Submitted by Bentley

I’m sure you must have seen this article from GIS (see below).

While I totally agree with the need to address food security by regional leaders much more is needed to be done if we are to ever come close to satisfying the food requirements of the region from regional sources. With specific reference to Barbados there are several areas that we need to urgently address. These include:

  1. Getting an effective praedial larceny act in place,
  2. Giving meaningful incentives to small farmers,
  3. Work towards removing the stigma associated with farming and agricultural work,
  4. Allow would be small food crop farmers to have a real stake in the sector (provision of unused parcels of government land at viable concessions, revive the agricultural seed store with a wide variety of viable seeds),
  5. Put conditions in place to control crop pests especially monkeys. I’m sure there are several other factors you can think of.

Food security and food crop farming must be seen as important by every member of society and government must do all it can to ensure this is achieved. 

I remember the late Dr Keith Laurie saying that during the second world war Barbados was able to feed itself since no food was coming in from outside. There is no good reason why we can’t achieve this on a Caricom wide basis.

See GIS article referred to by Bentley


It’s Time To Secure Region’s Food Security

BY JULIE CARRINGTON | MAY 20, 2022 | TOP STORIES

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley addressing the the opening ceremony of the three-day Agri-Investment Forum and Exhibition in Guyana, while regional leaders and officials look on. (PMO)

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley has used the platform of a major agriculture conference to make a strident call for regional heads to join together to ensure the region’s food security.

She made the call yesterday during the opening ceremony of the three-day Agri-Investment Forum and Exhibition in Guyana, as she spoke on the topic: Pursuing CSME and Removing Barriers to Enhancing Agri-Trade Within the Region.

Ms. Mottley told the large gathering that the ongoing crisis with Russia and Ukraine had reinforced the vulnerabilities of the millions of people living in the Caribbean, based on the effect of wheat and other food restrictions in place by some overseas countries which export wheat and its by-products.

The Prime Minister shared that Russia, the Ukraine and India had stopped sending important food and grocery items outside its borders, and warned of more restrictions to follow by governments to safeguard their food supplies in the face of soaring inflation.

She articulated the view that the entire Caribbean region had to be viewed not just in the context of the population in CARICOM of 18 million people, but also the visitors received on an annual basis, whose “responsibility is ours to feed”.

Ms. Mottley affirmed: “We are at that moment in time when it is up to us to stand up to the challenge or to recognise that the consequences of it will indeed be difficult and potentially devastating for our people. While we await the global initiatives to be announced by the UN Secretary General and the global crisis response team he has established on food, energy and financing with the expectation that what the world faces will be more challenging than what we faced in 2008 to 2010. We have a responsibility to take preemptive action in this region to protect our people.”

The Prime Minister and other regional heads also made a case for more regular transportation of goods across the region with the suggestion that a new solution be found to move the cargo.

“In this moment, when maritime transport is at its greatest challenge, we have to recognise that the bridge to resuscitating Caribbean tourism air transport may well be having regional air cargo moving to help offset the investment to move our people,” she emphasised. 

Ms. Mottley continued: “We may need to look at different planes and we may need to look at more regular traffic. The regularity of movement may well be the solution for us rather than these large aircrafts that move once or twice a day.”

The three-day event was held under the themeInvesting in Vision 25 by 2025, which represents the goal to lower the region’s US $6 billion food import bill by 25 per cent within the next three years.

julie.carrington@barbados.gov.bb

172 responses to “What Can be More Important than…”

  1. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “It seems that the regular news networks, and even BU bloggers, have caught up with the program.”

    nah….they have not caught up fully yet, it’s just the first glimpse GAVE THEM FRIGHT….they don’t know the half of it and from what am looking at…..they betta get with the REAL PROGRAM or crapaud and EVERYONE ELSE except them will smoke their pipes..

    .cause the tiefing dogs already ate ALL THEIR DINNER…

  2. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Bushman..we can definitely take a break now and watch it play out and what the REACTIONS of the dummy naysayers….

  3. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Meta(rape)verse

    This is what ya fake misleaders and their partners in crime were just pushing on the island as a savior..

    wonder what the old fowl gotta say bout dat…

    “Researcher ‘RAPED’ in Metaverse – report

    ‘Within a few minutes of logging into the platform [Meta-owned Horizon Worlds], researchers experienced homophobic slurs, gun violence (including a shoot-out at a house party), drugs laid out on a table, and a user stalking the researcher and following her into different worlds,” the SumOfUS NGO report read.

    One of the researchers, a young woman using an avatar with a female voice and appearance, claimed she was “raped” by a user, while others watched. The experience was described as “disorienting” and “confusing” by the researcher.

    Meta tried to shift the blame for the incident on the researcher herself, pointing out that she had disabled a safety feature that prevented other users from getting too close to someone else’s avatar.”


