Georgetown: Most of the corn and peas in Guyana are imported from the Central American country of Belize, and in an effort to reduce the food importation bill on these two products, the Ministry of Agriculture is moving to grow them, Minister of Agriculture Dr Leslie Ramsammy has disclosed.
The Minister said the ministry is working anxiously on this plan which will see the crops being test grown, in small quantities and later following successful testing, introduced to local farmers for cultivation.
“I believe that we should not be importing black eye peas and corn, I believe that Guyana should be an important producer of black eye peas and corn…these are crops that Guyanese farmers can grow, so I have instructed the Guyana School of Agriculture (GSA) to use its land in Essequibo, and to plant 10 acres of black eye peas just to demonstrate it can be grown in Guyana.”
Similarly, the Minister said he also instructed the National Agriculture Research and Extension Institute (NAREI) to work with the GSA and utilise 10 acres of land at Mon Repos, and cultivate corn to demonstrate to farmers that it can be grown locally.
With the Barbadian company Santa Fe in Region Nine growing corn and with the ministry now getting onboard, Minister Ramsammy said, “we are hoping that some of the farmers will take this on, so if not eliminating importation of those products that we can in fact reduce their importation.”
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