No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveCuba Plans to Diversify Crops to Deal with Climate Change

Cuba Plans to Diversify Crops to Deal with Climate Change

HAVANA – The Cuban government this week announced it plans to diversify its crops and stagger its plantings with the aim of reducing the damage from weather phenomena, and it added that the agricultural sector is recovering rapidly from the ravages brought a month ago by Tropical Storm Noel in the eastern part of the island.

Acting Agriculture Minister Maria del Carmen Perez told Cuban media Saturday that now “the main thing is to prepare the land and sow to shorten the lag in the winter plantings.”

Perez told the official daily Granma that equipment and resources had been allocated to quickly harvest crops such as bananas that were flooded and cannot stand the excess moisture brought by the storm, as well as other crops such as sweet potatoes so that farmers can replant what was lost after harvesting what they can salvage.

She said that farmers need “to increase the short-cycle crops,” adding that among the urgent tasks in the urban agriculture sector was moving the vegetable seedbeds to areas with better drainage to guarantee vegetable production for the yearend period.

Perez also said that now that there is an abundance of water in the ground this is the opportune time to increase the planting of rice on a small scale.

The rains and flooding associated with Tropical Storm Noel caused an estimated $500 million in losses in Cuba, as well as considerable damage to the road network, hydraulic installations, agriculture, housing and other sectors.

Sugar Minister Ulises Rosales del Toro, meanwhile, said that the 2007-2008 sugar harvest will get started Dec. 10 in a processing plant in the eastern province of Granma, the official AIN news agency reported.

Despite having more resources and greater availability of sugar cane, the last harvest brought in only 1.2 million tons, according to unofficial figures, even though production predictions had originally been for between 1.3 and 1.5 million tons of the crop.

In 2002, the sugar industry was restructured with the closing of almost 100 sugar mills and the reallocation of half the land area formerly dedicated to sugar cane to other crops. After the rise in sugar prices on the international market, the Cuban government decided to reopen some of the factories and increase the volume of cane produced for milling by 28%.

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica’s Pride 2025 Closing Event Bans Minors, Sparks Outrage

Costa Rica’s Pride 2025 closing event, set for June 29 at San José’s Plaza de la Democracia, was thrown into controversy when the government...

Former Costa Rican Minister Arrested for Drug Trafficking, Faces U.S. Extradition

Costa Rica’s judicial police arrested Celso Gamboa, a former security minister and Supreme Court judge, on Monday, following a U.S. request for his extradition...

Why Costa Rica Feels Like a Safe Haven for This Longtime Expat

If someone asked me to sum up why I live in Costa Rica in 5 words or less, my answer could well be: “It...

An Expat’s Take: 5 Burning Questions About Life in Costa Rica Right Now

Have you been keeping up with the various events taking place in Costa Rica? There is always something interesting going down, and here are...

Hondurans March to Mark 2009 Coup as Election Battle Heats Up

Thousands of government supporters marched Saturday in the capital of Honduras to commemorate the anniversary of the 2009 coup that ousted then-leftist President Manuel...

El Salvador Slams Paris Fashion Show Inspired by Cecot Mega-Prison Inmates

The president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, joked on Saturday that he could send inmates from his mega-prison to France, after they were represented...
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Tours
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica