ON Monday, April 22, the Caribbean Electric Utility Services Corporation (CARILEC) hosted its annual Disaster Management Roundtable aimed at facilitating knowledge sharing, strengthening relationships, and further developing collaborative mechanisms among disaster coordinators and health and safety officers from member utilities across the region.
The Roundtable was convened under the theme: ‘Developing Adaptive Capacity: Building Resilient Utilities, Deepening Regional and Multi-Sectoral Cooperation in an increasingly Volatile, Multi-Hazard Environment.’
The Roundtable was conducted using a hybrid format, at the Headquarters of the CARILEC Secretariat in Castries, with other participants joining virtually. The agenda included presentations from utilities and key partner agencies, such as the Caribbean Water & Sewerage Association Inc. Member utilities shared ground-breaking strategies for the management of disasters and the restoration of power supply following outages caused by major natural disasters.
With the Caribbean facing the increasing intensity, and frequency of hurricanes, earthquakes, and other natural disasters, as well as cyber-security threats, such as ransomware and relentless phishing attacks, developing efficient and cohesive disaster management strategies for electric utilities remains a top priority for CARILEC. Discussions at the session emphasized the fact that building resilient utilities and adaptive capacity requires sustaining and deepening regional and multi-sectoral cooperation as well as enhancing a multilayered approach, at the individual, community, organizational, national, and regional levels.
Executive Director of CARILEC, Dr. Cletus Bertin said, “The Roundtable provides a critical forum for our members, key institutional partners and the Secretariat to foster greater collaboration, develop synergies and further innovate our modalities of work in this area of operations. Participants engaged in comprehensive discussions centered on disaster preparedness, response, and recovery efforts aimed at mitigating the impact of such events on the consumer and the utility infrastructure. The outcomes of the Roundtable will significantly bolster the social and economic well-being of the region by enhancing the ability of utilities to prepare, respond to and recover from catastrophic events.”
The Association also provides support to its members through the long established CARILEC Disaster Assistance Program (CDAP).
CDAP was established to facilitate cooperation among CARILEC Member Utilities to better manage the threat of natural disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes. One major benefit of CDAP is the deployment of personnel from across the CARILEC utility members (Line workers and Engineers, as required) to affected utilities to ramp up post-disaster restoration efforts.