PetroCaribe rescue Jamaica among 18
countries allocated US$2-million each for food security
Dr. Christopher Tufton
Jamaica is one of 18
regional countries which will benefit from a drawdown of
approximately US$40 million from a special Petro-Caribe fund
aimed at helping them deal with global food security and
price increases.
Jamaica’s Minister of
Agriculture, Dr. Christopher Tufton - one of eight members
of the technical executive secretariat of the Council of
Agriculture Ministers of PetroCaribe meeting in Havana, Cuba
- yesterday confirmed that the 18 countries will each have
access to approximately US$2 million within weeks to support
emergency food initiatives, including fertiliser
availability.
"Basically, what is
proposed is that in the short term, US$2 million will be
allocated to each of the 18 countries which basically gives
an advantage to the smaller countries to whom the US$2
million will mean more in value," Dr. Tufton told the
Observer in a telephone interview following a press
conference announcing the proposals in Havana.
"That money will be
used to target specific areas of food production and
productivity, namely machinery, planting materials and
feeds, training and any other critical areas," he added.
He said that in
addition, each territory will submit their fertiliser needs
and the secretariat will look at procuring fertiliser for
the region, as opposed to individual countries sourcing.
"We also completed the
terms of reference of how the PetroCaribe Funds will be
administered in terms of the criteria, the focus, promoting
local production, consumption and trade between member
countries and ensuring that it does not conflict with other
institutions like Caricom," Tufton said.
"All of this is
subject to ratification by the respective countries, and
there is a meeting proposed for September in Honduras where
an official signing is expected to take place involving the
heads of the respective member countries," he added.
Tufton said that while
the overall fund is expected to reap some US$500 million by
the end of 2008, the funds have just started to accumulate,
following its announcement by Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez at the PetroCaribe summit in Maracaibo in early July.
The US$40 million,
which he said should be available to member countries within
a few weeks following ratification of the proposals, was the
initial portion.
The fund, announced to
the Jamaican Parliament by Prime Minister Bruce Golding on
his return from the Maracaibo summit, is an initiative by
Chavez to support PetroCaribe member countries in expanding
agricultural production and improving food security.
He said that Venezuela
would contribute US50 cents per barrel of exported oil,
which adds up to about US$760 million per year.
A special meeting of
regional agricultural ministers, including Tufton, was held
on July 30 in Honduras to start the process of working out
how the funds would be allocated. At that meeting Jamaica,
Nicaragua, Honduras, Suriname, St. Vincent and the
Grenadines, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, and Venezuela were
named to the technical executive secretariat assigned the
task of designing and recommending a treaty of food security
and the establishment of mechanisms to manage the oil fund.
(Jamaica Gleaner)