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ILO Funds Project To Formalise Operators In Agriculture And Fisheries

The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has provided the Government with US$70,000 to implement a project called ‘Formalising Operators in the Jamaican Agriculture and Fisheries Sectors’. This project will promote the benefits of formalisation and assist target operators to formalise their operations. A memorandum of understanding (MOU) was signed during a virtual broadcast, which connected representatives from the Ministry of Industry, Investment and Commerce; the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries and the ILO, on Thursday (February 4). This agreement is for a pilot phase of the project, which has a duration period of 11 months. The target beneficiaries include 100 farmers and fisheries producers registered with the Rural Agricultural Development Authority (RADA), 70 per cent of whom are farmers and the remaining 30 per cent fisherfolk. The Jamaica Business Development Corporation (JDBC) will lead this charge in developing the farmers and fisherfolk. Participants will be guided through industry-specific training and hand-holding sessions on how to manage and run a business, getting their operation formalised, opening a business bank account, creating strategic business linkages, drafting a business plan, and how to access financing. One objective of the project is to move farmers and fisherfolk along the micro, small and medium-sizes enterprise (MSME) business continuum from informal to formal, from micro operators to small businesses, and eventually to medium-sized enterprises. Minister of Industry, Investment and Commerce, Hon. Audley Shaw, who gave the main address during the virtual ceremony, said the project is timely, as the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has dealt a severe blow to the economy. “This project is, indeed, a timely intervention in ensuring that our post-COVID-19 recovery is strong,” he said. Mr. Shaw argued that agriculture is a most important activity in the country’s economic development, and is deserving of the benefits the project will offer. “The sector, in 2018, accounted for 7.3 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). Nevertheless, it is characterised by a prevalence of farmers operating informally, despite their significance to rural development and the economy in general,” the Minister said. “It is estimated that approximately 43 per cent of the Jamaican economy operates informally. The challenge of addressing informality is more severe where workers in the agricultural sector are concerned, and especially for those in the fisheries subsector,” he added. For his part, Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries, Hon. Floyd Green, said the Ministry welcomes this initiative, as it will provide more opportunities for farmers and fisherfolk who now operate informally. “We know the reality, they operate in this informal space, and as such, they’re unable to access the key they need to unlock their true potential, to truly modernise and grow the agriculture and fisheries sectors,” the Minister said. “I welcome this injection by the ILO, which is truly an investment in our farmers and fisherfolk… . I see this project as a precursor for a bigger programme, and with the leadership of the JBDC,” he added. Director, ILO, Dennis Zulu, said his organisation has no doubt that the JBDC will successfully institute activities to the satisfaction of the stakeholders. He also thanked both Ministers for their commitment to the success of the project. “The ILO remains committed to continue our collaboration with the Government of Jamaica and all other stakeholders in Jamaica, to ensure that we achieve the objectives of the project as stated,” he said.

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Jamaica makes bid to boost small earnings from huge Indian market

