Trinidad And Tobago flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Trinidad And Tobago

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Trinidad And Tobago

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Trinidad and Tobago, a Caribbean twin-island nation with 1.4 million people, contends with climate change impacts including temperature rises of 0.9°C since 1960 and more frequent extreme weather. Stable air quality trends coexist with industrial pollution challenges, while protected areas cover 44% of land. Government initiatives target renewables and Paris Agreement goals, but data limitations hinder full assessment of recycling and water metrics. Sources: https://www.emam.gov.tt, https://climateknowledgeportal.worldbank.org/country/trinidad-tobago.

Air Quality Index

0510
Moderate
6.5/10(AQI: N/A)
Stable trend

Air quality in Trinidad and Tobago shows a stable 6-month trend per database, influenced by oil and gas industries in areas like Point Lisas. Government monitoring via EMA reveals PM2.5 levels occasionally exceeding WHO guidelines in urban zones, but no current AQI data available. Initiatives focus on emission controls with moderate effectiveness.

Water Quality

0510
Good
7.0/10

Water quality is generally good with 98% access to safely managed drinking water per WHO/UNICEF data, treated via WASA standards. Coastal pollution from oil spills and urban runoff poses risks, monitored by EMA. Treatment meets basic standards but faces challenges from illegal dumping.

98% population access to safe water; desalinated supply supplements rainfall-dependent sources.

Recycling System

Recycling infrastructure is limited with no database rate available; informal systems handle plastics and paper via private collectors. National policy promotes waste separation, but low participation and landfill reliance persist. Recent initiatives aim to expand facilities.

Recycling Rate: %

Green Spaces

Protected areas cover about 44% of land, including Main Ridge Forest Reserve (national park) and wildlife sanctuaries. These support biodiversity amid deforestation pressures from agriculture. Two national parks and multiple reserves managed by Forestry Division.

Forest Coverage: 44.0%
National Parks: 2
Key sites: Main Ridge (24 sq km, oldest reserve in Western Hemisphere), Nariva Swamp, Matura Forest.

Environmental Policies

Key policies include Environmental Management Act (2000) enforcing EIA, National Climate Change Policy (2018), and Paris Agreement ratification. Targets 30% renewables by 2030; plastic ban on single-use bags implemented 2021.

Key Policies:
  • Environmental Management Act
  • National Climate Change Policy
  • Plastics Nuisance Act
Renewable Energy: 10MW solar by 2025, aiming 25-30% renewables by 2030 per NDC.

Natural Disaster Risk

MODERATE

Common disasters include hurricanes, floods, and earthquakes due to Atlantic hurricane belt and tectonic location. Recent events: Hurricane Beryl (2024) caused flooding; 2023 floods killed 5, affected 5,000.

hurricanesfloodsearthquakes
Climate Change Impacts: Temperatures rose 0.9°C (1960-2020), with 1.1°C above pre-industrial; extreme rainfall up 20% per decade since 1990s. Hurricane frequency/intensity increased; sea levels rose 3.1mm/year (1993-2021), threatening coasts. Floods 2x more frequent last 20 years.

Sustainability Initiatives

Renewable Energy

National Energy Policy targets 30% renewables by 2030 with solar/wind projects; 10MW installed by 2025 per NDC.

Waste Management

Integrated Solid Waste Management Plan promotes recycling centers and bans single-use plastics to reduce landfill waste.

Protected Areas

Expansion of Ramsar sites like Caroni Swamp for wetland conservation and carbon sequestration.

Wildlife & Nature

Leatherback TurtleVulnerable
OcelotEndangered
Red-bellied GrackleCommon