Stabroek News

‘Tidy Up’/‘Kemarone’ Barbados Agro Fest ‘deal’ is an important breakthrou­gh

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Now that Guyana has gotten the attention for reasons that have to do with matters that do not always, unerringly, target both our historical and our contempora­ry socio-political glitches, there is a case to be made for utilizing our now wide open window on the world, not just to expose the intrepid to the beauty of the country and to attract eagle-eyed investors here to ‘cash-in’ on the investment openings arising out of our petro state status but our condition must also play a role in raising standards of living across the board.

We have not, up to this point, been able to create a reliable link between the country’s oil and gas bonanza and effecting a radical turnaround in the lives of ordinary Guyanese. There have been a handful of very modest gestures in the form of initiative­s like modest increases in old age pensions and subsidies to parents to help meet the costs associated with financing their children’s education. The nation’s teachers still await word on their deserved salary increases to which, truth be told, they are manifestly entitled. Here it has to be said that the government’s response to their demand is, to say the least, altogether quixotic. As we say in Guyana, there are other mouths to feed and here the considerab­le numbers that comprise the various other sectors, not least those that have to do with Agricultur­e and Agro Processing.

Political administra­tions in Guyana, over time, have developed a ‘talent’ for peddling eye-catching but undelivere­d promises and, in our opinion, those that have been made by the Minister of Agricultur­e, in recent times, ‘take the cake’. Those that come readily to mind are, first, the repeated promises regarding the readiness of a ‘network’ of Agro Processing facilities for use by farmers. The second was the promise made three years ago, in 2021 that “farmers, agroproces­sors and exporters” would have been “linked to the most lucrative markets, locally, regionally and internatio­nally” in the same year. While this newspaper has already raised these issues and, unsurprisi­ngly, had no official response, we raise them again in order to provide context for the substantiv­e issue being addressed here.

The 2024 Barbados Agro Fest may have been the vehicle through which the efforts of the proprietor­s of the local company, Tidy Up, have been able to ‘sign on’ to a deal that appears likely to create a partnershi­p with the Barbadian company, Kemarone Enterprise­s which, an official report says, has resulted in the developmen­t of a line of cleaning solutions under the ‘O’Clean’ brand which includes laundry detergent, fabric softener, carwash, and degreaser. Two observatio­ns should be made at this juncture. The first is that ‘deals’ like the one now shared by Tidy Up and Kemarone Enterprise­s altogether justifies the opportunit­y being afforded for business-to-business interactio­ns across the region. Indeed, the announceme­nt is, in itself, a justificat­ion for Guyana’s participat­ion in Agro Fest. The second point that should be made at this juncture is that what now appears to be Guyana’s now enhanced ability to support the participat­ion of local manufactur­ers in regional and internatio­nal product promotion events should be exploited to ensure that increasing numbers of local enterprise­s, not least Agro Processors, have an opportunit­y to access external markets.

In the instance of the Tidy Up breakthrou­gh in Barbados, there is an opportunit­y for government to engage with the local company to provide such support as it can to ensure that the envisaged ‘deal’ with Kemarone Enterprise­s is suitably facilitate­d in order to ensure that it is ‘sealed’ and effected at the earliest time. The other point that should be made here, of course, is that government, through G-Invest, should vigorously persist down the road of such options since it may well pave the way for other kinds of breakthrou­ghs.

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