Jamaica’s first resident diplomat to India is making the case for the strategic importance of increased trade and investment flows between the two countries on the eve of his departure to take up the post of envoy in the second most populous nation in the world, the second-largest democracy and the sixth-largest economy. Having got a feel for diplomacy as Jamaica’s ambassador to Mexico for the past two years, business development and marketing specialist Jason Hall is looking to logistics investment, the sustainable energy sector, high-end professional services outsourcing, the knowledge economy and agribusiness development as top areas for the pursuit of vastly increased trade in goods and services, as well as investments between Jamaica and India. In this focus, he is at one with his counterpart, Runsung Masakui, India’s high commissioner who took up office in Jamaica last November. WATCH: Jason Hall eyeing to boost Jamaica’s earnings from Indian market The current generally low level of trade in goods between the two countries and the gaping trade imbalance favouring the Asian nation, which now sells about US$61 million worth of goods to Jamaica each year, is a source of concern for both men charged with promoting the economic, social and political interests of their respective countries. Jamaica imports mainly pharmaceuticals, motor vehicles, iron, steel and fish products from India, and sells mainly electrical machinery and aluminium to the Asian nation. Turning the tide on Jamaica’s paltry earnings of less than US$280,000 from exports to India’s humongous market of 1.3 billion people is a motivating force for Hall; firing up the Jamaican as he prepares for his second foreign posting, he told the Financial Gleaner in an interview at the foreign ministry in New Kingston this week. “From a strategic perspective, India’s success, capacity and expertise in science and technology recommends it as a perfect partner for Jamaica to build capacity in those areas, with important application in agribusiness and agro-processing, and enhancing route to market for our farmers,” Hall said. He cited processed foods, coffee, spices, condiments, essences and black castor oil as products with great potential for increased exports to India, which recorded a gross domestic product of US$2.8 trillion in 2020. Jamaica’s new high commission to India, who takes up office later this month, is also looking forward to a take-off for his home country in global digital services from enhanced India-Jamaica relations, providing opportunities for the greater outsourcing of back-office operations of Indian companies to Jamaica in the areas of finance and legal services, among others. In this regard, Hall views Jamaica’s nearshore location to the large Indian target market of the United States and the island’s high-quality English language proficiency as a distinct asset for increased high-value knowledge processing outsourcing business. “Currently, there is business processing outsourcing, but we have a tremendous opportunity here for Jamaica to move up the value chain. Additionally, there is potential to increase our capacity in medicine, pharmaceuticals and healthcare delivery,” the diplomat said. In his view, there is also scope for significant knowledge transfer in the area of solar energy development with India’s proven track in the area and its hosting of the International Solar Alliance, of which Jamaica is a member. Increased cooperation in tertiary education delivery and scientific knowledge transfer from India to Jamaica, through educational collaboration, are also on the cards. The promotion of Jamaica’s special economic zone legislation and infrastructure will be on the agenda for Hall, who is also accredited to Singapore, Sri Lanka, Malaysia and Nepal. In this regard, he brings to the job several years’ experience in investment and trade promotions as the regional manager for the Caribbean and Latin America for Jamaica’s state investment and trade promotions agency, Jampro. He also marketed Jamaica as deputy director for cruise shipping, attractions and events at the Jamaica Tourist Board, JTB; and was Caribbean marketing and business development manager for food manufacturer and distributor Nestlé. Hall speaks five languages, including French, Portuguese, Spanish and siSwati, spoken by the Swazi people of southern Africa. Not to be overlooked, he said, is the export of Jamaica’s cultural content, and a collaborative framework involving Jampro, JTB, other state agencies and private-sector groups is said to already be in place to carry forward this and other trade and investment promotions activities. Hall pointed to an economic diplomacy programme out of Jampro and the Jamaica House cultural and manufactured products and services showcase already pioneered by the JTB, as areas in which he has worked and on which he will be drawing heavily as Jamaica’s high commissioner to India, and ambassador to other nations in the Indian subcontinent and other parts of southern Asia. In the ongoing effort to transition Jamaica from a solely goods-trading economy to being mainly a service-based economy, Hall said the opportunities presented by India in this regard are real and are being taken seriously.

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Tropical Battery powers up for expansion