  4. A very relevant question to ask is if CARICOM is going about this CMSE and the removal of barriers and enhancing trade in agricultural goods the right way. On introspection it seems that a lopsided trade arrangement is being launched. It has not been articulated what each territory will be producing to trade within the region. Barbados has not stated what it will be trading. It is expecting to trade black belly sheep at a premium price so one can assume that this trade will be outside of the region. The focus seems to be on Guyana becoming the major benefactor. Here is a unique opportunity for the food security pie to be divided up between all member states with each of them specializing in 2 or 3 crops for regional export. That way everyone will benefit. This pending arrangement to rely on Guyana to ensure food security will marginalize the farmers in Barbados. The focus on our part must be what goods Barbados can specialize in and export to the region.


  5. Notice no other country in the region has said pint about the arrangement


  6. LOL @ David
    The place is getting curiouser and curiouser….
    The annual exhibition seems to be the ‘be-all’ of local agriculture.
    James Paul says that he sees ‘some areas for improvement ….NEXT YEAR.’ Murduh!!

    In normal countries, the exhibition is simply a snapshot of daily farm life.
    ‘improvements’ relate to daily production and are urgently implemented.
    Not bout here… everything in its own time.

    Bushie watched with mirth as wunna built some new ‘ponds’ in st Philip and Lears.
    But Boss.. that is 1050s technology..
    Ponds shiite…!!

    Now when Demon Bill Gates making baby ‘milq’ outta jobby, and them other men making ‘mock port’ outta scraps, the local agricultural machinery discovers… ponds… ha ha ha shiite!!!
    if it wasn’t SO serious Bushie would dead did laff…. But Indar does look like he serious!!!!

    what a place!!!


  7. @Bush Tea

    Have never been a fan of Agrofest in so far as it has not sparked interest in agriculture capture in national GDP numbers. However it remains a good walk about for an hour with the family.


  8. Let’s walk through the millions of dollars this govt has piled up.in debt strapped across the bajans back


  9. Fresh menu
    BARBADOS AND GUYANA COLLABORATING ON HEALTHIER SCHOOL MEALS
    Government is looking to Guyana to assist with the provision of healthier inputs to be added to the current school meals menu, to control the rising cases in childhood obesity.
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley yesterday pledged to deepen cooperation in this area with Barbados’ CARICOM neighbour, during a courtesy call with senior officials from Banks DIH Limited at Ilaro Court.
    Mottley emphasised the importance of healthy eating habits in children, and mentioned the role that the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Nutritional Security can play in reducing the spend at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital to treat diabetes and obesity in the future.
    “We need to start to change the way in which our children eat at every level and I have asked Agriculture to be intimately involved based on the produce available,” she stated.
    The Prime Minister recommended to Banks DHI’s Sales and Marketing Executive, Carlton Joao, that his company should pursue all available investment opportunities in Barbados, adding that she and Guyana’s President Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali, had done much to promote the region as “one singular environment and one singular investment space”.
    In turn, Mr. Joao congratulated Ms. Mottley on her selection as one of TIME Magazine’s 100 most influential people of 2022.
    He praised her for representing the interests of Barbados and the region on the world stage, and promised to lend assistance to Barbados wherever possible to achieve healthier meal alternatives for children.
    (BGIS)


  10. This is a blow for small farmers will be knocked out of this market.


  11. By now, it must be clear to even the politicians themselves, that they have no idea what the donkey they are doing.

    Bushie is still AMAZED that there are people who would accept responsibilities that are so far beyond their capabilities… and that, even if they foolishly did so, when they ‘catch themselves’ and realize their predicament, continue to sink themselves, (and the BBs that look up to them) deeper into the jobby,

    One has to be either dumb enough to not see the danger…
    Or callous enough to not care about the suffering you will cause.


  12. angela cox May 31, 2022 5:50 PM #: “Let’s walk through the millions of dollars this govt has piled up.in debt strapped across the bajans back.”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~

    You’re always making references to ‘piling up debt.’

    Please provide BU with the necessary statistics to prove Barbados’ debt has progressively grown much higher NOW than it was when at the time the DLP was ‘kicked to the curb?’


