09 Apr 2019

Major Marketing Drive to Attract Large Investments in Agriculture

The Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries will be embarking on a major marketing and production drive during the 2019/20 fiscal year, in a bid to attract large-scale investments to the agricultural sector.

Portfolio Minister, Hon. Audley Shaw, said this will be spearheaded through several of the Ministry’s agencies, including Jamaica Promotions Corporation (JAMPRO) and the Agro-Invest Corporation (AIC), utilising the Agricultural Incentive Programme as a catalyst.

He said the engagement is among several targeted focus areas for implementation, in recognition of the Ministry’s role as a key driver of economic growth.

The Minister was speaking at the Planning Institute of Jamaica (PIOJ) inaugural Economic Growth Forum, held at the Terra All-Suite Nova Hotel in St. Andrew, on Thursday (March 14).

Mr. Shaw said the initiatives are being targeted within the context of the national agriculture development strategy, and will serve as catalysts to enhance production and productivity, improve infrastructure as well as support the expansion of businesses, particularly micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs).

He said that although domestic crop production grew by 6.9 per cent during the October to December 2018 quarter, “it cannot be lost on us” that the overall sector grew by just over two per cent during the period.

“Agriculture is the base of growth in our economy, and we have to really focus, in a substantial way, on boosting it,” he added.

The forum featured research paper presentations and a panel discussion on the theme ‘From Elusive to Inclusive Growth’.

It was also used to launch the PIOJ’s 2019 Growth Inducement Programme Research Report, a collection of eight research papers encompassing economic growth-related areas.

These include financial inclusion, tertiary education, labour market developments, and social interventions.

 

Source: https://jis.gov.jm/major-marketing-drive-to-attract-large-investments-in-agriculture/

20 Feb 2019

GraceKennedy Goes Into Farming – Targets 50% More Supplies From Agro Park

GraceKennedy Limited, a large buyer of agricultural crops as inputs for its food manufacturing operations, is taking a more direct interest in farming under a new partnership with the Jamaican Government to supply its St Elizabeth factory.

Previously, the conglomerate provided technical support to farmers in its supply chain. Now, it will be more involved as an agro park investor, utilising lands leased in the parish.

On Tuesday, Group CEO Don Wehby told the Financial Gleaner that Grace Agro-Processors, a division of GK Foods & Services Limited, is partnering with the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries, MICAF, to establish the agro park on 110 acres at Ridge Pen in proximity to its processing plant in the neighbouring district of Hounslow.

GraceKennedy is not expected to till the soil itself. Instead, it will sublease plots on the property to different farmers, who will have GK as a guaranteed buyer for their output.

The company expects planting of crops to begin in November of this year and for reaping to begin in May 2019.

“GK has entered into a lease with private owners to secure the land, which it will sublease to members of its supply chain to facilitate an expansion of their crop production. In addition to land, GK will facilitate access to specialised equipment to mechanise the land preparation and planting processes, making the participating farmers’ operation substantially more efficient,” Wehby explained.

The GraceKennedy conglomerate is heavily invested in food and financial services. Food trading brings in the majority of revenue, and is highly profitable for the conglomerate, but its money and financial services segments has a better track record on net margins, that is, the proportion of revenue that flows to the bottom line.

That trend was borne out again in the first quarter ending March when food trading accounted for $20 billion, or 80 per cent, of the $24.91 billion in revenue for the period, but less than half, or $841 million, of the $1.86 billion of pretax profit, before inter-segment eliminations, reported by the conglomerate. The financial division contributed 20 per cent of revenue while accounting for $1.02 billion in pretax profit.

For the group, revenue grew five per cent, while net profit spiked by nearly 15 per cent to $1.3 billion for the March quarter.

Ridge Pen key

GraceKennedy opened its Hounslow facility in 2011 after investing $43 million in the facility to produce pepper mash, and package fresh vegetables. The company contracts farmers to supply about 45,000 pounds of West Indian red and Jamaican Scotch bonnet peppers to be processed as mash for sauces, as well as carrots, cabbage, lettuce, callaloo and onions.

The facility is equipped to produce, process and distribute fresh produce to the retail and hotel trades, and to export pepper mash.

