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DoA, CUC Partner to Repurpose Vegetation Material for Agricultural Use

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Summary

The Department of Agriculture (DoA) and Caribbean Utilities Company (CUC) have entered into a partnership to redirect chipped vegetation material from powerline maintenance away from landfill toward agricultural use. The vegetation material will be delivered to a DoA-designated location where it will be processed into mulch or incorporated into composting operations. Farmers and members of the public may collect the material for soil improvement purposes. This voluntary initiative aims to support environmental stewardship and strengthen local agriculture through more efficient use of organic materials.

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What changed

The Department of Agriculture and Caribbean Utilities Company have announced a new partnership to repurpose vegetation waste from powerline maintenance activities. Under the agreement, chipped vegetation material will no longer be transported to landfill but will instead be delivered to a designated DoA location for processing into mulch or composting operations. The DoA will make the repurposed material available to farmers and the public for collection to support soil improvement and sustainable agricultural practices.

This initiative affects the agricultural sector and energy utilities in the Cayman Islands by creating a new source of organic material for farming and land management. No compliance obligations or deadlines are imposed; the arrangement is voluntary and operational in nature, aimed at promoting environmental sustainability and supporting local food production through efficient waste diversion.

What to do next

  1. Monitor for updates from the Department of Agriculture regarding material availability and collection procedures

Archived snapshot

Apr 16, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

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DoA, CUC Partner to Repurpose Vegetation Material for Agricultural Use

15 April 2026 | Press Release | By: PLAHI PR

Vegetation material generated during routine powerline maintenance will now be repurposed to support agriculture rather than transported to landfill under a new agreement between the Department of Agriculture (DOA) and Caribbean Utilities Company, Ltd. (CUC).

The agreement allows chipped vegetation material produced through CUC’s vegetation management activities to be delivered to a designated Department of Agriculture location, where it will be available for public and agricultural collection to support soil improvement.

Proper vegetation management is essential: Vegetation contact with power lines may lead to electrical shock, fires, and power outages. Proactive vegetation management helps to keep our communities safe, protects the grid, and improves resilience from storm‑related damage. Property owners are asked to manage landscaping to prevent overgrowth, when vegetation encroaches on the powerlines, it becomes unsafe for personnel without specialized training to address this growth. CUC routinely addresses vegetation growth on roadways and public areas and will assist and advise property owners if landscaping growth is becoming or becomes unsafe.  In the past, much of the resulting green waste from the vegetation management, was transported to the landfill for disposal.

Under the new arrangement, that material will instead be redirected for productive use within the agricultural sector.

Minister for Planning, Lands, Agriculture, Housing & Infrastructure, the Hon. Johany “Jay” Ebanks, said the initiative represents a practical partnership that supports both environmental stewardship and local agriculture.

“Vegetation material generated during essential maintenance of our electricity network will now be put to productive use rather than transported to landfill. Through the Department of Agriculture, this material will be available for collection as mulch, assisting farmers and the wider community with land management,” the Minister said.

Once delivered, the vegetation material will be managed by the Department of Agriculture and incorporated into composting operations or processed into mulch for agricultural use.

The Department will also make vegetation material available to farmers and members of the public where appropriate, supporting sustainable agricultural practices and improved soil health.

Mr. Robert Whorms, Director of Energy Delivery of Caribbean Utilities Company said the initiative reflects the company’s commitment to responsible operations and environmental stewardship.

“Effective vegetation management protects both our community and our electrical system. By keeping trees and undergrowth away from power lines, we reduce the risk of electric shock, fires, and outages caused by vegetation contact.’’

The initiative reflects ongoing efforts by the Ministry of Planning, Lands, Agriculture, Housing & Infrastructure to strengthen local agriculture while promoting more efficient and sustainable use of organic materials. Users are responsible for their own collection and transportation of the material from the designated DoA site.

Last updated:

Related Topics

Agriculture, Environment & Natural Resources Press Release Ministry of Planning, Lands, Agriculture, Housing & Infrastructure (MPLAHI)

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
CIG
Published
April 15th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Agricultural firms Energy companies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Vegetation management Waste diversion Soil improvement
Geographic scope
KY KY

Taxonomy

Primary area
Agriculture
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Environmental Protection Energy

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