The CARICOM Private Sector Organisation (CPSO) says it welcomes the decision of the United States to remove tariffs on key Caribbean Community (CARICOM) export sectors, saying it will bring “important relief” to regional industries that had been negatively affected by the reciprocal tariffs implemented earlier this year.
President Donald Trump had first implemented the tariffs in April and updated the measure in August.
“This decision is both timely and consequential. It reinforces the competitiveness of Trinidad and Tobago’s exports in the chemicals sector, which includes fertilisers and related downstream products,” said CPSO chief executive officer, Dr. Patrick Antoine.
“It stabilises key agricultural and agro-processing supply chains across CARICOM and provides targeted relief where it is most needed. For Jamaica, a major exporter of agricultural products to the United States, this relief comes at a critical moment, as the nation’s agricultural sector requires all possible support to rebuild its production infrastructure in the wake of Hurricane Melissa.”
Antoine said that “this outcome demonstrates that when the Community acts in a unified and coordinated manner toward a shared purpose, positive outcomes are achieved for the people of CARICOM.
“The November 14, 2025, Executive Order while reflecting US domestic priorities, also reinforces the credibility of the CARICOM as a key interlocutor with the United States and highlights the importance of aligning regional positions in pursuit of common purposes,” he added.
The CPSO said it had previously estimated that the reciprocal tariffs would cost CARICOM member states US$653.6 million in export revenue annually, with the largest exposures concentrated in the base metals, agriculture and food and chemicals sectors.
Antoine, who is also the CPSO’s technical director, said that the coordinated advocacy of CARICOM leaders played a pivotal role in securing the withdrawal of the reciprocal tariffs, saying that they had all engaged United States counterparts on the urgency of addressing the tariff measures affecting agriculture, chemicals and other critical exports.
The CPSO said that the burden of the reciprocal tariffs fell most heavily on the agriculture and food and chemicals sectors with a CPSO study estimating potential annual export revenue losses of US$117.7 million for agriculture and US$86.1 million for chemicals.
The CPSO said that the November 14 executive order by President Trump eliminates the reciprocal tariffs and reverses the previous rates applied under the America First trade measures.
It said that among the products now exempted from the reciprocal tariffs are ammonia, urea ammonium nitrate (UAN), both essential fertilisers widely used across global agriculture, as well as methanol and selected agri-food products.
“Trinidad and Tobago, which is CARICOM’s leading industrial and manufacturing exporter, had been the member state most affected within the chemicals sector and stands to benefit significantly from the withdrawal of the US tariffs,” the CPSO said.
The CPSO said the US remains CARICOM’s principal trade and economic partner and that the removal of the reciprocal tariffs will, therefore, contribute to the strengthening of the US-CARICOM trade relationship.
It said that during the US’ Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA) Biennial Review Process, which was undertaken in July 2025, the CPSO made a submission to the United States Trade Representative (USTR) outlining the negative implications for CARICOM’s export sectors of the imposition of the reciprocal tariff regime.
The CPSO said that even as the organisation continues to undertake work aimed at measuring the impact of the remaining tariffs on regional exports, Antoine noted that with the removal of these key tariffs, a substantial portion of CARICOM’s exports to the United States will benefit immediately.
“While the CPSO welcomes the removal of the tariffs on a substantial part of the region’s agriculture and Chemical exports, the organisation will continue to work with the CARICOM heads of member states to assist with the elimination of the remaining tariffs affecting CARICOM’s exports to the US.”
The CPSO said that it remains committed to supporting CARICOM leaders and the regional private sector in advancing solutions that strengthen trade facilitation, enhance competitiveness and bolster long-term economic resilience.
CMC/ag/ir/2025
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Nov 24, CMC -
