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A strategic Revised Medium Term Plan has been adopted by the Board of Directors of the Caribbean
Agricultural Research and Development Institute (CARDI) at their 58th Meeting which was held last week in Belize City, Belize.
The Board is comprised of regional representatives from the agriculture sector, financial
institution, and the academia and is responsible for the approval of the work programmes for the Institute, the general operation of the Institute, and implements the general policies of the Institute.
In this regard, the Board may also give the Executive Director general instructions for the
implementation of such policies. The 2005 – 2007 Plan is focused on the development of technologies within the ambit of Research and Development (R&D) and is designed to further improve good sustainable
agricultural practices, preservation and enhancement of our natural resources base and increase competitiveness of the agri-food sector. It encompasses mandates from the Institute’s Strategic Framework that are
vital to CARDI.
The Plan presented to the Directors is in keeping with the Institute’s continued quest to
reposition itself to respond to the dynamic needs of the agriculture and food sector of the Caribbean Community particularly with respect to technologies generated, trade and environmental considerations. It is
designed to target improved efficiency and productivity at the farmer level as well as the post harvest and value added development that will make products attractive to the consumer.
The Executive Director, Dr Wendel Parham stated that CARDI would continue to adhere and pursue
sustainable technologies that increase the competitiveness of our agriculture without compromising biodiversity, biosafety and human health.
At the meeting, the Board of Directors also discussed critical issues aimed at supporting the
agriculture sector in the CARICOM region in achieving greater production, efficiencies, diversification and global competitiveness such as the Jagdeo Initiative, the Caribbean Regional Invasive Species Intervention
Strategy (CRISIS) and development in the area of Biotechnology.
CARDI has been given the responsibility to develop policies by the CARICOM Secretariat on
Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) and also chairs the Working Group on Invasive Species in the greater Caribbean region.
CARDI is the lead agency for Research and Development in the agriculture sector for the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM), and is also responsible under the (CARICOM) Regional Transformation Programme (RTP) for Technology Generation, Validation and Transfer, Market Development and Integrated Production and
Market Programmes.
Under the RTP, CARDI is particularly responsive for leading the commodity and thematic areas of
Hot Pepper, Sweet Potato, Small Ruminants and Market Development.
The Executive Director also pointed out that other issues of significant importance that
received in-depth and comprehensive deliberations included the status of payments by Member Governments, staff compensation, liabilities, and negotiations which are slated for the agenda at the upcoming Special
Meeting of the Board of Governors of CARDI that will be convened next month on the 7 October 2005 in St Kitts Nevis. The Chairman of the Board of Directors, Dr Keith Archibald and the Executive Director, Dr Parham
will attend this meeting.
While in Belize, the Board of Directors visited a comprehensive food production system in which
CARDI through its Belize CARDI Country Representative/Agronomist Mr Anil Sinha and his staff provide technical support and advice that assisted the Mennonite Community to realise self-sufficiency that generate 75
percent of agricultural production in Belize.
The Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute (CARDI) was established in 1975 by
Member States of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to meet the agricultural research and development needs of the Region.
The member countries are Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana,
Jamaica, Montserrat, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago.
For more information please contact Selwyn E. King, Public Relations and Communications Manager, CARDI. (53/2005)
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