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The Solomons Strike Gold!
31st August 2006. A Solomon Islands company has won first prize, it was announced at the Asia Pacific Forum for Environment and Development (APFED) which met in Adelaide
last week.
The winner of the Ryutaro Hashimoto APFED Gold Award was
Kokonut Pacific Solomon Islands Ltd for its project “Rehabilitating a rural economy with virgin coconut oil production”.
Mr Colin Dyer, CEO of Kokonut Pacific Solomon Islands (KPSI) Ltd (pictured front right) explained that KPSI was a joint venture with a Canberra-based company, Kokonut Pacific (Aust) Pty Ltd.
Although only two years old, KPSI has installed 13 village-level virgin coconut oil (VCO) units in four Provinces. Because coconuts are produced throughout the year, the project has created permanent rural jobs for 400 men and women supporting about 3,200 people.
KPSI is helping ‘kick-start’ an ailing economy and has already exported 120 tons of Organically Certified VCO
to markets in Australia, Europe and the USA. Sold as an up-market virgin edible
oil in the health.
Sold as an up-market virgin edible oil in the health food.
Coconut oil producers form an association
THE country’s first certified organic virgin coconut oil producers’
conference was held in Honiara at
the end of August. The conference, attended by 35 producers from five islands in the country, discussed topics on
quality control, money management, virgin coconut oil products, bio-fuel and staff management of this new and growing industry.
Guest speakers at the conference were from the department of agriculture and livestock, department of planning and aid coordination and
Kokonut Pacific Australia, which managed the international marketing of the oil. Following the conference the participants formed a Certified Organic Virgin Coconut Oil Producers Association (COVCOPA).
Kokonut Pacific Solomon Islands chief executive officer Colin Dyer said the formation of the association is a great “maturing of the industry”.
“The formation of the Certified Organic Virgin Coconut Oil Producers Association shows the confidence that these rural producers have in their future,” Mr Dyer said.
Mr Dyer said producers need to stay together and focused on the markets already achieved while developing further opportunities in the domestic markets.
“These village entrepreneurs are learning rapidly of the challenges of rural development and are taking positive steps to keep moving forward,” he said.
The association is now under the care of an interim committee, who will seek formal registration and develop a draft constitution as soon as possible.
The conference was funded by EU Micro Project.
Participants hoped that the conference would become an annual event as they have gained so much insight and understanding from the guest speakers including Dr Dan from Kokonut Pacific Australia, as well as from each other.
read all the Producer stories here
also see the biofuel page
This article is adapted form an article printed in the Solomon Star 5 September, 2006
Extension Training visit Feb-March 2009
I n early 2007 Chris Maina embarked on an installation and
extension worker training tour spending four weeks travelling the island
of Malaita from end to end. New units were launched and existing ones upgraded and much training and
assistance was given to all. New software was
introduced for processing the extension worker visits at HQ. New
trial equipment for testing was also placed in service with
various producers for in field testing.
Expanding the local market is of vital importance to avoid the
unreliable fluctuations of the export market.
As producers gain and understanding they produce more oil of export quality and this is a also a better product for the local
market. Wider use is being made of the by product and here we se pigs being raised on the meal.
A new unit was completed at Hauhui final training given Suraio. Tawaiseu in the south has a vital village and exuberant team.
The need for regular extension worker visits was again
reinforced and there are now a three trained extension workers and
a construction crew that
regularly visit the far reaches of the Solmons encouraging
producers.
The trip was well worth while and the usual
travelling across the open Pacific Ocean in open boats, sleeping on
village floors with mosquitoes and using the open air amenities kept Chris
alert.
Dan’s Solomons safari 2009
As we set off from the west coast of Choiseul at 6am on
that Sunday morning, having visiting DME sites
impacted by the April 2007 tsunami, our helmsman
told us “The boat ride to Gizo will take one and a
half hours in good weather. If the weather is not so
good it will usually take an hour longer.” He failed
to say how long it would take if we actually had bad
weather
full
story...
Solomons 2010
Along with the natural expansion of KPSI, other donor organisations such as CSP are helping to expand the DME concept. Regular producers meeting are now held and a number of
extension worker travel regularly to visit the producers and discuss their needs.
The producers grow their own nuts or buy them in from neighbouring farmers
and this helps to spread the prosperity to others. Extension workers
provide vital communication between the remote farmer and
the knowledge base at HQ, help to organise meetings of
interested parties, help with setting up of a framework
that the producers can continue to use, take orders for
spare parts and note the general morale and concerns of
the producers. Helping farmers understand their
financial position is vital where money is relatively
new concept but is a vital requirement for school fees,
transport and power. The extension worker becomes a
regular visitor and a part of the local community.
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