  13. Youth hope for farming

    UPON PERUSING the Centre Pages of Monday’s DAILY NATION, which focused on the first Agrofest in two years, one could not help but be drawn to the photograph of a youngster with his two calves.
    It spoke a thousand words, including the fact that, as we as a nation are focusing on food security, farming of the livestock variety is in safe hands. No longer is the industry the domain of the middle-aged or young adult apprentices.
    It is a delight to see school-age children again showing a keen inclination towards livestock rearing.
    The youthful element may have been missing from this sector in recent years because there seemed to be no real necessity for it. In an environment where we have been importing most of what we eat for more than half of a century, one hardly would have witnessed the phenomenon of bygone years when Barbados was a mainly agrarian society.
    Back then, in the 1970s and beyond, there was hardly a youth who did not have a sheep, goat or chickens to attend to and whose daily routine did not involve rising early to feed the stock, milk cows and stake them out before going off to school. The commercial aspect of those activities funded uniforms and books while instilling discipline, responsibility and an appreciation for hard work.
    Today, as we prepare for the possibility of food shortages against the backdrop of war in Eastern Europe, the participation of Barbadian youths in Agrofest is reassuring as they pose confidently with their livestock and win major prizes. Take, for example, 12-year-old Isaiah Marshall, who helped his
    family to capture the prizes of Best Beef Bull On Show and Best Beef Bull 12 Months And Older, and also competed with his Blackbelly sheep last weekend.
    These are hopeful signs as this new generation of farmers, bursting with ideas, innovative and energetic, appear to be eager to grasp the opportunities evident as our nation looks seriously at developing the capacity to feed ourselves in these uncertain times.
    Such uncertainty has been signalled by India, for instance, which recently told the world it would halt exports of wheat and grain in order to focus on feeding its own one billion-plus population. This is happening as global challenges worsen daily in getting goods out of major source markets, particularly Europe, as a result of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
    In the interim, Barbados and Guyana are partnering on the food terminal at Lears and the Blackbelly sheep initiative, among other projects.
    And during the three-day Agri-Food Investment Forum And Expo in Guyana last week, CARICOM chairman and Belize Prime Minister John Antonio Briceño called on member states to remove barriers to regional trade.
    Being proactive and rallying our neighbours can spark the economic prosperity and diversity which Barbados craves as a backup to its main foreign exchange earner, tourism. It may also be the only way for our upcoming generation of farmers to survive.
    As we prepare for the possibility of food shortages against the backdrop of war in Eastern Europe, the participation of
    Barbadian youths in
    Agrofest is reassuring

    Source: Nation Editorial


  14. @ David
    Please tell Bushie why the writers of these editorials are not required to put their names and email address like normal journalists?
    That is a lotta shiite!! …and Bushie should be able to tell him/her why!!

    The bushman is so TIRED of these official Trini newspapers in Barbados coming with this condescending shiite about how ‘well Bajans are doing’ when some little fingernail shop opens, or when some 9-year old helps to raise a damn sheep between watching U-tube videos of school fights…

    Steupsss…
    Add this insulting editorial attitude to their nasty habit of reporting every bit of jobby from our retarded politicians as if it is straight from the Bible with NEVER an intelligent question asked……and Bushie GOTTA cuss some damn body !!!

    We have a shiite country with an annual budget of THREE BILLION DOLLARS…. mostly controlled by foreigners who own and dominate every shiite of value … and this wicked son-of-a Journalists using an editorial to laugh at Bajan Brass Bowls about owning a snow-cone cart.

    What got Bushie REALLY ashamed however, is that we actually take these insults like complements….

    The ONLY shiite worse than being made a slave ‘vi-et-armes’, is to be enslaved by YOUR OWN MIND, and to go along meekly like a damn brass bowl sheep…. to the slaughterhouse..

    Wunna could go long…
    But not this stinking bushman…!!!


  15. 100% bang on Bush Tea!

    Blogmaster did you write the above?


  16. @Bush Tea

    The editorial represents the view of the newspaper/editor. Is there a need for a name? It was a PR piece.


  17. Is there a need for a name?
    ~~~~~~~~
    Man Boss, Bushie tired cussing the damn Nation …from since Harl Hoyte sell um off for 20 pieces of silver to buy his hybrid SUV.
    Time to cuss some specific individual traitors now….

    @ Dullard
    Bushie was thinking that a more ‘dribbly’ blogger could be the writer, but now that you ask David…..
    Hmmmmm ?!?!
    LOL


  18. In fine form is the Bushman. I haven’t laughed so hard all day!

    All true this time, unfortunately.


  19. @ Bush Tea,

    Well spotted. The editorial is reminiscent of those classic cinematic archives from Brtitish Pathe, where propaganda was used as a tool to brainwash the British public and her subjects. We are in 2022, and yet the Nation editor believed it appropriate to publish an editorial in a Barbados which has recently become a republic.

    Perhaps BU’s triple DDD could be the anonymous writer of this editorial. She always paints a glorious picture of Barbados and has the writing skills to seduce the doubting Thomas’s of this world.

