by Linda Straker
- Grenada implementing strategy as major supplier of fresh produce
- Strategy includes investing and reviving Government estates
- Volcanic ashfall will be source of regional food shortage
Agriculture Minister Peter David has disclosed that Grenada is in the first stage of implementing a strategy that will see the island becoming a significant supplier of fresh produce in the Southern Caribbean.
St Vincent supplied to these islands but is presently unable to do so because of the eruption of the La Soufriere volcano. The volcano had an effusive eruption in December and its first violent eruption on 9 April. David said that the ashfall will be the source of food shortage in the region and Grenada is placing itself in a position to reduce the impact of the fallout.
“It is going to have a long-term serious impact on St Vincent and I dare say food availability in the southern Caribbean. Food security is an important issue for us, and St Vincent has been in a sense a major producer/supplier of many agricultural products including livestock,” David told journalists on Wednesday during the weekly post-cabinet briefing.
Speaking about the immediate negative impact, David said, “We run the risk of increased prices. We run the risk of shortages and we run the risk of having a negative impact on the food situation in the southern Caribbean.” He admitted that the disruption in crop production and pending food shortage are not caused by the volcano eruption; it existed before the volcano. “The situation was already there before the volcano; our food import bill is very high.”
Grenada’s Government plan is to increase food production by investing and reviving Government estates under the management of the Ministry of Agriculture and at the same encourage private farmers to increase their production. The distributor for the produce will be the Marketing and National Importing Board (MNIB).
“We have already looked at several Government estates to determine what we are going to produce, but we have to first determine what the market demands, because we have to produce what the market wants.” David reminded journalists that St Vincent is well known for its mass production of roots crops which as tannia, sweet potato and dasheen.
The MNIB disclosed that since the eruption of the volcano, buyers from other southern Caribbean islands including Barbados and Trinidad have made inquiries about fresh produce available from Grenada. MNIB recently resumed shipping soursop to the USA and a shipment of fresh produce is scheduled to be shipped to Barbados – which is also affected by ash fall from the volcano.
Lord my God. It is plan, can’t we give it time?
Only idiots look to what they think the market wants instead of what the soil and sight is best suited to grow. Obviously NEVER farmed and what exactly are government estate’s? Land stolen from the people? You couldn’t even sustain Summer Fresh Juice company. You can’t take over the food exports in just a couple of months plants and crops take time to grow.
I dare* (not dear) say