Strong cash flow at the end of 2020 giving impetus to expansion exploits TROPICAL Battery has been energised for expansion mode having declared its intention to pursue a number of acquisitions in the coming months. Managing Director Alexander Melville, who made the disclosure, also announced that the company is currently seeking out partnerships for strategic alliances. He advised shareholders of the company’s Strategic 2021 Growth Plan which will be underpinned by acquisition and strategic partnerships. Melville, who has more than 26 years of industry work experience in the automotive/battery business, told shareholders in the company’s just-released 2020 annual report that, “we will be focusing on creating shareholder value through acquisitions of and partnerships with aligned profitable companies in Jamaica and across the Caribbean region”. To this end, Tropical Battery has entered into discussions with several key partners to assist in identifying suitable acquisition targets. Tropical Battery is one of Jamaica’s oldest and most trusted household brands, primarily operating in the energy storage space for more than 70 years through the sale and distribution of batteries. Based on its latest audited financial report, the company’s cash flow position, as at the end of its 2020 financial year, was very strong. In fact, the cash generated by operations was the highest on record – coming in at $312 million or a 107 per cent increase versus the $151 million generated in 2019.   HEALTHY AND STRONG CASH BALANCE As at September 30, 2020 cash and cash equivalents stood at $263 million, which represents the highest on record. “This cash and our strong balance sheet position us well to achieve our growth objectives into new product lines and markets/countries as well as fund strategic acquisitions,” Melville explained. Total equity was up 34.4 per cent, moving from $547 million at the end of fiscal year 2019 to $735 million as at September 30, 2020. This increase was driven mainly through increases in retained earnings and cash received from the initial public offering last year.   EXPANSION PLANS ALREADY IN MOTION Foremost in the expansion plans is the drive currently underway to repackage and expand the company’s Tropical lubricant line to include primary batteries, bike batteries and freezetone engine coolant. This is in addition to several other brands in the pipeline like Hankook and Laufenn tyre brands, which are coming soon. Tropical Battery is also expanding parking at its number one retail store while its sister company, Diverze Properties, is in the process of purchasing land and building directly beside its Grove Road branch in Kingston. The decision to expand the parking facility is based on the fact that its number one customer complaint is the lack of sufficient parking space. In order to solve this problem, the decision was taken to more than double the existing parking facility. Further expansion currently in the works for Tropical Battery is in the renewable energy (lithium-ion battery) area wherein it has brought in its first container of lithium-ion batteries valued at over US$300,000. As much as 70 per cent of the shipment was sold in the first 60 days. As part of the expansion plans, Tropical Battery is restructuring some of its retail stores to include solar panel displays and new lithium-ion batteries.

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Direct roundtrip flight from Jamaica to Africa in March

Following on the success of the first ever non-stop flight from Nigeria to Jamaica last month, the company behind the historic initiative has organised another trip from the mother continent to the island that promises to be even better. Elizabeth Agboola, CEO and founder of travel company Nigerians Travel Too, told Loop News that the March 30 Air Peace flight to Jamaica will begin in Lagos, Nigeria before stopping in Ghana for more passengers. What’s more is that an expanded schedule will give Jamaicans the opportunity to travel directly to Africa on a roundtrip, she said. The plane’s schedule will begin on March 30 in Nigeria, with a stop in Ghana before heading to Jamaica. The passengers on that flight are expected to have an 11-day, 10-night stay in Jamaica. On March 31, the plane will depart the island for a roundtrip to Africa, with stops in Ghana and Nigeria before returning to Jamaica on April 8. It then departs the island for Ghana and Nigeria a final time on April 9. According to Agboola, the company decided on the Jamaica to Africa-leg opportunity out of demand after the historic flight from the continent on December 21. That flight travelled directly from Lagos, Nigeria to Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica. “This time around, there will be a facility for the outbound out of Jamaica into Nigeria or Ghana. “We have had a lot of people asking and slightly upset that we didn’t have the facility for the outbound out of Jamaica. The only available thing was a one-way,” Agboola told Loop News. She said that there were passengers who purchased one-way tickets to Nigeria when that flight departed Jamaica on December 28 and charted their own course back to Jamaica for their return. According to Agboola, the expectation is that the trip from Jamaica to Africa will be well supported, as apart from Jamaicans, there were also Grenadians on the one-way flight back to Africa, while there were inquiries from St Kitts and Nevis and the Dominican Republic. “We actually had quite a buzz from the Caribbean at large. So with the right place with marketing, I know people, once they know it is available, they will go with it,” Agoobla said. She stated that, although the flight will be going to Nigeria, other destinations in Africa could be easily reached as there are connecting flights from Lagos to the various other cities in the continent.  

