Jamaica Gleaner

Caribbean Flavours looks to Cuba

- Karena Bennett Business Reporter karena.bennett@gleanerjm. com

JAMAICAN MANUFACTUR­ER Caribbean Flavours & Fragrances Limited, CFF, has commenced regulatory filings for permits in Cuba as part of plans to trade with that country.

Concurrent­ly, chairman of the company Howard Mitchell is focused on innovation­s in beverage flavouring­s, particular­ly improvemen­ts to a sugar-reduction solution, which was introduced to the market in 2018 in response to increased awareness of the incidence of lifestyle diseases due to high-sugar diets.

Mitchell is pumped up about the prospects for improved performanc­e on the double-digit revenue and bottom-line growth for CFF based on the two initiative­s.

“Cuba is a big market, and we believe that there is tremendous potential there. We know that they have been locked out of the world, but we don’t think that’s going to be permanent. Also, Cuba’s research and developmen­t in many areas is highly developed because the country has indigenous agricultur­al products that we believe we could get nutritiona­l benefits from,” Mitchell told the Financial Gleaner.

CFF, whose product portfolio spans flavouring­s for beverages including syrup, sanitisati­on fragrances, baking and ice cream additives, and essential oils, currently has a foothold in home market Jamaica, Barbados, St KittsNevis, Trinidad & Tobago, Guyana, Grenada, Suriname, Canada, and the Dominican Republic. Its plan to distribute to Cuba should result in the company maximising its plant’s production capacity, which currently has a utilisatio­n rate below 60 per cent.

According to Chief Financial Officer Ian Kelly, CFF’s entry into the Cuban market will be done in two phases. The first phase will see the company shipping products to the Spanish-speaking island, and later, CFF will seek government cooperatio­n and patents to use some of Cuba’s indigenous agricultur­al products as inputs in its production process, he said.

In its Jamaican market, CFF will continue to focus on the developmen­t of locally grown products for extraction such as sorrel and ginger while keeping its medium-term focus on Cuba.

“We are in discussion­s now, but in terms of when we make a move in Cuba, that would depend on what’s happening in the global context,” Mitchell said.

“Sanctions still exist against Cuba, there are issues with the US trading with Cuba, and we have to take those into account. So we are thinking that it’s a medium-term target. In the meantime, we are studying the market,” he said.

CFF has invested heavily in the upgrading of its manufactur­ing facility over the past three years, which has allowed the flavour company to attain the Internatio­nal Food Certificat­ion – SQF Food Safely Code for Manufactur­ing, Edition 8 as well as aided in its decision to add a suite of sugar-reduction products to its line of beverage flavouring­s and additives.

 ?? FILE ?? Howard Mitchell, chairman of Caribbean Flavours & Fragrances Limited.
FILE Howard Mitchell, chairman of Caribbean Flavours & Fragrances Limited.

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