    Take a look at the two video clips below. In the second video taken in 1920! You will see that nothing, absolutely nothing has changed for the common working man and woman in Barbados. No doubt, BU’s very own DDD will put her own private spin on the last video.

    https://britishpathe.com/video/boac-and-bwia-present-a-flying-visit-to-the-caribb/query/Georges

    https://britishpathe.com/video/bridgetown-barbados-lady-coal-shovelers-in-british/query/barbados+coal+women


  20. I read and hear of these multi-million dollar deals and projects, but the small amount of a paycheck is neglected.

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2022/06/03/volunteers-reveal-they-have-not-received-wages-since-december/

    From BT
    “How many people are there in Barbados who go six months without getting paid? Six months is a very long time and how we are being treated is real unfair. If certain people had to go six months without getting a salary they would walk off the job but we are still coming to work,” she lamented.

    “The hurtful thing is that there hasn’t even been any communication from anyone to tell us when we are getting paid. Six months without getting a cent and no one had the decency to come and tell us that there would be a delay in payment and that we would get paid by such and such a time.”


  21. $3B CHALLENGE

    PM tasks farmers with helping cut food imports
    By Natanga Smith
    natangasmith@nationnews.com

    With increasing concerns about Barbados’ import bill, which has remained steady at a little over $3 billion for the past eight years, Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley had an intense meeting with local farmers Friday night to discuss ways to reduce that bill.
    President of Barbados Association of Retailers, Vendors and Entrepreneurs, Alister Alexander, reported that in the meeting with farmers, the Prime Minister “challenged them to come to her with a revolutionary plan to bring food security to Barbados. And the farmers have decided to organise themselves and take up the challenge”.
    Figures supplied by the Barbados Statistical Service showed that the country’s highest bill was in 2014 at $3.5b, and since then it has not dropped below $3b.
    The local officials in agriculture believe they can help cut the gigantic bill.
    James Paul, chief executive officer of the Barbados Agricultural Society (BAS), said importers needed to have “better linkages with farmers . . . . The real issue is that some farmers cannot access some markets here. There are not enough business linkages between the farmers and retailers. The supermarkets do not have any investment in the farms. So they do not have to go to a farmer to buy from them.”
    He said local produce could stand up to many imported food items.
    “We might not have sufficient to fill a quota, but any amount bought from a farmer is helping to cut the import bill and keep revenue in the country. Our produce is just as good. And even so, if there is better communication between the retailers and farmers, the farmers will get to know the varieties they actually want and then plant to suit,” he said.
    Produce locally grown
    He told the Sunday Sun that Barbados imported watermelons, onions, lettuce and cabbage, which are all grown here.
    Year after year, more fresh and chilled vegetables and fruits, as well as meats and dairy products,
    kept rolling in. Even beverages, tobacco and prepared foods topped the list.
    In 2014, food and live animal imports totalled $552 304 150 while beverages and tobacco amounted to $94 195 611.
    In 2019, importation cost of meat and edible offal was $62 606 504; dairy produce was $64 180 725; fish, molluscs, etc. $37 961 065; edible vegetables cost $34 801 523 and edible fruits $38 310 398. Cereals and sugar (and sugar confectionery) came to $69 384 911 and beverages, spirits and vinegar had the highest bill of $92 508 002.
    In 2020, meat and edible offal reached $54 921 136; dairy produce was $60 204 339; fish, molluscs, etc. took $27 172 730; edible vegetables and fruits totalled $67 779 397; cereals and sugar (and sugar confectionery) came to $73 456 574.
    Beverages, spirits and vinegar had the highest bill of $80 015 750.
    The main supplying countries are the United States (top of the chart), Netherlands, United Kingdom and China and some CARICOM states.

    Alexander said importation was high because there is a demand.
    “We can work towards stopping the importation by being able to support ourselves. We must have a food-secure nation and the only way to do that is to produce your own food. If you are not producing your own food, that means someone else is feeding you and if they find themselves in a crisis they will sort themselves first and we here will starve,” he said.
    Alexander said the farming sector must have vision and look at consistency to provide the produce needed.
    “I am looking at my farmers now and we grow everything. I can see sweet potato, squash, pumpkin . . . everything. But it is about consistency from our farmers. You might have a glut and then there is a scarcity. How will
    you fulfil the orders? Last week cucumbers were $3 a pound; right now they are at $1 because of scarcity. You have to look into all the factors. The farming sector has to have some sort of central planning. We have to try to get people who are accustomed moving independently to stop looking to compete but look to cooperate.
    “Barbados can be one farm. We can move into international and regional markets, but you can only move into those markets with volume,” he added.
    A check with the Barbados Agricultural Development and Marketing Corporation showed that it imported more than 1 329 308 kilogrammes and 1 256 500 kilogrammes of onions, respectively, in 2020 and 2021. In terms of poultry, in 2020 they imported 1 337 000 kilogrammes and for 2021 only 861 000 kilogrammes, the lowest so far since 2017.


    Source: Nation

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