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Coffee Farmers Urged To Adopt Best Practices

By: , June 2, 2017

The Key Point:

A call has been made for players in the coffee industry to utilise best practices for its sustainability.
Coffee Farmers Urged To Adopt Best Practices
Photo: Michael Sloley
Member of Parliament for East Rural St. Andrew, and wife of the Prime Minister, the Most. Hon. Juliet Holness (2nd left), assists member of Settlement, Sheila Morrison (3rd left), to display trophy for placing first in the Quality Cup contest, organised by Ueshima Coffee Company (UCC) and held today (June 1), at Craighton Hall Estate, in Irish Town, St. Andrew. Others are (from left) Cynthia Robinson, representing second place New Grange/Woodford; Japanese Ambassador to Jamaica, His Excellency Masanori Nakano; and Roxanne Richards, representing Middleton, which placed third.

The Facts

  • Making the call, Member of Parliament for East Rural St. Andrew, and wife of the Prime Minister, the Most. Hon. Juliet Holness, says the industry is a mainstay of her constituency, and a major export commodity for Jamaica, hence the need for combined efforts from stakeholders to protect it.
  • Emphasising that best practices in the farming sector can help to mitigate the recurring challenges that plague agriculture, she said coffee farmers in the area have applied them, and must be commended. “Amidst all the challenges, they have kept the industry vibrant,” Mrs. Holness added.

The Full Story

A call has been made for players in the coffee industry to utilise best practices for its sustainability.

Making the call, Member of Parliament for East Rural St. Andrew, and wife of the Prime Minister, the Most. Hon. Juliet Holness, says the industry is a mainstay of her constituency, and a major export commodity for Jamaica, hence the need for combined efforts from stakeholders to protect it.

“It is imperative that we employ the best practices that will create sustainability and will grow this particular sector,” Mrs. Holness emphasised.

She was delivering the keynote address at a ceremony for participating communities in the Quality Cup Contest, organised by Ueshima Coffee Company (UCC), yesterday (June 1), at Craighton Hall Estate, in Irish Town, St. Andrew.

Emphasising that best practices in the farming sector can help to mitigate the recurring challenges that plague agriculture, she said coffee farmers in the area have applied them, and must be commended.

“Amidst all the challenges, they have kept the industry vibrant,” Mrs. Holness added.

She also urged stakeholders in the coffee industry to protect the “product’s reputation” and to do more to fight praedial larceny.

“We can’t buy coffee from people who we know are not coffee farmers. All of us have to work together to protect each other,” the Member of Parliament told the farmers.

Meanwhile, President of the Jamaica Coffee Growers Association, Donald Salmon, told JIS News that the competition, now in its third year, is helping to lift and maintain quality in the industry.

According to Mr. Salmon, production is improving and young persons are being attracted to the sector, as coffee “seems to be giving more returns than going to the city to work”.

For her part, Manager for International Trade and Administration at UCC, Sophia Watts, said the event was initiated to encourage good agricultural practices.

“We want to stay recognised as the ‘King’ of coffee,” she said, citing their Blue Mountain brand.

The community of Settlement placed first in the competition, New Grange/Woodford came second, while Middleton district placed third.

Last Updated: June 2, 2017

Jamaica Information Service