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IDB Invest and JMMB Bank partner to promote access

IDB Invest, a member of the IDB Group, through a recent agreement with JMMB Bank has provided the bank access to US$35 million with a five-year tenure to facilitate increased financing to small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs). The project will also increase the availability of long-term financing to JMMB Bank to support the growth of its SME lending service, while contributing to the maturity and structure of its debt profile. This will in turn provide a diversification of funding sources, thereby decreasing the dependence of shorter-term deposits, to the benefit of SMEs. Jerome Smalling, CEO and executive director of JMMB Bank, said the partnership underscored the bank’s commitment to assist SMEs to scale and grow their businesses through the provision of holistic solutions to support them throughout their business life cycles. “We recognise that access to affordable financial solutions plays a key role in business operation and growth. The bank believes that this sector has tremendous growth potential and, in leveraging further support to the sector, the company is seeking to play its part in helping SMEs to realise their full potential and contribute even more to the country’s development,” he stated in a company release last week. The partnership will also see IDB Invest lending support to the bank on the development and implementation of an environmental and social management system. In addition, IDB Invest will provide advisory services to bolster internal capacity and an action plan to ensure that JMMB Bank’s human capital strategy attracts and retains the best talent pool. CEO of IDB Invest, James Scriven said his organisation was pleased to have closed this transaction with JMMB Bank. “This operation will allow SMEs in Jamaica to have greater access to financing, which makes me proud as this is part of our commitment to strengthen and support the increase in credit financing for SMEs within the Caribbean region by generating more jobs and promoting their development,” he stated. According to IDB Invest, the forging of this agreement also stemmed from the bank’s strong creditworthiness and capacity, which it said were also supported by its solid and stable financial performance. JMMB, as a part of its larger group strategy, has sought to to add value to its SME clients through the provision of financial partnership, resources, innovative financial solutions and by building a network to support growth. Through the opening of its SME resource centres in Trinidad and Jamaica within the last year, small businesses are provided with the relevant coaching and advisory services including marketing, taxation, accounting, business plan writing and other general financial management and back office support. Through its partners and other oganisations, JMMB has designed these SME Resource Centres to help small operators to improve their operational efficiencies as well as to lend expertise and provide access to resources — all of which will ultimately help them to grow their businesses to the next stage.

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Micro and small businesses important to growth

