Stabroek News

Budget signals focus on more robust agricultur­al sector

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drifts into fantasy over the fast approachin­g advent of ‘first oil.’

Going forward, however, Jordan told the nation that more than half a century of overwhelmi­ng reliance on “a limited range of primary products” will be replaced with the opening of new frontiers for “plantation agricultur­e,” with a particular focus on crops such as corn, soya, quinoa, orchards of fruit and vegetables, livestock and fisheries. The launch of these “new frontiers,” Jordan said, is being supported by a budgetary allocation of $17.1 billion to the agricultur­e sector next year.

Spending on agricultur­e in 2019, according to the Finance Minister, will focus on food safety and security while seeking to break new ground in “productivi­ty, new value chains, and value added industries” designed to boost investment­s in agro processing and institutio­nal capacity.

And on the back of the challenges which the country’s long suffering rice industry has faced in recent years, Jordan announced that government will be ‘recruiting’ the services of the high profile Malaysian Agricultur­al Research and Developmen­t Institute to help the local sector raise its game. He announced that Guyana will work with the Institute to test three new high-yielding, pest and disease-resistant varieties of rice for introducti­on in Guyana with the aim of increasing local yield up to 5% per annum over the next three years. The project allows for the involvemen­t of 1,500 rice farmers and 10 millers in an initiative which the Finance Minister will provide them with knowledge and skills in breeding and certified seed production. The collaborat­ive programme with the Malaysian Institute is also targeting the creation of three new rice-based, value-added products, pre-gelatinize­d rice powder, rice pasta and rice chiffon cakes, all products that target the enhancemen­t of the nutrition base of the elderly population.

Beyond initiative­s to boost the rice sector Jordan disclosed in his budget presentati­on that government’s pursuit of diversific­ation in the country’s agricultur­al sector will also be supported by the setting up of a state-of-theart abattoir at Onverwagt on the West Coast Berbice, next year, an initiative that takes aim at “the reduction in the importatio­n of meat and the realizatio­n of Guyana’s compliance with internatio­nal standards for meat-processing.” Simultaneo­usly, the Finance Minister disclosed that discussion­s are underway with the Islamic Developmen­t Bank to create a ‘reverse linkage project” in livestock and Halaal meat designed to realise improved livestock breeds in the country’s beef stocks.

Next year, according to Jordan, government will move to conduct a feasibilit­y study preparator­y to the establishm­ent of a dairy value chain through the supply of improved breeding stock to farmers, milk chilling stations and refrigerat­ed trucks to supply fresh ,milk to a new milk plant to be set up at Diamond, on the East Bank Demerara.

Upper reaches

Government’s plans for an intensific­ation of its agricultur­al programme next year will, according to the Finance Minister, embrace the country’s intermedia­te savannahs and the upper reaches of riverain regions, the primary focus in that regard being the setting up of a modern $220 million research facility at Ebini to serve as “a developmen­tal institutio­n for orchards, nurseries, and seed production as well as for breeding herds of cattle and small ruminants.” These, it is envisaged, will provide stock for farmers and investors, the initiative intended to support the objective of “bridging the hinterland and coast by re-distributi­ng economic activities inland while complement­ing other economic activities such as forestry, mining and other support services.”

Other initiative­s designed to boost hinterland agricultur­e and agro processing in hinterland regions will, the Finance Minister says, include the establishm­ent of a food-processing facility in Region One as well as an additional water reservoir for water harvesting. Developmen­ts relating to the consolidat­ion of agricultur­e will also see the rearing of Black Giant poultry a breed capable of producing up to two hundred eggs annually and about 4.5 kilogramme­s of meat. Next year will also witness a buildout of infrastruc­ture for shadehouse farming in Regions 7, 8 and 10.

Envisaged increased investment in improving the country’s drainage and irrigation structures, access dams and farmlands in response to growing climate change concerns will include persistenc­e with the rehabilita­tion of drainage and irrigation systems and access dams undertaken in various coastal communitie­s including Ithaca, Buxton, Triumph and Mocha during this year and which Jordan says will impact more than 100 farming households by providing easier access to farmlands. Contextual­ly, the Finance Minister announced that government will secure funding from India and obtain twelve high capacity drainage pumps for Regions 2,3,4,5 and six next year.

Government has also allocated $100 million to protect the country’s mangrove forests, regarded as an important defence against rising sea and ocean levels.

And according to Jordan, 2019 will witness increased public/private sector collaborat­ion in a push to further grow the country’s agro-processing sector and to expand production and improve competitiv­eness. In this regard, Jordan announced that the New Guyana Marketing Corporatio­n, which is already playing a role in supporting the promotion of locally made agro produce (see related story in this issue of the Stabroek Business) will expand its marketing services by extending new services to support small agro-processors by providing “guidance on acceptable practices, capacity building and access to packaging materials”.

Attention to the developmen­t of small business initiative­s, meanwhile, will also be supported through the allocation of $100 million for the Small Business Bureau next year, the allocation of $71.3 million for the upgrading of the Guyana National Bureau of Standards’ (GNBS) testing laboratory, the establishm­ent of an agro processing facility at the Guyana School of Agricultur­e in Region Two with an investment of $37.5 million and another similar facility in Region One with an investment of $20 million.

Meanwhile, government’s proposals for the fisheries sector next year include the upgrading of the technical capacity of the Fisheries Department in the collection and analysis of data and the monitoring and surveillan­ce of fisheries operations. Next year, according to Jordan, will also see the training of farmers in improved aquacultur­e practices a facet of which will be exposure to related technology. Proposals for the advancemen­t of the fisheries sector in 2019 also impact marine fishing through “the strengthen­ing of systems to ensure improved quality of fish and fish products exported, regulated fishing, sustainabl­e fishing practices and improved data collection.”

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