Hotels in danger: how the Sargassum invasion threatens the balance of Caribbean tourism
January 21st, 2026 Rédaction No Comment Hotels and Lodging Guadeloupe, sargasses 1513 views
The scale of the sargassum bloom at the beginning of 2026 has reached historic highs, transforming the idyllic shores of Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula and the French Antilles into areas of unprecedented ecological and economic crisis.
Although these brown algae are part of the marine ecosystem, their massive accumulation since 2011—and their current uncontrolled explosion in Guadeloupe, Martinique, and the Riviera Maya—is causing profound distress among local populations dependent on tourism, who see their beaches disfigured by a brownish slick often mistaken by travelers for oil spills.
This environmental disaster is compounded by a health hazard due to the unbearable sulfur odor emitted by the decomposing algae, making swimming impossible and causing a sharp drop in hotel occupancy rates as well as a rapid depreciation of coastal real estate.
Faced with this scourge, major international hotel chains are on the front lines and are desperately trying to protect their infrastructure. In Mexico, all-inclusive giants such as AMResorts (Dreams, Secrets), Hyatt (Ziva & Zilara), Barceló, Riu, and Palladium Hotel Group are investing heavily in drifting barriers and costly collection systems to preserve access to the sea.
In the French West Indies, it is primarily Club Med (Sainte-Anne), the Karibea group, and the establishments of the Des Hôtels et Des Îles group that are bearing the brunt of these massive influxes, forcing operators to adapt. to reinvent the customer experience away from the shore or to deploy robotic cleaning solutions.
This systemic crisis is now forcing the hotel industry to integrate « sargassum management » as a permanent expense, while simultaneously seeking, with the help of authorities, industrial outlets to transform this cumbersome biomass into fertilizer or construction materials—the only way to salvage a 2026 season already heavily jeopardized by the brown shadow of these ocean invaders.
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