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How Entrepreneurs are recharging the Caribbean
From Left: HANCE JOHN at Westfield Farms and RICARDO BOATSWAIN, owner of Solife Solar
Features
February 10, 2026

How Entrepreneurs are recharging the Caribbean

By ARI SHAW

WHILE POLICY discussions on renewable energy often occur at the national and governmental levels, a new generation of young innovators is rewriting the narrative of energy resilience.

From solar-powered farming operations in St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) to waste-to-material innovations in Jamaica, it is the youth-led enterprises that are bringing real change to communities.

These entrepreneurs are creating jobs, lowering energy costs, and reimagining sustainability through technology and creativity. The region’s energy transition is not just about infrastructure; it’s about investing in people who have the power to make change from the ground up.

RESIDENTS HAVING fun at 360 Recycle Manufacturing Playground

Young people (some barely out of their twenties) are not waiting for the next grant or foreign investor. They’re solving the problem in their own creative ways.

In the lush Marriaqua Valley, often known as SVG’s Food Basket, Hance John, now 34, saw the high cost of electricity as a barrier to modern farming in his early twenties.

John started small, installing solar-powered lights to avoid the expense of grid connection. Seven years later, he graduated to a full suite of solar solutions: cameras for security, pumps for irrigation, and feeders for crops and livestock, but this time, for his business, Westfield Farms.

During an interview, John explained that this move bridges traditional agriculture with cost-effective, sustainable technology.

“My community has been pushing the boundaries of sustainable farming,” he further explained, “We live in a farming community where innovation is inherent.”

According to him, his systems cut bills and withstand hurricanes and droughts better. The young farmer disclosed that he hires locally, sources raw materials from nearby, and offers internships to agricultural students and young technicians.

“I try my best to give opportunities within the community,” he explained.

John credits his early education in agriculture to primary school through to the tertiary level. His work represents a general reduction in energy costs for small-scale stakeholders by combating praedial larceny with solar surveillance. It also promotes modular systems that make farming more resilient to disasters such as hurricanes and droughts.

However, initiatives are not without challenges. He acknowledged funding as the “number one killer” of micro and small agricultural businesses.The young farmer stated that banks view investments in small farmers as high risk, noting theft, pests, diseases, and weather events. He further disclosed that “outdated laws” on praedial larceny offer “all bark and no bite,” discouraging investment.

His solutions? Policies that open doors early. He suggests youth-led community projects, Research and Development (R&D) fora to bridge the gap, education on sustainable energy starting in primary school, student exchanges, internships abroad, and even green scholarships.

“Focus on agriculture and tourism,” he suggested, “ That’s where the real development happens.”

Across the island, Ricardo Boatswain experienced similar challenges.

He stated in an exclusive interview that, 15 years ago at 27, he launched Solife Solar after noticing that families and businesses were “bleeding money” due to high electricity bills.

However, Boatswain didn’t pull this knowledge from the abyss. Banking taught him numbers and risk. Project management taught him execution, and construction gave him the “hands-on” feel for building things that last.

That combination taught him to see the sun not as a natural anomaly but as an economic equation. He bootstrapped the company and reinvested every win to avoid “handouts.”

“Formal setup would have cost hundreds of thousands,” Boatswain recalled. “But I gained traction through grit and risk-taking.”

Today, Solife is a regional leader, offering the Caribbean’s only 84-month payment plan for solar installations. This makes clean energy accessible to everyday Vincentians, from homes to businesses. His utility-scale projects and residential collages of rooftop panels demonstrate how solar can deliver energy independence.

During the interview, Boatswain referred to the youth as “the engine of the transition,” He, however, added that engines need fuel. “Funding, clear vision, policy support, and most of all, grit and taking risks.”

Further north, on the island of Jamaica, another story was shaped through harder circumstances.

At the age of 13, Sheed Cole left his grandmother’s house. A house that lacked electricity and running water. After his family emigrated, he collected empty soda bottles to buy food.

“Survival meant recycling long before it was a buzzword,” he said in an interview.

Cole went on to become a visual arts educator for several years, but the island’s waste crisis never left his mind.

He calculated the number of plastic receptacles- styrofoam, and food containers- that clogged gullies and streets, totalling two million per day.

“What if this waste is not the problem, but the raw material?”

That question gave birth to 360 Recycle Manufacturing Ltd. Now in his thirties, and using low-tech methods that locals can easily learn, the company shreds styrofoam and plastic. Mixes it with cement and wire mesh to create a lightweight composite for playgrounds, benches, planters, sculptures, and even housing components.

He said that in places like Rosetown, children play on equipment built from the very trash that once littered their streets, “Environmental, social, and psychological all at once,” Cole added.

The Jamaican entrepreneur, now 48, pointed out that while he faced numerous difficulties, mainly scaling, his innovation has won awards, attracted partnerships and funding, and the development of better equipment that now trains artists, fabricators, labourers, and youth from tough communities in fabrication, design thinking, and entrepreneurship.

“Youth are central to the Caribbean’s sustainability,” Cole insisted. “When they see waste as value, they stop seeing themselves as victims.”

He further pointed out that his company has embedded energy efficiency directly into construction; composite insulation keeps buildings cooler in Jamaica’s heat.

“Less need for fans or air conditioning means lower electricity bills over time.”

The innovator called for a policy that backs local talent over imported fixes.

“Invest here, mandate recycled materials in public works, parks, schools, side walks, and housing,” he said.

“Prioritise them in procurement, and the industry scales itself.”

He proceeded to offer young entrepreneurs what he terms a simple truth: “This work is hard. You’ll feel isolated. But if it’s rooted in your community, you were born for this moment. The Caribbean’s future depends on it.”

From Marriaqua’s solar-fed farms to Kingston’s recycled playgrounds, there’s one thing in common: Caribbean youths aren’t waiting for approval. They are developing resilience by utilising their grit, local expertise, and inventiveness.

SVG’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) 2.0 aims for 60% renewable energy by 2030, with a strong focus on private innovation and youth participation (30% actively participating in climate discussions). Jamaica is travelling in tandem with the larger region. The question at hand is not whether the shift is feasible, but rather whether communities, partners, and governments will make sufficient investments in the individuals already making it happen.

One solar panel, one composite block, one trained young person at a time- the Caribbean is recharging itself.

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