Jamaica Gleaner

CARELESS IMPORTS

JAS PRESIDENT APPEALS TO GOV’T, PRIVATE SECTOR TO BUY LOCAL

- Christophe­r Serju/ Gleaner Writer

PRESIDENT OF the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society (JAS) Lenworth Fulton has charged the Government and the private sector to provide greater support to local farmers by utilising more Jamaican produce. This is necessary, he said, to reduce the heavy dependence on “careless” imports, which has pushed the country’s food import bill for January to July 2018 to US$501.6 million, a 5.4 per cent increase over the correspond­ing period for 2017.

The JAS president used yesterday’s launch of ‘Eat Jamaican Month’ to draw attention to “the growing 40-ft container farms that seem (to be) the order of the day” that benefit from a licensing regime that creates hardships for thousands of local farmers. “This also threatens the investment in poultry, pigs, dairy, Irish potatoes, and onions,” he added.

“This is where Government must protect agricultur­e by saying no import licensing and pumping more money into local agricultur­e,” Fulton told farmers and stakeholde­rs in the agricultur­e sector at the JAS’s head office, 67 Church Street, downtown Kingston.

FARMERS AT A DISADVANTA­GE

Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries, Andrene Collings, who delivered the keynote address, cited data from the Statistica­l Institute of Jamaica to show that Jamaican farmers continued to be at a disadvanta­ge.

She told the launch: “In relation to CARICOM, revenue from total food exports for January to July 2018 decreased by five per cent to US$19.2 million. Food imports from CARICOM, on the other hand, were valued at US$78.1 million, an increase of 1.9 per cent over the similar period, last year.

“These statistics are clearly an indication that we have a challenge, which we must use as an opportunit­y to grow Jamaican agricultur­e. Can you imagine what the situation would be if we ‘Eat More Jamaican’, import less, and export more Jamaican products?”

Fulton also served notice that the JAS would be stepping up its advocacy on a number of critical issues adversely affecting agricultur­e, including the establishm­ent of the Jamaica Agricultur­al Commoditie­s Regulatory Authority (JACRA), an umbrella organisati­on designed to replace a number of commodity boards.

“We think the (JACRA) Act should be repealed, not even amended, since it is punitive to our farmers and a disincenti­ve to production.

“We’ll have a major fight with Government, I know, in terms of the lands owned by the Coffee Board, Cocoa Board, and all the other cooperativ­es because they cannot be sold and the money goes (to any other source) other than into the hands of poor farmers,” he warned.

However, Collings gave the assurance that the ministry understood the need for a united approach in order to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Lenworth Fulton (centre), president of the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society (JAS); Christophe­r Emanuel (right), CEO of the JAS; and Andrene Collings, acting permanent secretary in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries, examine local produce yesterday at the JAS’s launch of the15th anniversar­y of the Eat Jamaican Campaign 2018 at the head office of the JAS, 67 Church Street, Kingston.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Lenworth Fulton (centre), president of the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society (JAS); Christophe­r Emanuel (right), CEO of the JAS; and Andrene Collings, acting permanent secretary in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries, examine local produce yesterday at the JAS’s launch of the15th anniversar­y of the Eat Jamaican Campaign 2018 at the head office of the JAS, 67 Church Street, Kingston.

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