N H ZUBERI

KARACHI: Vice President of Pakistan Businesses Forum (PBF)and Former Chairman of FPCCI Standing Committee on Agriculture Ch Ahmad Jawad has urged the government to dedicate one of the special economic zones to food processing and value additions specifically. As optimizing the potential of the agriculture sector is contingent upon a paradigm shift from supply-led production to demand-driven high value agriculture.

Speaking to webinar on focus agriculture, he said approximately, 80.39% of total exports from Pakistan were industrial products and 19.08% were agricultural products which are unfortunate. In this regard we must focus on increasing value addition and develop a strategy for diversification. “Our farmers must get better farm income by doubling of exports. This is the right time to increase our productivity and diversify to value addition. We must designing specific strategies to improve organic agriculture and value addition in food items,” he said.

He said that organic farming is the way forward for agriculture in Pakistan. The increasing trend of organic agricultural produce is on the rise and necessary steps must be taken to promote organic farming and improve our organic identity globally. Similarly we should have a properly designed agricultural export policy, which has provisions of incentives for exporters, fund to promote Agri start-ups and encourage new exporters,” Jawad added. For this, we need to develop a robust strategy which is market oriented and encourages large scale private sector participation in agricultural exports, he said.

It is also the need of the hour to aggressively grow our agri exports so that the agriculture sector continues to grow at a fast pace thereby enhancing farmers’ incomes too. Foremost, exporters need high connectivity both via the sea and air routes to reduce export costs. “Improved logistics and strategies to curb losses at pre and post-harvest stage will help generate surplus for exports,” he added.

Currently we need substantial investment in agricultural supply chain management. We lack quality storage and transport facilities, especially cold storage facilities and refrigerated transport to handle perishable food commodities, especially meat and dairy products. Acquiring these facilities would play a key role in determining the fate of agri-trade, both in domestic and international markets. Secondly the larger challenge remains how to build larger, longer-term scalable competitiveness rather than opportunistic trade that takes place occasionally.

He retried that infrastructure, investment, value addition and enhanced supply chain competitiveness will be the key areas to double agriculture exports; he said and further mentioned that through conducive policy ecosystem shall largely help in realising vision of doubling agricultural exports.

YPARD Country Representative Shahla Salah said that by serving as a bridge between agriculture, manufacturing and by meeting the basic need of assured supply of healthy and affordable food to all people across the country, Pakistan’s agriculture surely has the potential to be a major driver of Pakistan’s growth in the coming years and we expect that incumbent government may initiate for tangible results in this regard.