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JAMAICA: Farmers Benefiting from JBI Greenhouse Project

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#Mandeville, February 23, 2019 – Jamaica – Twenty farmers from Content in Manchester are getting ready to  reap sweet peppers and tomatoes from their greenhouses.

They are part of the Jamaica Bauxite Institute (JBI) Water Harvesting and Greenhouse Project that has been operating in eight communities across the island since 2013. The project aims to provide sustainable livelihoods for residents of mined-out communities.

Marjorita Isaacs is the only woman in the project, and she is growing sweet peppers.

“This is my second crop and I now have my full quota,” she told JIS News.

From a farming family, Ms. Isaacs says her parents were Irish potato growers, so farming is in her blood.   She said she prefers greenhouse to outdoor farming, when heavy rainfall affects her crops.

Another farmer, Raymond King, has been in greenhouse farming for four years.“I love it because when you have problems outside, you don’t have them inside and it pays better.  When you are outside, you have one crop, but inside you can pick several for one year straight,” he said.
Mr. King said even when it is raining, he can still be working, and he has a steady, reliable market for his crops, including yam and sweet potato.  

For her part, Dianne Gordon, a Director of bauxite lands at the JBI who has been with the Bauxite Community Development Programme (BCDP) for some 21 years, said the project was conceptualised in collaboration with the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF) to fulfil the mantra ‘Life after bauxite’.

“You can have production and life long after the mining is finished. Content is a living example of that. This area was mined in the 1960s and we started in 2018,” she noted.

Ms. Gordon said JSIF and JBI got together, along with RADA, in 2013 and put the project together.

The farmers in Content occupy 20 greenhouses. There are seven other locations with 160 farmers, namely, Nine Miles, Tobolski, Watt Town and Clapham, in St. Ann; Blue Mountain and Rose Hill, in Manchester and Myersville, in St. Elizbeth.

“The beauty of the project is that mined-out pits are converted into water-harvesting ponds using a solar water pump to take the water to temporary storage tanks, and [it is] fed to the greenhouses using the gravity method. This helps farmers to plant whether there is drought or not,” she said.

Contact: Barbara Ellington

Release: JIS

Photo Caption: Farmer, Raymond King, examines peppers in his greenhouse located in Content, Manchester, during a tour of the farm by Executives of the Jamaica Bauxite Institute (JBI), recently.

JIS photo

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Jamaican gets multi-million dollar grant to enhance resilience 

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Credit:Donald De La Haye

Rashaed Esson

Staff Writer

Jamaica got a 3 million US dollar grant from humanitarian charity organisation Direct Relief, as part of its mission to strengthen resilience in the Caribbean region. This is also an effort to enhance Healthcare systems and infrastructure throughout Jamaica in preparation for natural disasters as the organization renews its ongoing partnership with the island. This was announced by Direct Relief in an article on May 1.

 

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Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana sign security agreement 

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Rashaed Esson

Staff Writer

To enhance and strengthen security in the Guiana Shield, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana on Monday April 29, signed a security common master plan following a meeting in George Town, as announced By President of Guyana Irfaan Ali on Facebook. Ali expressed that the agreement will hopefully enhance collaborations and relations between Suriname and French Guiana.

 

 

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Caribbean News

Grenada Prime Minister says there needs to be greater focus on coral health in the region’s universities. 

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Rashaed Esson

Staff Writer 

The Prime Minister of Grenada, Dickon Mitchell, at the 2024 Sustainable Tourism Conference on April 22, expressed that Caribbean universities should be leading researchers for coral restoration as he addressed the importance of corals to the region’s capacity for tourism sustainability amid climate change

Regarding this, he called for more funding to encourage universities to create more marine experts, given the region’s vulnerability to climate change effects.

 

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