Barbados and its Caribbean neighbours face mounting exposure to climate-driven, financial and insurance-related risks that could undermine regional stability unless governments and industries act decisively to strengthen resilience, a leading business figure has warned.
Marlon Yarde, president of the Barbados International Business Association (BIBA), said these risks are now, more than ever, defining economic issues for the region, as reinsurance constraints, regulatory pressures and rapid technological change reshape the region’s vulnerability — and failing to prepare for those shifts could prove the greatest risk of all.
Yarde delivered the warning at Tuesday’s media launch of the 2026 Barbados Risk and Insurance Management Conference (BRIM), at Pelican House, Harbour Road. The two-day conference is scheduled for March 26 and 27 at the Wyndham Grand Barbados Sam Lord’s Castle Resort.
“You meet at a moment when the global risk landscape is shifting in real time, shaped by climate volatility, economic uncertainty, geopolitical tension and rapid technological transformation,” Yarde told reporters. “In this environment, insurance and risk management are no longer back-office functions. They are central to national resilience, business competitiveness and investor confidence.”
Barbados was not merely reacting to global developments, but positioning itself to help shape how small, forward-looking jurisdictions respond to rising and increasingly complex risks, Yarde said.
“Barbados is not simply observing these global shifts. We are actively shaping how small, forward-looking jurisdictions respond to them,” he said.
He described BRIM 2026 as a strategic platform designed to confront the challenges facing Barbados and other Caribbean states as global reinsurance markets evolve, competition intensifies, and pricing and capacity continue to shift.
“Global reinsurance markets are evolving rapidly. Competition is intensifying. Terms are shifting. Tax-free losses continue to influence pricing and capacity,” Yarde said, noting that these realities raise uncomfortable but necessary questions for the region.
“What will make the region uninsurable? And how do we ensure risk transfer remains accessible and sustainable?” he asked.
BRIM 2026 would examine the Caribbean’s specific exposure to both predictable and unpredictable risks, and what that means for preparedness, long-term planning and strategic resilience in an era of heightened climate threats and economic uncertainty, Yarde said.
But he stressed that risk alone was not the defining issue. Regulatory strength, solvency frameworks and governance standards were now central to market credibility and investor confidence.
“In a world where capital is selective and risk is repriced quickly, confidence matters,” Yarde said. “Confidence is built through strong frameworks, transparency and regulatory foresight.”
The conference’s focus on regulatory innovation and credibility was especially timely, he said, arguing that these were not abstract policy debates but factors that directly influence investment flows, market access and long-term sustainability in the insurance industry.
Yarde also pointed to growing financial pressures on insurers and long-term institutions, which must balance the need for returns with discipline around liquidity, credit quality and downside risk.
He highlighted Barbados’ established role in captive insurance, noting that the island’s global standing was built on decades of regulatory credibility, professional expertise and innovation, but warned that competitiveness could not be taken for granted.
“Captives continue to gain momentum as part of modern risk strategy, and Barbados continues to rank among the world’s leading jurisdictions for captives, not by accident,” Yarde said. “At the same time, competitiveness requires constant evolution.”
As part of that evolution, he said BRIM 2026 would explore whether Barbados could position itself as a domicile for managing general agents (MGAs), as they expand globally through specialisation, technology and new distribution models.
The BIBA president also flagged emerging challenges tied to digital assets, crypto markets and new financial infrastructure, warning that alongside opportunity came governance, cyber risk, custody and operational resilience concerns.
Decisions made within the insurance and risk management sector have direct consequences for economies and communities across the region, he added, noting that BRIM 2026 would bring together regulators, insurers, reinsurers, risk managers, analysts and innovators to strengthen the region’s capacity to respond to a rapidly changing global environment.
“In a world defined by uncertainty, the greater risk is failing to prepare.”
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