Since joining the Caribbean Telecommunications Union, French Guiana has established its place as a French territory in the Americas that looks toward the Caribbean, the Amazon, and Europe all at once. This choice may seem technical. Yet it speaks to something deeper: for French Guiana, regional integration is not just about politics or airplanes. It’s also about networks, data, businesses, and everyday life.
A membership that goes beyond telecommunications
The Caribbean Telecommunications Union is a regional organization dedicated to the development of information and communication technologies in the Caribbean. By joining this network as an associate member, French Guiana is entering a forum where connectivity, cybersecurity, digital governance, and infrastructure are discussed. The formal membership agreement was signed in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, following ministerial approval during ICT Week 2025 in Kingston, Jamaica. This is a significant development: French Guiana is now one of the territories associated with an organization designed to coordinate digital initiatives on a Caribbean scale.
For Gabriel Serville, president of the Territorial Collectivity of French Guiana, this step is part of a broader strategy. The goal is not only to improve communication with neighboring countries, but also to open up opportunities for businesses, healthcare, startups, the space industry, and public services.
French Guiana: Between the Caribbean and the Amazon
French Guiana is not an island, but it shares concrete challenges with the Caribbean: remoteness, connectivity costs, dependence on international cables, the need for more resilient networks, and difficult travel between neighboring territories. Through the Caribbean Telecommunications Union, French Guiana can advocate for its needs within a regional framework. It can also bring attention to a different geographical context: that of a territory situated between the Guiana Shield, the Amazon Basin, and the Caribbean Arc.
This positioning gives meaning to the projects discussed in connection with membership. In particular, the Lum@link project aims to diversify international connections, increase bandwidth, and secure communications across the territory. The prospect of a high-capacity data center in French Guiana was also presented, as were projects related to coastal monitoring and climate adaptation through the SEAS program.
How this might make a difference
Joining the Caribbean Telecommunications Union does not mean that new telecom operators will immediately set up shop in French Guiana. The real challenge lies elsewhere: building bridges. French Guianan companies could collaborate with Caribbean partners. Institutions could share their expertise. Joint projects could emerge in areas such as cybersecurity, connectivity, innovation, and data management.
That is also why this issue goes beyond the digital realm. When a region can communicate more effectively, it can cooperate more effectively. When it secures its communications, it also protects its economy, its essential services, and its ability to respond in the event of a crisis.
A Sign Ahead of the CARICOM Summit
Joining the Caribbean Telecommunications Union comes at a time when French Guiana is also continuing to strengthen its ties with CARICOM. Political membership would be a major step forward. But that alone will not be enough. Before the grand gestures, we need concrete cooperation. Cables. Protocols. Companies communicating with one another. Government agencies working together. Young professionals who see the Caribbean as a place of opportunity, and not just as a map.
Perhaps that is where the real value of this partnership lies. French Guiana is not just building a technical connection; it is building a digital bridge. And in a region where distances are sometimes greater than just kilometers, this bridge could become one of the most useful pathways toward a more connected Caribbean.
The Caribbean Telecommunications Union is a regional organization that supports the development of telecommunications and digital technology in the Caribbean. It works on issues such as connectivity, infrastructure, cybersecurity, data, and digital cooperation among Caribbean countries.
French Guiana’s accession to the Caribbean Telecommunications Union marks a milestone in its growing ties with the Caribbean. It allows the territory to participate in regional discussions on digital technology, networks, infrastructure, and economic cooperation. For French Guiana, it is also a way to strengthen its role as a bridge between the Caribbean, the Amazon, Europe, and South America.
This membership does not necessarily mean that new telecom operators will immediately enter French Guiana. Above all, it opens up opportunities for partnerships with Caribbean stakeholders, particularly in the areas of business, institutions, healthcare, startups, cybersecurity, connectivity, and data management. The challenge is to build concrete partnerships in the region.