
KINGSTON, Jamaica — The Opposition People’s National Party says Friday night’s nationwide electricity failure again exposed how vulnerable National Water Commission treatment facilities are because of their reliance on the Jamaica Public Service network, with thousands of Jamaicans losing water supply across the island.
Ian Hayles, the party’s spokesman on water, said in a statement that many households were left dry because the Government had not moved decisively toward solar energy for key water infrastructure.
Hayles said Western Jamaica faced similar disruption during Hurricane Melissa, but argued that the minister’s budget presentation still brought no fresh solution. He said the country remained almost fully tied to the electricity grid and that ordinary Jamaicans were bearing the consequences.
The Westmoreland Western member of parliament described the delay in adopting renewable systems as more than a simple lapse, saying it amounted to a governance failure with implications for public health, tourism and daily life in densely populated communities.
He called on the Government to urgently shift critical NWC assets to solar and other advanced renewable technologies, warning against leaving the country exposed to one failure point.
Hayles also urged the deployment of generators to priority locations, including tourism corridors, major population centres and residential areas. He further demanded that the Government present a full energy resilience plan for the water sector during the current parliamentary session.
Syndicated from Jamaica Observer · originally published .
Legal context · powered by Jurifi
Get the legal angle on this story. Pick a prompt and Jurifi's AI will explain it using Jamaican law.
AI replies are based on Jamaican law via Jurifi. Not legal advice.
Other coverage

Fruit Vendor K!lled in Montego Bay | Jamaica Demands Urgent Safety Changes
Realnews YtWatch
JPS under scrutiny following island-wide electricity blackout
Radio Jamaica News Online
Omar Wright | Every Drop Counts: How Jamaicans Can Help Secure Our Water Future
Our Today
Omar Wright | Every drop counts: How Jamaicans can help secure our water future
Jamaica Gleaner
Multi-Agency Initiative to Assess Hurricane-Damaged Water Systems in St. Ann
Jamaica Information Service