Minister of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries Audley Shaw (centre) enjoys a piece of watermelon during a tour of Austro Jam in Bluntas, St Elizabeth, on Friday. Looking on are state minister for education, youth and information and Member of Parliament for St Elizabeth Southwestern, Floyd Green (right), and CEO of Austro Jam , Martin Zsifkovics. (Photo: JIS)

MONTEGO BAY, (JIS) — Minister of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries Audley Shaw is calling on farmers to increase the production of fruits in order to reduce imports.

The minister was speaking to journalists on Friday following a tour of the Austro Jam Ltd farm in Bluntas District, St Elizabeth, where farmer and Chief Executive Officer Martin Zsifkovics is engaged in largescale cultivation of fruits such as watermelon, cantaloupe, and honeydew — utilising irrigation technology provided by the National Irrigation Commission.

“What Martin is doing is showing that we have to take things to a higher volume level, so that we can cut down the importation of these critical fruits that we can produce here at a higher quality than what we actually import from abroad,” Shaw said.

He noted that Austro Jam Ltd, which supplies hotels on the north coast as well as supermarkets across the island, is a great example of what can be achieved in Jamaica as it relates to import substitution.

“He (Zsifkovics) is a source of inspiration to me as minister to say to other farmers that they should raise the volume levels and get rid of the importation of these [fruits] that we can produce successfully here in Jamaica,” he added.

Meanwhile, the minister said that “apart from the hotel trade and the supermarkets locally, let’s target the other 15 Caricom countries. Things like what we are producing here — cantaloupe, honeydew — can be sold into those 15 member countries because they are importing from the United States and other third-country markets”.

For his part, Zsifkovics noted that the visit from the minister serves to underscore the importance of the agriculture sector for the country’s sustained growth.

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/article/20180926/ARTICLE/180929723