Liberty Caribbean, the operators of Flow, Liberty Business and BTC, have confirmed its state of readiness for the 2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season, which officially begins on 1 June.
With more than a century of service across the Caribbean, the company continues to strengthen its preparedness, resilience, and emergency response capabilities to support customers, governments, and communities throughout the region during periods of crisis.
The announcement follows the significant impact of Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica last year, which reinforced the critical importance of resilient communications infrastructure and rapid response capabilities across the Caribbean.
“Hurricane Melissa reminded us once again that connectivity is far more than technology. In moments of crisis, it becomes a lifeline for families, businesses, emergency responders, and governments,” said Inge Smidts, Chief Executive Officer, Liberty Caribbean.
“The lessons from that experience have further strengthened our resolve and accelerated our investments in network resilience, operational preparedness, and recovery capabilities across the region. We remain committed to ensuring our customers and communities can rely on us when it matters most.”
Over the past year, Liberty Caribbean has continued to make strategic investments to strengthen its networks and improve disaster resilience across multiple markets. In Jamaica, this included major investments in a new and enhanced mobile network, expanded spectrum capabilities, strengthened transport diversity, hardened infrastructure, backup power systems, and additional redundancy measures aimed at improving reliability and accelerating recovery.
The company has also continued simulation exercises, emergency response drills, fuel and logistics readiness planning, and cross-functional coordination efforts across all operating markets to ensure rapid mobilisation if required during the hurricane season. Flow Grenada completed an emergency response drill in February 2026 and has another scheduled for June 2026.
“Our teams have worked tirelessly to modernise our infrastructure, strengthen operational readiness, and improve how we respond during emergencies. While no network is immune to extreme weather events, our focus remains on building stronger, smarter, and more resilient systems capable of supporting the Caribbean through disruption and recovery alike,” added Smidts.
NOAA’s forecast for the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to November 30, indicates a 35% chance of a near-normal season, a 10% chance of an above-normal season, and a 55% chance of a below-normal season.
The agency forecasts a total of 8 to 14 named storms (winds of 63 km/h or more). Of these, 3 to 6 are expected to become hurricanes (with winds of 75 mph or more), including 1 to 3 major hurricanes (Category 3, 4, or 5 with winds of 115 mph or more). An average season sees 14 named storms, including seven hurricanes, three of which are major hurricanes.
“We understand the responsibility that comes with serving the Caribbean. Our commitment extends beyond connectivity alone. It is also about supporting the resilience of the communities we serve and standing beside them before, during, and after times of crisis,” said Smidts.
Flow Grenada’s Country Manager Lincoln Baptiste said, “We are confident in the upgrades made to the network and provisions made after the impact of Hurricane Beryl. Although we do not wish for a repeat of such natural disasters we are prepared for any disaster that may impact Grenada, Carriacou & Petite Martinique.”
Liberty Caribbean and Flow continue to encourage customers and businesses across the region to review their own hurricane preparedness plans and remain informed throughout the season.
Source: Liberty Caribbean






















