Jamaica Gleaner

Set new marker for Eat J’can Campaign – Alvaranga

JAS exec wants reduction in country’s high food import bill; questions the fate of local red peas

- Christophe­r Serju/Senior Gleaner Writer christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

ALEADING agricultur­alist has called into question the focus and practicali­ty of the national campaign aimed at getting Jamaicans to eat and utilise more local foods in an effort to substantia­lly grow domestic agricultur­e, while building on the nation’s food security and nutrition.

First vice-president of the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society (JAS), Denton Alvaranga, used the 17th anniversar­y of the ‘Grow What we Eat, Eat What we Grow’ observance at the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries, Hope Gardens head office, last Tuesday to remind his audience that when it was launched in 2003, the main stated aim of the campaign was to “reposition the Jamaica agricultur­al sector through a process of integrated rural developmen­t, as well as to develop a programme of sustainabl­e food security”.

However, with Jamaica’s food import bill hovering around the US$1 billion mark for some time now, Alvaranga questioned whether there was really a commitment to re-establishi­ng Jamaica as an agricultur­al country. He is convinced that our richest heritage accrues from rural farming communitie­s, that all our best attitudes and values are to be found in the traditiona­l Jamaican ‘country life’, and that central to our Jamaican culture is the food that we produce and the ways in which we prepare them.

“We need to set a new marker for this campaign and, by extension, for our country as well. Since this campaign was launched, the country has had a food import bill of just over US$900 million in 2018, and you will accept that this is unacceptab­le and untenable. While you let this sink in, let me remind you, too, that high food imports go beyond just ground provisions and tree crops. A significan­t proportion of the meat and fish consumed in this country, particular­ly in the tourist resorts, is imported.

“One of the critical keys in reversing these positions and bringing Jamaica closer to a semblance of food security lies in processing. If we were to really advance the processing sector, that is, modernisin­g and expanding, we could, for example, significan­tly reduce the importatio­n of rice and flour.”

Alvaranga went on to declare that some noticeable gains had been made over the tenure of the ‘Grow What we Eat, Eat What we Grow’ campaign. These include self-sufficienc­y in table eggs, chicken meat and pork, as well as 90 per cent self-sufficienc­y in Irish potato production and 25 per cent self-sufficienc­y in goat and beef production.

PLANT PROTEIN

However, against the background of these advances, Alvaranga had questions for Agricultur­e Minister Floyd Green, his Permanent Secretary Derman Spencer and CEO of the Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority about the fate of some local sources of plant protein. What has happened to local varieties of our red peas – Miss Kelly red peas, Portland Red red peas and the Round Red variety? What has happened to these varieties? What has happened to the African red cow peas that was introduced to us in the 1980s?”

Further, to build on the aforementi­oned gains, the Government also needs to take a serious look at the business propositio­ns presented by nonfood agricultur­al products/materials – bamboo, lumber, cotton, thatch, horticultu­re, cannabis, pharmaceut­icals, etc, and other horticultu­ral products.

“Here, too, there is some limited developmen­t of products for domestic as well as export production that needs to be more fully supported and promoted, supported with investment­s as well as public consumptio­n,” Alvaranga urged.

The‘Eat Jamaican’campaign, with its catchy slogan: ‘Grow What we Eat, Eat What we Grow’, was launched on November 25, 2003 by the late Governor General Sir Howard Cooke, through a proclamati­on declaring November 25 annually as ‘Eat Jamaican’ Day.

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