Nevis Climate Change Risk Profile
The CCCRA — Caribbean Climate Change Risk Assessment — for Nevis. The companion document to the SKN Hazards Risk Profile, focused on the long-term climate hazards that quietly amplify every other hazard the island faces.
What is the CCCRA?
The Nevis Climate Change Risk Profile is the local application of the Caribbean Climate Change Risk Assessment (CCCRA) framework — produced through the regional Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC). It catalogues the climate drivers affecting Nevis, the sectors most exposed, and the mitigation and adaptation responses available.
The companion document to the federal-level SKN Hazards Risk Profile. The hazards profile catalogues every natural hazard the islands face; the climate profile zooms in on the long-term climate-driven changes already underway and projected through this century.
Most climate-change risks won't arrive as a single dramatic event — they'll arrive as the long, slow worsening of hazards Nevis has always faced. Hurricanes intensify a little faster. Dry seasons last a little longer. Storm surges sit on a little more starting water. The combined effect over decades is what reshapes the island.
The Report
The full Nevis Risk Profile CCCRA — embedded inline below, or download for offline reference.
Climate Drivers
Four observable shifts in Nevis's climate are driving most of the assessed risk.
Rising Temperatures
Annual mean and extreme temperatures climbing — more frequent heat-wave conditions, longer dry spells, higher peak humidex.
Shifting Rainfall
Drier dry seasons, more intense rainfall events when it does rain — the 'feast or famine' pattern that drives both drought and flash flooding.
Sea Level Rise
Climate-driven sea-level rise as a multiplier behind every other coastal hazard — surge, erosion, saltwater intrusion.
More Intense Storms
Warmer ocean → more energy available to fuel hurricanes. Storms can intensify faster and produce heavier rainfall.
Sectors Affected
The profile assesses exposure across six core sectors of Nevis's economy and infrastructure.
Water Resources
Drier dry seasons, saltwater intrusion into coastal aquifers, more competition for limited fresh water.
Agriculture
Crop water stress, shifting growing seasons, more frequent crop failure from drought and flooding.
Health
More heat-related illness, expanded range of mosquito-borne diseases, food security pressure.
Tourism
Beach loss, coral bleaching, hurricane disruption to the cruise and stay-over markets.
Infrastructure
Roads, buildings, the airport, the harbour, the EOC — all sized for yesterday's climate.
Coastal Zone
Erosion accelerating, mangroves under pressure, the windward and leeward coasts shifting at different rates.
What to Do — Mitigation & Adaptation
Two responses are available and they aren't substitutes — both are needed. Mitigation slows the trajectory; adaptation reduces the impact of what's already locked in.
Mitigation
Reduce greenhouse-gas emissions. Modest near-term effect on climate trajectory; significant long-term effect on how bad it gets.
- Switch to renewable energy (solar PV on rooftops)
- Improve energy efficiency in buildings
- Reduce dependence on imported fossil fuel
- Support international and national climate targets
Adaptation
Reduce vulnerability to the climate change already locked in. Most of the actions are local, practical and cost-effective.
- Update Coastal Zone Setbacks for projected sea-level rise
- Diversify water supply and improve catchment storage
- Plant drought-tolerant crop varieties; build rainwater harvesting
- Climate-proof new public infrastructure
St. Kitts and Nevis is one of the smallest emitters on Earth — but also one of the most exposed to climate change. The Federation's voice in CARICOM, AOSIS and at UNFCCC conferences carries weight precisely because of that mismatch. The CCCRA is the evidence base for that case.
Companion Documents
The CCCRA doesn't sit on its own. These hazard pages and reference documents give you the operational view of the long-term picture the profile lays out.
SKN Hazards Risk Profile
The federal-level country risk profile — the structural framework this document complements.
OpenSea Level Rise
Operational page for the multiplier hazard behind every coastal threat.
OpenCoastal Erosion
Includes the live NDMD coastal erosion + climate change PDF (7.05 MB).
OpenDrought
Slow-onset hazard most directly amplified by climate change.
OpenHeat Wave
Frequency and intensity rising with annual mean temperature.
OpenHurricane
Warmer ocean → more energy to fuel intensifying storms.
OpenHow to Use the Profile
Planners & Builders
Use the climate projections to size infrastructure for the climate of 2070, not 2026. Roads, harbours, schools and hospitals built today need to survive their service lives under projected conditions.
Sectors at Risk
Agriculture, water, health, tourism and coastal businesses can use the sector chapters to build sector-specific climate adaptation plans.
Educators & Researchers
Cite the CCCRA as the authoritative local climate-change baseline. Combine with the SKN Hazards Risk Profile for the full hazard picture.
Cite, Share, Build On It
The CCCRA is a public document — published for the use of every government department, school, business and household in the Federation. Cite it, share it, and use it to make the case for climate adaptation in the planning decisions that matter most.