by Brendan Heyck and Fayeann Lawrence, Co-Founders of Island Innovators (@isleinno)
Definition: What is Radaptation?
Radaptation (noun) is a deliberate and radical process of structural transformation in response to systemic shifts in the global environment. In the Caribbean context, this means redesigning our economies, governance systems, education models, and regional collaboration with urgency and vision, so we are not merely resilient, but remain relevant.
The storm is here
For decades, leaders, thinkers, and communities across the Caribbean have echoed the same aspirations: diversify our economies, modernise governance, upskill our people, and integrate regionally. These weren’t new ideas, but what was once seen as needing gradual reform is now urgent and imperative.
We’re calling it “Radaptation” — a portmanteau of Radical Adaptation — a deliberate, transformative shift in how we think, build, assess, govern, and collaborate in the face of a rapidly changing global order. Climate change, globalisation, and artificial intelligence are already reshaping the landscape. The gap between nations that are thriving and those struggling to adapt is widening — and we are falling further behind.
Now, with a resurgent Trump presidency escalating a global trade war within its first 50 days, the stakes for the Caribbean have risen exponentially. From tourism and trade to foreign investment and cost of living, the ripple effects will be precipitous, outsized, and deeply consequential.
This is not about surviving a single shock. It is about ensuring the Caribbean does not become an afterthought in the emerging global reorder.
Radaptation is our opportunity to lead, if we’re bold and courageous enough to act.
Why Radaptation now?
The call for adaptation in the Caribbean is not new. For generations, we’ve known that small island states must become agile to survive. But there is a difference between adjusting to the wind and redesigning the sail.
Today’s convergence of global crises — economic volatility, climate emergency, technological disruption, and geopolitical instability — demands more than conventional reform. It demands radical rethinking, strategic courage, and regional unity. It demands Radaptation.
History has repeatedly shown us the cost of delay.
- In the 1970s, the oil crisis exposed our energy vulnerabilities
- In the 1980s and 90s, structural adjustment programmes hollowed out public service investment.
- In the 2000s, WTO rulings on preferential EU banana imports dismantled the agricultural backbone of Eastern Caribbean economies
Each time, we adapted, but reactively and at a huge cost. Today’s trade war, fuelled by nationalist rhetoric and protectionist policy, strikes at the heart of the Caribbean’s global dependencies. And it’s already here.
The Trade War reality: Risks and the radical opportunity
Trade wars may sound like distant power struggles between giants. But for the Caribbean — small, open economies with deep dependencies on global markets — the fallout lands fast and deep.
On 21 March 2025, Tropical Shipping and the Caricom Private Sector Organisation (CSPO) sounded the alarm through their local representatives at the Grenada Chamber of Industry and Commerce (GCIC). They warned that the US Trade Representative’s (USTR) proposed Section 301 tariffs enacted via executive order to start 6 April — targeting Chinese-built vessels with port entry fees up to US$1.5 million — are expected to disproportionately affect Caribbean trade routes, where the majority of vessels are Chinese-built.
This will increase shipping costs, squeeze consumer budgets, and disrupt supply chains. It’s a clear reminder that smaller economies pay the highest price in the schoolyard fights started by bullies.
The Real-World Risks
- Imported inflation: Higher shipping costs mean higher prices on everything, including essentials like food, medicine, fuel
- Tourism volatility: Economic insecurity suppresses travel and investment
- Remittance pressure: Diaspora incomes are vulnerable to recession ripple effects, and family remittance flows bolster the livelihoods of many in the Caribbean
- Development finance tightening: Global uncertainty chokes access to concessional finance from agencies like USAID
- Food and energy insecurity: Trade bottlenecks make our import dependence dangerous to cost-of-living and quality-of-life
And yet, opportunity lives in disruption.
Radaptive Opportunities
- Regional production hubs — agro-processing, manufacturing, and creative exports for intra-Caribbean markets
- Nearshoring and Digital Services — tech-ready, English-speaking labour
- Green Energy sovereignty — geothermal, solar, and wind to cut dependency and create jobs
- Food System reinvention — local, climate-smart agriculture that feeds, empowers and independently sustains
- Innovation-led diplomacy — regional voice; unified strategy; reinvigorated soft-power
- Regional cargo and transport — shared maritime and air logistics infrastructure
- Foster Free Trade in new markets — expanding trade partnerships beyond traditional blocs, particularly with Africa, Latin America, and the Global South
What Radical Adaptation looks like
Radaptation isn’t about cosmetic upgrades. It requires a shift in our systems of power, production, thinking, and potential.
Governance: From Bureaucracy to Boldness
- Digital-first services and open data
- Agile legislation for AI, fintech, and innovation
- Regional regulatory harmonisation
- Lean government operations with a rejection of “the way it’s always been done” — colonial legacy thinking and status quo
Economy: From Extraction to Creation
- Scale up the knowledge economy
- Build startup ecosystems and value chains
- Mitigate import dependency through regional trade
- Open the markets — dissolve the impediments to business and innovation
Education: From Rote to Radical Relevance
- Embed digital fluency, problem-solving, critical thinking and entrepreneurship
- Align training to future sectors, not just legacy jobs
- Support lifelong learning as a national ethic
- Implement a “Peace Force” — local training and employment opportunities to actively participate in nation-building
Conclusion: Our Time, Our Turn
We are no strangers to adversity in the Caribbean. But we must now confront a different kind of challenge — one not defined by hurricanes or external machinations but by whether we are bold enough to redesign our future on our own terms.
Radaptation is not about panic; it’s about possibility. It’s about reclaiming agency in a world that does not wait for small states to catch up. It’s about building a region where young minds see more than migration to increasingly unwelcoming countries as their only path forward — and where nations like Grenada are not reactively resilient but proactively ready.
The question is not whether change is coming or how seriously it will affect us. It’s whether we will shape it or continue to be deformed by it.
If this vision speaks to you — whether you’re in public service, private enterprise, civil society, or education — let’s connect at [email protected]. Let’s share ideas and strategise together to make this shift real. Let us have a voice in how we treat these threats as a nation and as a region. The Caribbean doesn’t need to wait to be invited into the future. We can build it.