In Jamaica, where a significant per cent of employment is provided by micro and small entrepreneurs, taking ‘small’ ideas seriously is paramount to moving the economy forward. For two decades, JN Small Business Loans (JNSBL) has facilitated the emergence and sustenance of thousands of micro and small businesses across Jamaica, which, before the pioneering move by what was then the Jamaica National Building Society, had few places they could turn to seek financing for their operations, because: – Their owners and their operations lacked the assets to secure financing; – They could not articulate or present how they would grow their ideas; – With no assets to secure financing and little paper work to demonstrate the businesses’ performance and future projections, they were deemed too risky. But with the need to borrow as little as $5,000; an opportunity to use furniture or appliances to collateralise loans and a relationship on which micro and small businesses could depend to assist them to grow, JNSBL has demonstrated that not only can micro and small business operators be loaned funds, but that they also repay effectively. Over its two decades, the company has approved nearly 500,000 loans valued in excess of $48 billion, which have helped to maintain livelihoods and create jobs for some 200,000 Jamaicans, who merely need someone to take them seriously. Through sustained partnerships with entities, such as the Development Bank of Jamaica, EXIM Bank, the National Insurance Fund, the Tourism Enhancement Fund and the Jamaica Business Development Corporation, JNSBL has been able to channel financing to micro entrepreneurs in key sectors and provide capacity-building to assist with their sustainable growth. And, through partnerships beyond Jamaica, JNSBL has been able to forge diplomatic ties and establish cooperation that has enabled the company to share its success and also expand the body of knowledge available on the role of the micro and small business sector to the economy. This includes its continued partnership with the United States Agency for International Development, from which has spawned opportunities for study tours for businesses in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as technical assistance and exchange opportunities for local micro and small businesses. FINANCING IMPROVES OUTCOMES; TECHNOLOGY IMPROVES ACCESS There is no doubt that having an available resource to which micro entrepreneurs can tap into creates a boon for businesses, their owners and their families to flourish. In 2008, a study by the Tropical Medicine Research Institute at The University of the West Indies underscored that there is a positive relationship between loan access for micro entrepreneurs and their personal economic achievement. The study showed that beneficiaries of loans from JNSBL enjoyed a better standard of living. They were more likely to own a home and had more expendable income than those who did not benefit from a loan to grow their operations. Technology has also been an important tool leveraged by JNSBL to strengthen access to financing for micro and small businesses. For more than a decade, the company has used technology to make payments convenient for clients and to also make sound decisions that allow it to serve them even better. Through its uniquely designed kiosks and JN Bank Smart ATMs, clients can visit JN Bank branches and point-of-sale locations in post offices to make their loan payments conveniently and quickly. The Global Information System (GIS) technology allowed JNSBL to equip its client relations team to make sound determinations about the vulnerability of clients, to consider external and environmental threats, as they worked to support and tailor solutions to meet the needs of our clients. JNSBL continues to invest in technology to better support the industry and to drive down the costs associated with supporting the sector. EMPOWERING THE MICRO AND SMALL BUSINESS SECTOR The innovations go a far way to support the Jamaican economy— our micro and small business sector, who, in addition to being provided with access to financing, are given an opportunity to establish or tighten personal relationships with the formal financial sector through the ownership of a bank account, so that they can develop financial footprints that will redound to even broader windows to access capital. But this access must be protected and recognised by the State to deepen financial inclusion and the sector’s participation in the growth of the economy. Over the years, JNSBL has, therefore, been a keen participant and supporter in the development and passing of legislation, such as the Security Interests in Personal Property Act (2013) to broaden the forms of collateral that can used to secure financing; and now the Microcredit Act, recently passed in the Senate to protect, in law, our micro entrepreneurs whilst supporting the ongoing development of the sector. JNSBL welcomes this legislation, not only for the legal protection it will afford our clients, but the confidence it will spur in the importance of the sector and the people who drive it. To grow, we believe firmly that we must build the confidence by reassuring our people that we will provide greater access to financial services for all Jamaicans while supporting their ongoing development. Gillian Hyde is the general manager of JN Small Business Loans Ltd

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New Customs Act big step forward, say brokers

