A major push to reduce food waste could significantly lower Trinidad and Tobago’s food import bill and bolster national self-sustainability, according to Louisea John-Browne, founder of Increase Kids Agro World (IKAW).
As geopolitical concerns refocus attention on regional food security, John-Browne and her team are aiming to expand their efforts to combat food waste across T&T and the wider Caribbean.
In the coming weeks, she will bring strategies learned in the United States to classrooms in South Trinidad to commemorate International Compost Awareness Week.
IKAW has campaigned to reduce food waste in T&T for five years and recently joined the US Composting Council.
“We attended a composting conference in February in the US and the large volume of production and operations that we saw across there is a vision would like to have locally in Trinidad, and that will, know, afford us the ability to export regionally, so that we can have regional farmers on board with using organic fertilizers,” said John-Browne in a phone interview with the Business Guardian on Monday.
Last week, Professor Wayne Ganpat warned the Business Guardian that the Caribbean could face a sharp increase in food prices within three months, suggesting a potential food crisis.
“We are faced with the four Fs. Fuel increases, which is going to impact food for humans, feed for livestock, and fertilisers in a big way as a key component of agriculture,” Ganpat stated.
John-Browne believes IKAW can address the final “F” through an upcoming education drive designed to encourage waste reduction strategies. She noted that the latter part of the equation is “vitally important.”
“Our slogan is compost today, zero food waste tomorrow. So we focus a lot on food waste reduction that could very well impact the food import bill. We teach kids one to reduce food waste, and then we teach them,” she explained, “Where the same food that is wasted is converted into a fertiliser that we can use in our gardens to generate, or to create, or to grow plants. So we’re talking now self-sustainability.”
Her stance is supported by her organisation’s growth over the past year, which she uses to advocate for the development of what she calls “Black Gold.”
“We can sustain ourselves, individuals, families and a nation by using the same food that is wasted to create the fertiliser to again generate food, our own food. So it can very well impact the food import bill over time, that is so we saw the need to teach kids the value of reducing food waste and creating ‘Black gold’. With a hope that in years to come, once the knowledge is given now that the bill would be reduced, it will be a self-sustained nation,” the IKAW founder said.
John-Browne noted that increased awareness has directly translated into higher demand.
“I think it’s been about a year now that we have grown. Our sales have grown. We were able to educate a wider cross-section of not only kids, but the population, doing various training programs throughout the country. And because of the education that we were doing and the awareness that we were bringing to people, the sales went up so persons were now seeing the need for the use of the compost, from home gardeners to large-scale, large-scale farmers.”
She added that interest has even extended to Grenada, though those specific plans are still maturing.
“We have had a couple of farmers in Grenada reach out to us for the compost and also for one of the courses that we were offering. However, that kind of fell through the cracks, but we did have that regional interest and our hope is that we will reach that regional level,” John-Browne said.
“One, with the connections that we have to the US Composting Council, and also through our connections regionally, as we have some composters in the Bahamas and also a couple other small islands that we have been connecting with to carry the work a little further.”
Beyond her business success, she is urging other companies to adopt organic fertilisers on a national scale.
“If persons or businesses or even the country have a desire to reduce food waste and then to use natural fertilisers, I think that is where it starts. And then, having these, after having desire, you would need to have a plan.
“How you intend on, from our experience, collecting the food waste and converting it,” she said, “Our eventual end goal, which is on a national level, is to have an automated facility where all, or a large percent, if not all, of the food waste that is generated in the nation is collected at our facility and automatically converted into organic fertilizer that our said farmers can use and that we can export regionally as well. So that is our end goal, that is on a national level.”
She observed that many regional composters focus primarily on fertiliser production rather than waste reduction.
“What we have realised in doing so is that a lot of the other composters are not focusing on achieving zero food waste only. That is our goal; they are mostly doing the composting for fertiliser, fertilisation purposes. But our end goal is to achieve, if not zero food waste, but the concept of it growing in one: our children’s minds, and two: the population, to address the issue of food wastage,” John-Browne said, “So that’s why we compost. But regionally, that’s not the end goal. But we have seen composting, making up a little bit of a stride in the Caribbean. We intend on taking it further.”
Following last year’s campaign targeting corporate T&T, John-Browne confirmed that this year’s initiative will focus on three primary schools and one secondary school in San Fernando.
