Coconut Board Targets 5% Annual Increase in Value-Added Output, Exports
- The Coconut Industry Board (CIB) is looking to expand agro-processing output and value-added exports by at least five per cent annually. This is among the operational plans contained in the Jamaica Public Bodies Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure for the Year ending March 2025.
- To achieve the target, the CIB will be pursuing several activities this year to encourage efficient production and adoption of innovative technologies and provide ongoing research and support, while creating marketing opportunities for the various products that can be derived from coconut.
- In addition, two training programmes for farmers will be held with a focus on seed nut selection, which is expected to increase germination and production rates by 15 percent. The CIB also plans to set 55,000 seed nuts and distribute 19,625 seedlings to registered farmers. Other initiatives by the CIB include the development of coconut varieties that meet market demand.
- The research arm will explore the use of molecular technologies for crop improvement and the development of resilient, robust coconut hybrids, and a tissue culture project will also commence in collaboration with the Scientific Research Council (SRC).
- The CIB also plans to pursue business partnerships with industry and other investors actively, and will conduct 15 climate smart training/workshops, research the use of smart water in the Jamaican coconut sector and as well as investigate and demonstrate (test) the application of drone technology in combatting praedial larceny.
- The CIB was established under the Coconut Industry Control Act (1945) to promote interest in the local industry and encourage the efficient production of coconuts through the distribution of seedlings to registered farmers, provision of ongoing research support and the development of marketing opportunities locally and globally.
(Source: JIS)