Turks And Caicos Islands flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Turks And Caicos Islands

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Turks And Caicos Islands

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Turks and Caicos Islands, a small island territory with 38,718 residents, confronts significant environmental challenges from climate change, including rising seas and intensified hurricanes. Air quality data is unavailable, showing stable trends, while sustainability metrics like recycling and renewables are not recorded. Strong marine protections exist, but disaster risks remain high due to its coastal vulnerability. Historical trends indicate warming temperatures and increased storm impacts.

Air Quality Index

0510
Good
8.0/10
Stable trend

Air quality data is unavailable from monitoring stations, with database trends stable. Limited industrialization suggests generally good conditions, though tourism and vehicle emissions pose minor risks. No PM2.5 or PM10 averages recorded.

Water Quality

0510
Excellent
8.5/10

Groundwater and desalination provide drinking water meeting WHO standards, with regular testing by the Water Department. Coastal pollution from tourism is monitored, but coral reef runoff affects marine water quality.

Desalinated water safe after treatment; 95% household access.

Recycling System

Recycling infrastructure limited; no national rate available. Basic waste collection exists, with some plastics and metals exported. Efforts focus on reducing single-use plastics via bans.

Green Spaces

Limited terrestrial forests; focus on marine protected areas covering 25% of waters. Key sites include Princess Alexandra National Park.

National Parks: 1
15 marine protected areas protect reefs and mangroves vital for biodiversity.

Environmental Policies

Policies emphasize marine conservation, plastic bans since 2017, and Paris Agreement commitments. National Environment Policy promotes sustainable tourism.

Key Policies:
  • Marine Protected Areas Act
  • Plastic Bag Ban
  • National Climate Change Policy
Renewable Energy: Target 50% renewables by 2030 via solar incentives.

Natural Disaster Risk

HIGH

Primary risks are hurricanes, storm surges, and flooding; earthquakes rare.

hurricanesfloodsstorm surges
Climate Change Impacts: Temperatures rose 0.8°C over 1981-2010 baseline per regional Caribbean trends; sea levels rose 3.5mm/year 1993-2023. Hurricane frequency increased 20% since 1990s; Hurricane Ike (2008) caused $20M damage, Fiona (2022) major flooding. Precipitation erratic with more intense events.

Sustainability Initiatives

Marine Conservation

15 protected areas cover 25% of EEZ, protecting reefs and turtles; enforced by DEMA since 1990s.

Renewable Energy

Solar PV expansion; FortisTCI targets 30MW by 2025, reducing diesel dependence.

Plastic Reduction

Banned single-use plastics 2017; reusable bag promotion in tourism sector.

Wildlife & Nature

Hawksbill TurtleCritically Endangered
Nassau GrouperEndangered
West Indian Whistling DuckVulnerable
BonefishNear Threatened