Producing more food, more quickly

Producing more food, more quickly

With the tightening of the U.S. blockade of Cuba and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on key sectors of the economy, boosting food production is essential
Author: National news staff | informacion@granma.cu
April 29, 2020 14:04:33
Within the current context marked by the tightening of the U.S. blockade against Cuba and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on key sectors of the national economy, boosting food production is essential.
Presently, Cuba imports some 800,000 tons of corn and spends 550 million dollars on animal feed, an unsustainable dependency which obliges us to focus on banishing the import mentality.
For these reasons, the Second Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Central Committee, José Ramón Machado Ventura, joined by Central Committee Secretariat member José Ramón Monteagudo Ruiz and Minister of Agriculture Gustavo Rodríguez Rollero, met with a reduced number of provincial and municipal leaders to review on progress made on implementing food production strategies that emerged from regional meetings held at the end of March in Holguín, Sancti Spíritus and Havana.
Regarding the province of Artemisa Machado Ventura reiterated the importance of preparing all arable land and using certified seeds. This province has several commitments, including the production of charcoal, honey and tobacco, which may not be marketable now given the international situation, but when demand reappears, income will be ensured, he noted.
Artemisa is planting corn, for use as animal feed and to boost milk production, which is currently not meeting projections.
In Mayabeque, Machado Ventura and Vice President Valdés Mesa stressed that the government has prioritized national solutions as central to the economy, and that agricultural production is key in all this work; insisting on the importance of exploiting to the maximum all material and financial resources available to the sector, including fuel, fertilizers and foreign exchange allocated.
He reiterated that among established priorities for cultivation are rice, beans, corn and plantain, as well as production of eggs and pork, while calling for taking advantage of the spring season to plant short-cycle crops, an effort in which urban, suburban and family agriculture also play an important role.
Campesinos in Matanzas are sowing more than 24,000 hectares this spring as a concrete response to present needs - mainly short-cycle crops. Advantage is being taken of cleared land, now available with the potato harvest completed, an important contribution to saving fuel.
Machado Ventura emphasized that outdated habits must be overcome, especially the tendency to import needed supplies and sign contracts for only a portion of expected production.
Carlos Luis Naranjo Suárez, the Agriculture Ministry's provincial representative, in Matanzas stressed the importance of increasing corn production, as well as improving yields for both beans and rice, as well as plantain and cassava.
Party Secretariat member José Ramón Monteagudo Ruiz praised work done in Cienfuegos to recover underutilized productive poles and incorporate new ones, while urging that more land be granted in usufruct. He stated that this process must be speeded up and the current strategy reviewed.
Some 5,000 new hectares under irrigation have been incorporated to ensure the food supply, with productive areas reactivated and others added. The Paso Bonito Cruces irrigation canal is now in full use; the Tablón factory has been revitalized to guarantee the supply of animal feed; and several agricultural projects are underway; while coffee planting in lowlands and charcoal production are advancing.
In Villa Clara, Machado Ventura called for intensifying the preparation of acreage and prioritizing the planting of cassava, boniato and other crops to confront the pandemic, and create conditions to substitute imports.
He addressed the need to increase yields, which depends on the quality of seeds used and regular attention to plantings, with available supplies and equipment, which is no small feat, he noted.
"Agricultural development is a secure base because with it we can replace, if not 100 percent of food imports, at least a significant portion," José Ramón Machado Ventura stated in Sancti Spíritus.
The most challenging situation here is that faced by the Sur del Jíbaro Agro-industrial Enterprise, which was obliged to reduce rice planting to 700 hectares as a result of the Zaza reservoir’s low water level, but is looking to take advantage of ground water from existing wells on its property, while continuing land preparation and diversifying livestock production, as well as other crops.
In Ciego de Ávila, Machado Ventura insisted that the contracting process must be conducted correctly, going directly to the productive base, visiting farmers and insisting that every contribution is needed given the situation the country is facing.
The recently concluded potato harvest provided more than 19,500 tons to the population's diet, in a campaign with limited availability of resources, fundamentally of phytosanitary products, which required a search for alternatives. Nonetheless, the province was able to send potatoes to Guantánamo, Granma, Las Tunas, Camagüey and Havana.
In Camagüey, where only 7.5% of the arable area is irrigated, campesinos are obliged to prepare as much land as possible to take advantage of spring rains.
Dairy farmers here are under pressure since they are behind in scheduled deliveries to the industry, a deficit they hope to recover during the "peak" months of the current campaign.

Categoría
Situaciones Excepcionales
RSS Minrex