https://i0.wp.com/demerarawaves.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/UG-2024-5.png!

Guyana gets Caricom funds for agri development

Last Updated on Saturday, 26 December 2015, 21:01 by GxMedia

Finance Minister Dr. Ashni Singh and CEO of the Caricom Development Fund (CDF) Ambassador Lorne Mc Donnough sign the Loan Agreement for the Country Assistance Programme between the CDF and the Government of Guyana in the presence of President Donald Ramotar.

Guyana and the CARICOM Development Fund (CDF) on Saturday signed a country assistance programme agreement that will inject US$7.32M into Guyana’s agriculture sector.

Guyana’s Finance Minister, Dr. Ashni Singh and Chief Executive Officer of the CDF, Ambassador Lorne McDonnough signed the agreement for a combination of a US$4.566M concessionary loan and a US$2.66M grant, at the Hilton Hotel.

President of Guyana Donald Ramotar, Foreign Affairs Minister Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett, Minister of Foreign Minister of Public Works, Transport and Hydraulics Robeson Benn and the Director-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Elizabeth Harper, witnessed the signing.

“Through the funding, more than 9 000 farming households are to gain easier access to farmlands to improve and sustain agriculture production year-round,” the Guyana-based Caricom headquarters said in a statement.

In brief remarks, President Ramotar said the funding made possible through the CDF would go a long way towards improving the infrastructural development in the agriculture sector which, in turn, would stimulate and develop production particularly in three regions of Guyana.

He pointed to Guyana’s capacity to feed the Caribbean and to contribute to the food security of the Region.
President Ramotar, who is also the Lead Head of Government for Agriculture in the Community’s Quasi Cabinet, called for the de-stigmatisation of agriculture, and the modernization of the sector to make it more attractive to young people. He said he was confident that with modern technology and new techniques, the Community could lift production, find markets, lure youths and lift the income of those involved in the sector.

In his comments prior to signing the agreement, Minister Singh said that President Ramotar’s presence at the event – held in the margins of the Thirty-Fourth Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government – was testimony to Guyana’s commitment to CARICOM, to the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) a flagship programme of CARICOM, to regional institutions, and to the development and impact of projects in Guyana. Agriculture, he stated, was perhaps the leading example of a sector that could manifest regional integration at its best.

Ambassador McDonnough said the approval of funds and signing ceremony with Guyana marked the fifth of eight Member States that are to benefit from the CDF under the first funding cycle, and was tangible evidence of Community mechanisms at work.

The CDF was established under Article 158 of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas “for the purpose of providing financial or technical assistance to disadvantaged countries, regions and sectors.” It is the centre-piece of a regime to address the disparities among the Member States of the Community which may result from the implementation of the CSME.

Funding, Ambassador McDonnough said, has been approved for Dominica which should sign its agreement next week. Consideration of a programme with Grenada is underway and should shortly be able to approve for signature.

The country assistance programme to Guyana, he said, supported access road construction by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), and dovetails with other agriculture-related projects.