bloc’s flagship Global Gateway Investment Agenda, a strategic infrastructure and development investment initiative rolled out across the globe.
Ramsey outlined the broad scope of existing collaboration between the two sides, spanning a wide range of priority areas critical to the Eastern Caribbean’s long-term stability and growth: renewable energy development, climate disaster resilience, water security, biodiversity conservation, sustainable tourism growth, food sovereignty, expanded digital connectivity, sargassum seaweed management, and accessible climate finance. She also highlighted new educational mobility and learning opportunities for Caribbean students opened through the EU’s Erasmus+ programme, a long-running initiative that supports cross-border education and training across the globe.
In a key institutional announcement during the ceremony, Ramsey confirmed that starting in September 2026, the existing EU Delegation to Barbados will be upgraded to an enhanced regional delegation. This expanded mandate will task the delegation with leading and coordinating implementation of the EU’s Global Gateway Strategy across the entire Caribbean region, streamlining delivery of development projects and investment initiatives.
Following the formal credential presentation, Ambassador Ramsey and Director General Jules held closed working discussions focused on expanding the scope and impact of EU-OECS cooperation. The talks centered on priority areas including climate resilience, renewable energy scale-up, sustainable ocean governance, digital transformation, expanded educational access, technological innovation, deepened regional integration, and cross-border infrastructure development.
Both leaders underlined the need for a more strategic, coordinated approach to development cooperation that aligns the OECS’ own long-term Development Strategy with the EU’s Global Gateway Investment Agenda. They closed the meeting by reaffirming their shared commitment to unlocking new economic and social opportunities for the people of the Eastern Caribbean through strengthened collaboration, targeted innovation, and responsible, sustainable investment.
