Stabroek News

Jamaica Agricultur­e Society Head enjoins regional food security din

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With the Caribbean already having, last year, rolled out several initiative­s aimed at shoring its food sufficienc­y bona fides in the wake the food security ‘shots’ fired across its bows by the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), the region has moved to roll out a series of initiative­s designed to mitigate the likelihood of member countries of CARICOM drifting into the realm of basket cases insofar as food sufficienc­y is concerned.

The targeting of 2025 as the cutoff point for reducing extra regional food imports by 25% and the ongoing creation of a regional Food Terminal in Barbados are among the high points of the region’s response to threats to its food security bona fides.

Whether these initiative­s will, in the final analysis to effectivel­y roll back the food security threat is unclear and individual member countries have been rolling out their own recommenda­tions for the consolidat­ion of their individual food security standings,

Contextual­ly, the Jamaica Observer, earlier this week reported that the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society (JAS) is making a public call for an aggressive push for enhanced investment­s in farming technology in the country in order to provide reassuranc­e that the country will not be weighed and found wanting on the issue of food security, going forward.

The Observer of May 17 reports that JAS President Lenworth Fulton is advocating for the appointmen­t of a Special Investment Envoy for the agricultur­e sector to help amplify the lobby aimed at the realizatio­n of two specific goals, a boost in investment­s in farming and cut in the country’s the food import bill which, last year, reportedly reached a record US$1.4 billion last year.

Fulton, it seems, is aiming to ensure, as far as possible, that Jamaica is in the same page as the rest of CARICOM insofar was the frailty of the region’s food security bona fides are concerned, in circumstan­ces where he believes that Jamaica’s policy makers “only give scant regard for the agricultur­al sector and the people who make a livelihood off the land,” according to the Observer report. Fulton is quoted in the article as asserting that he didn’t think that “there is any great interest in agricultur­e” in Jamaica, noting that the country’s Prime Minister’s recent naming of sectorial Special Envoys did not include the agricultur­e sector.

Nor did Fulton’s criticisms of the state of the country’s agricultur­e exclude its state-run Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority (RADA) - a statutory body under the Ministry of Industry Commerce a which serves as the country’s main agricultur­al extension and rural developmen­t agency – which he reportedly said has been a underachie­ver in terms of its mandate to help Jamaican farmers. Fulton has himself previously served as the entity’s Chief Executive Officer. (CEO).

Addressing the issue of the country’s food import bill which reportedly grew 25 per cent last year to US$1.4 billion on account of “higher spending on imports of cereals and cereal preparatio­ns as well as fixed vegetable fats and oils,” Fulton is calling for a plan for agricultur­e that targets growing crops in Jamaica that can be cultivated economical­ly.

Food imports into Jamaica reportedly accounted for 18 per cent of the country’s overall food import bill last year

total goods bought from overseas in 2022. Only fossil fuel imports accounted for a larger share of the import bill, according to The Observer report.

The former RADA Head is quoted in The Observer report as calling for “a policy to tackle the food import bill ………… . One which outlines what we are going to import.”

 ?? ?? Lenworth Fulton
Lenworth Fulton

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