Wehby said Grace Agro-Processors will assist participating farmers in its Ridge Pen Agro Park with access to financing for the inputs required to implement best practices; share the results of its research on its supply chain, including “a custom-made nutrition programme and improved planting material”; and provide guidance on achieving Global GAP certification for farms.

MICAF will handle the infrastructure works for irrigation, roadways and drainage, and assist with the procurement of additional lands for future expansion, he said.

However, Wehby said he was not at liberty to disclose the investment in the overall project, citing “deference to the partnerships,” while noting that it was substantial and projected to grow output along GK’s supply chain by more than 50 per cent.

Plans for a ‘mother farm’

Wehby also expects Ridge Pen to eventually become the “mother farm”, whose practices will be copied by the various farmers within GK’s supply chain.

“The intention is for the mother farm to act as a commercial-size tutorial example of all the best practices at work,” he said. It will include experimental plots to test the efficacy of new methods, technologies and crop varieties, as well as a seed bank to be developed “from true to type, healthy, high-yielding plants at the mother farm to facilitate access to quality planting material for the rest of the supply chain,” he said.

“The mother farm will also act as a central collecting point for smaller farmers nearby to meet the delivery trucks transporting produce to the factory,” Wehby noted.

By converting 110 acres of idle lands “and putting it into the hands of skilled farmers eager to expand production, GK’s intention is to create a reusable model for supply chain capacity improvement, through the establishment of a well-utilised, efficiently operated agro park facilitated by public-private partnership which, in the medium term, will increase production, reduce imports and increase exports,” he said.

http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/business/20180518/gracekennedy-goes-farming-targets-50-more-supplies-agro-park

20 Feb 2019

Growth & Jobs | Farmers To Participate In Agro-Economic Zone

A total of 224 farmers have already registered to participate in the agro-economic zone being established at Holland Estate, St Elizabeth.

Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries, JC Hutchinson said the crops to be cultivated along with other needs have been identified under the project, which is being implemented by the Agro Investment Corporation (AIC).

He noted that the AIC will be meeting with all the farmers within another three weeks “to outline how they are going to be moving forward with the project.”

He said that the property is expected to be handed over at the end of June, once the outgoing owners have completed the reaping of crops.

The 2,400-acre agro-economic zone will comprise farms as well as packaging and processing facilities. The project is expected to provide jobs for over 900 persons.

Produce, when reaped, will be graded and distributed, with Grade ‘A’ produce to go to hotels and the export market; Grade ‘B’ to the local market; while Grade ‘C’ produce will be used for purées, juices and other value-added items.

“We have an investor, who is looking to set up a complex to do the full grading, packaging, processing and marketing,” Hutchinson said.

He noted that the property will be secure. “The entire property will be fenced and current gaps in fencing will be repaired. Also, for every exit and entrance, AIC is going to be putting up (security) cameras and on top of that, we will be having a drone that will be monitoring the place,” he noted.

http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20190205/growth-jobs-farmers-participate-agro-economic-zone

28 Jan 2019

Agro-Parks Designed To Facilitate Investments By Wide Cross-Section Of Stakeholders – Food Industry Interests And Suppliers Targeted

Chief Executive Officer of the Agro-Investment Corporation, Sylburn Thomas, is urging Jamaicans to exploit the investment opportunities now available at the Government’s agro-parks islandwide.

He was of the view that Jamaican’s should invest in the agro-parks, as he believed that if they can consolidate the entire value chain in a physical location, risks can be minimized and more can be done from synergy and knowledge sharing and do more from efficiencies and scale economics.

Mr. Thomas said the agro-parks concept is designed to facilitate investments by a wide cross-section of stakeholders, with food industry interests and suppliers among those targeted.

Mr. Thomas said agro-parks which are currently available for additional investments include: Spring Plain with 943 acres of arable land, and Ebony Park which has 1,197 acres, both of which are situated in Clarendon; and Elim, St. Elizabeth, which has 2,000 acres for aquaculture.

He was speaking at an agricultural information forum hosted by Jamaica Promotions Corporation (JAMPRO), at the Terra Nova Hotel in St. Andrew last week.

 

http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20190205/growth-jobs-farmers-participate-agro-economic-zone

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