The August 2023 Lahaina wildfire produced the largest wrongful death litigation in Hawaii history. The lawsuits share a common thread: corporations and government agencies operating in Lahaina had emergency preparedness frameworks — and those frameworks failed because they were designed for environments where mutual aid arrives within hours, where evacuation routes have alternatives, and where communication infrastructure survives the initial emergency event.
Island operating environments do not have these properties. They never did. The frameworks failed not because they were poorly implemented but because they were built for the continent and applied without modification to an island.
Corporations operating in island environments — hotels, resorts, hospitals, energy operators, ports, financial services firms — face five categories of security and ESG risk that continental frameworks systematically underestimate.
The five island-specific corporate security risks
Supply chain singularity and business continuity exposure. When a Caribbean hurricane closes a port, when a Pacific typhoon disrupts shipping routes, when a tsunami damages a port facility — the business continuity plan that assumes alternative supply routes will fail. Island supply chains have no geographic redundancy. Business continuity planning for island operations requires a fundamentally different architecture than continental business continuity planning.
Insider threat in high-turnover island workforces. The hospitality industry's documented insider threat patterns — cargo diversion, theft, fraud, data breach — are significantly elevated in island operating environments where workforce social density creates the conditions ISPI's research identifies as insider threat amplifiers. ISPI's insider threat research addresses hospitality, healthcare, and energy sector insider risk specifically.
Emergency preparedness duty of care under geographic isolation. Post-Lahaina litigation has established that corporations operating in geographically isolated environments face a higher standard of emergency preparedness duty of care than their continental counterparts. ISPI's Island Emergency Management Framework provides the standard against which island corporate preparedness is increasingly measured.
ESG accountability to indigenous and Pacific Island communities. Corporations operating on or adjacent to Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, or indigenous island community lands face ESG accountability requirements that generic ESG frameworks do not address. ISPI's corporate ESG research provides the island-specific accountability framework.
Reputational risk in close-knit island social environments. Negative events in island communities propagate through dense, persistent social networks faster and with more lasting effect than equivalent events in anonymous urban environments. Reputational risk management for island operations requires community-specific protocols.
Corporations operating in Hawaii, the Pacific, the Caribbean, the Indian Ocean, and Mediterranean island environments are invited to commission confidential security assessments from ISPI. Contact: ISPIGlobal@proton.me or visit ispiglobal.com/commission.