A key stakeholder in the export-import process has welcomed the tabling of the Customs Act, 2020, declaring that the proposed law will position the Jamaica Customs Agency (JCA) as a major player in facilitating modern international trade. Clive Coke, president of the Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders Association of Jamaica (CBFFAJ), said that under the current 1941 legislation, the JCA focused primarily on revenue collection and the imposition of fines and penalties on those who violate the law. “This new act will definitely speed up things and improve efficiency within Customs and for the importing and exporting public,” Coke said in a Gleaner interview. The CBFFAJ head said that the proposed new statute would place Jamaica in a better position to improve its ranking in the Logistics Performance Index (LPI). “With Jamaica having an interest in improving its ranking in the logistics index, many of these things are dependent on Jamaica Customs stepping up its game and embracing worldwide standards other than just seeing itself as an enforcer,” he said. Jamaica ranked 113 out of 160 countries in the 2018 LPI. Based on the World Bank’s collection of development indicators, the efficiency of Jamaica’s customs-clearance process was reported at 2.42 in 2018 on a scale of one to five, where one is low and five is high. The LPI overall score reflects perceptions of a country’s logistics based on efficiency of customs-clearance process, quality of trade and transport-related infrastructure, ease of arranging competitively priced shipments, quality of logistics services, ability to track and trace consignments, and frequency with which shipments reach the consignee within the scheduled time. Commenting on the role of customs brokers in the facilitation of trade, Coke said that for the first time, persons in Jamaica who ply their trade as brokers and freight forwarders have been recognised in the parent legislation. He said that while regulations acknowledged the role of customs brokers, the current archaic law of 1941 did not recognise them. On the vexed issue of individuals who pretend to be customs brokers in an effort to fleece unsuspecting members of the public, Coke said that the sector had been grappling with this problem for many years and had reported the matter to the authorities at the JCA. He said that many persons presented themselves at the wharf under the pretence that they were licensed customs brokers. Jamaica Customs has a gazetted list of authorised customs brokers. DECEIVED BY COUNTERFEIT Coke said that some members of the public had been deceived by persons who posed as customs brokers and lost significant sums of money. “It is one of those things that the Shipping Association of Jamaica and the Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders Association have been looking to actually operate the entire wharf area as a logistics park, so that we can have more control of these unauthorised persons who find themselves in the space,” he told The Gleaner. The Customs Act, 2020, will repeal and replace the current 1941 law in order to modernise customs practices and procedures to effectively and efficiently facilitate trade. The memorandum of objects and reasons states that the modernisation of customs practices is expected to bring benefits for the trading community and the JCA by improving customs-clearance and revenue-collection processes, simplifying procedures for businesses, and providing more efficient service delivery to the public. Meanwhile, Coke said that customs brokers had experienced a fall-off in business of between 30 per cent and 40 per cent owing to the impact of COVID-19. He said many members of the CBFFAJ in Montego Bay, who depend on the tourism sector for business, have had to reduce staff in the wake of low occupancy levels at the hotels.

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FosRich partners with Huawei on solar products

Energy products distributor FosRich Company Limited has struck a deal with Chinese technology company Huawei to sell its photovoltaic, or PV, solutions in the Jamaican alternative energy marketplace. Fosrich CEO Cecil Foster says the agreement gives it exclusive right to distribute and install PV solutions, otherwise called solar systems, in the local market, inclusive of inverters to convert solar generated power for regular use; digital switches and panels, monitoring devices and lithium-ion batteries for power storage. “Huawei is partnering with us through their brand Fusion Solar to bring photovoltaic power products and panels to the local market. We’ll be able to do large scale industrial and governmental operations, Foster told the Financial Gleaner. “That means we can cover from the factory to the office and the home,” he said following the announcement of the distribution arrangement on Thursday on the final day of the Jamaica Stock Exchange 16th Regional Investments and Capital Markets Conference in New Kingston. Director of Enterprise Business Group for Huawei Northern and Western Caribbean, Courtney Hamilton, said the company had been on the lookout for a distributor with clout in the Jamaican market, and says the arrangement positions the Chinese company to expand its footprint. The company is already in the Caribbean supplying telephone equipment and cellular infrastructure. “As world leaders in the photovoltaic power generation space, we want to supply the entire ecosystem for solar power, except the panels which we currently don’t do. What we’re supplying will make sure that customers will have a totally digital solar plant,” Hamilton said. Jamaica’s alternative energy market continues to evolve, with both wind and solar systems. The market is estimated at over $4 billion, energy sources say, with solar systems being more ubiquitous, having been adopted by both households and industrial users as a cheaper source of energy over supplies of electricity from the national grid. The inverters to be supplied by FosRich will range from small 3-kilowatt units for household use to 100 kW units for commercial applications, according to Hamilton. He said the partnership would start out small then scale up as business grows. “The original investment for inventory is about $15 million, but we expect that to grow exponentially as the market responds and the relationship grows,” he said. Solar technology has got cheaper over the years, but Foster says has no plan to compete at the low-end against easily procurable solar panels. His sights are on building contractors and clients of that nature. “What we are committing to do is deliver premium quality products at lower, competitive prices. FosRich distributing for Huawei is better and much different from someone buying off the Internet. We want that growing market out there to come to us,” he said. FosRich has been in business for more than 25 years, and is now turning over annual revenue of more than $1.8 billion. The junior stock market company supplies lighting and power equipment for home and commercial use, but in recent years it has ventured into the manufacturing of PVC pipes and conduits, as well as the repair of power transformers on behalf of starter client Jamaica Public Service Company.

