Andrea Perez Sobers
ST JOHN’S, Antigua — Caribbean tourism leaders are moving to reshape the region’s tourism economy with a new push to build a regional logistics and supply chain framework aimed at keeping more tourism dollars within Caribbean economies.
The initiative was unveiled during a press conference at the 44th edition of the Caribbean Travel Marketplace 2026 in Antigua and Barbuda, where regional officials outlined plans for a new working commission focused on strengthening tourism supply chains, improving business integration and reducing dependence on imports.
Leading the discussions were Dona Regis-Prosper, Ian Gooding-Edghill and Edmund Bartlett.
Officials said the region can no longer rely solely on visitor arrivals while importing large volumes of goods and services used by the tourism sector.
Instead, the commission will focus on building stronger regional production networks capable of supplying hotels, restaurants, cruise operators and tourism businesses across the Caribbean.
Regis-Prosper said the plan is intended to create deeper collaboration between governments, tourism agencies, private sector operators and international development institutions.
The proposed framework is built around eight major areas: regional connectivity, investment, infrastructure, digital transformation, labour mobility, human capital development, visitor facilitation and supply chain resilience.
Bartlett said the Caribbean must move aggressively to strengthen the connection between tourism and broader economic development.
He argued that the region has spent decades growing visitor arrivals while failing to sufficiently expand domestic and regional production systems capable of benefiting from tourism demand.
Bartlett also stressed the need to professionalise the tourism supplier network and expand regional manufacturing and agricultural capacity to service hotels and tourism operators throughout the Caribbean.
Gooding-Edghill said the project forms part of a broader long-term strategy to increase the share of tourism revenue retained within Caribbean economies.
He noted that while the Caribbean attracts millions of visitors annually, too much tourism spending still leaks out of the region through imports and overseas procurement.
Regional officials believe a stronger tourism logistics network could help create jobs, deepen business linkages and improve economic returns from tourism across island economies.
The initiative emerged from meetings between the Caribbean Tourism Organization and regional hotel and tourism associations held alongside Caribbean Travel Marketplace this week.
Representatives from Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Anguilla, Belize, the British Virgin Islands and several other Caribbean territories participated in the talks.
Officials confirmed that the Caribbean Tourism Organization Council of Ministers has already approved the conceptual framework for the initiative, allowing the project to move into its implementation phase.
International financial institutions including the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank are expected to provide technical support and possible financing assistance as the project develops.
Tourism officials believe the proposed logistics hub could become one of the region’s most significant economic integration projects in years, particularly as Caribbean governments search for new ways to convert strong tourism arrivals into broader economic growth.
The move also comes as regional tourism officials continue discussions on improving intra-Caribbean travel, airlift coordination and trade linkages as part of wider efforts to strengthen economic cooperation across the Caribbean.