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Education Minister welcomes opening of STEAM Lab at JC

Minister of Education, Youth and Information Fayval Williams has welcomed the launch of the Dr Joseph Tait STEAM Infusion project at Jamaica College. Speaking at the launch and opening of the Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics (STEAM) Laboratory on Wednesday, Williams said the initiative, which is funded by Dr Tait, is in line with the thrust of the Ministry to enable students to have greater access to the technology and the resources needed to thrive as 21st century learners. “At the Ministry, we are committed to the task of ensuring that none of our students is left behind as we seek to eliminate the digital divide that exists in our society. This divide has been made even more evident with the COVID-19 pandemic and the need for our classrooms to be moved to the virtual space,” she said. The Minister argued that the opening of the Laboratory is one of the best examples of how crucial it is for partnerships to be encouraged in education. “Because of the outreach of one man and his team, many young men will be able to be inspired in this lab, opening up to them a world of possibilities,” Williams said. She noted that, overall, the STEAM Infusion project is forward-thinking and innovative. “If Jamaica is to be the place to live, work, raise families and do business, then our workforce, through our education sector, has to be equally competitive on the global market. The investment truly begins in education.” She further noted that the STEAM movement has been earning traction over the years in Jamaica and other countries. She added: “I am sure we will reap the reward of Dr Tait’s investment for years to come and I am sure there will be more hands available to join him and others like him on this journey to improve the education of our children.” For his part, Board Chairman, Jamaica College, Michael Bernard, said the school aims to be amongst the leading institutions in Jamaica in the use of technology. In his remarks, Dr Tait said he feels “a certain amount of excitement at what this could hold for the future and I also feel a certain amount of gratitude… [that] this little country boy from Clarendon could do this for his college and for his country”. “I am grateful for the support of the Jamaica College community,” he said, adding that he will also be supporting the implementation of an amphitheatre for the dramatic arts at the school.

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Green endorses 400-acre organic greenhouse farm project

Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries, Floyd Green, has endorsed the proposed 450-acre Land We Love Organic Greenhouses project, the largest commercial organic farm to be established in the Caribbean, hailing it as impressive and one that will supplement agricultural production in the country. Speaking at a briefing meeting with Jamaica-born Canadian Michael Allen, who has 20 years experience in agriculture and organic greenhouse business in Canada, Green welcomed the project, stating that there was a need for large projects that will provide economies of scale as well as consistency in production and quality, factors that were critical for sustained agricultural growth. Green also stated that organic farming would provide the opportunity for niche marketing with crops such as ginger and turmeric having a huge export market potential. The Agriculture Minister expressed a keen interest in the training component of the project that will include collaboration with universities and high schools even as he called for the setting up a training facility. This facility, he said, would, among other things, create a hub and robust training programme for the region, as well as better equip seasonal farm workers. The project, which will be located on former sugar cane lands in St Elizabeth, will be carried out in three phases over a seven-year period, with the construction of 10-acre greenhouses, a storage facility and a 145-acre field crop area and will provide employment for over 350 persons, targeting 70 per cent women. Crops to be cultivated include tomatoes, lettuce, bell peppers, strawberries, turmeric, ginger and garlic. The project will feature the Cravo retractable roof production system designed for tropical climate and will be solar powered.

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