• Covid-19
  • Travel Protocols
  • Immigration & Customs Form
Sunday, June 15, 2025
SKNIS
  • Home
  • About
  • Press Releases
  • Parliament
  • In The News
  • Bills
No Result
View All Result
SKNIS
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

The value of bees is more than just a sweet thing

SKNISEditor by SKNISEditor
May 24, 2021
in Featured, Press Releases
The value of bees is more than just a sweet thing
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

22 May, Bridgetown, Barbados – The mere sight of bees sends us scampering in fear of being stung, however we savor their honey to sweeten our food, desserts, pastries and teas, especially a hot lemon tea when nursing a common cold. In Barbados alone, the demand for honey is estimated at 350,000 pounds on an annual basis. But bees are more than just producers of honey, a food rich in high-carbohydrate loaded with minerals and vitamins, they are critical to the pollination of many of our favorite fruits and vegetables and without them our biodiversity is at risk.

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) states that more than 75% of the world’s food crops depend, to some extent, on pollination. Pollinators, like bees, butterflies, birds, moths and beetles help plants to reproduce. Fruits and vegetables are actually plant babies which comes from a plant that has been pollinated.

Related posts

TWENTY-THREE BOYS HONOURED FOR EXCELLENCE IN SAINT KITTS

TWENTY-THREE BOYS HONOURED FOR EXCELLENCE IN SAINT KITTS

June 13, 2025
SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS REINFORCES COMMITMENT TO REGIONAL COOPERATION AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE AT BRAZIL-CARIBBEAN SUMMIT

SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS REINFORCES COMMITMENT TO REGIONAL COOPERATION AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE AT BRAZIL-CARIBBEAN SUMMIT

June 13, 2025

The new world as we know it today continues to be pummelled by the COVID-19 pandemic and that along with the harsh effects of climate change and natural disasters in the Caribbean places the agricultural sector in the region under extreme pressure. As a result, we at a critical juncture where all efforts must be made to ensure that we protect bees and other pollinators or face a drastic reduction in food supply and increase in hunger, a grim picture we must avoid at all costs.

The importance of bees is evidenced by the approximate 90.5 million beehives in the world an increase up from about 80 million beehives in 2010. While beekeeping tends to be perceived as a hobby, it can be contribute to income generation and increase the livelihood of beekeepers, especially those whose income was impacted by COVID-19.

It is against this background that the United Nations recently designated 20 May as World Bee Day in effort to raise awareness of the importance of pollinators, the threats they face and their contribution to sustainable development goals.

Renata Clarke, Sub-regional Coordinator at FAO stated, “FAO recognizes and underscores the importance of bees and provides technical assistance to countries on issues ranging from queen breeding to artificial insemination to sustainable solutions for honey production and export marketing”.
She recommended that where possible farmers should avoid using pesticides, fungicides or herbicides on farms and gardens as they kill beehives, but suggested diversifying crops as a means to attract bees and other pollinators.
Meanwhile, Pattie Bedford, Technical Consultant for Antimicrobial Resistance at FAO stated, “The extensive ashfall from the recent eruption of the La Soufrière in St. Vincent and the Grenadines covered leaves and trees so there no immediate food sources available for bees. It was suggested that bees be fed a sugar solution and the Barbados Apiculture Association generousy donated 21 bags of sugar each weighing 25 kg and 50 gallons of sugar solution”. It is estimated that 350 hives were safely moved into the green zone.
It is commonly known that bees, the hardest working creatures on the planet, have benefited people, plants and the environment for decades. By carrying pollen from one flower to another, bees and other pollinators enable not only the production of an abundance of fruits, nuts and seeds, but also more variety and better quality, contributing to food security and nutrition. Simply put, our food supply and the quality of food we eat depends on the pollination of bees and we cannot afford to risk a decrease in food supply as many countries continue to face alarming rates of hunger and malnutrition.
Contact for more information:-
Marquita Sugrim
FAO National Communications Consultant
FAO Subregional Office for the Caribbean
E-mail: marquitajuanne.sugrim@fao.org

  • 1 246 426 7110
Previous Post

WEAR FACEMASK AND SANITIZE THOROUGHLY TO PROTECT YOURSELF IF CARING FOR A CHILD EXPOSED TO COVID-19, CMO LAWS ADVISES  

Next Post

PRIME MINISTER HARRIS PRESIDES OVER SPECIAL ECCB MONETARY COUNCIL MEETING ON TOURISM  

Next Post
PRIME MINISTER HARRIS PRESIDES OVER SPECIAL ECCB MONETARY COUNCIL MEETING ON TOURISM  

PRIME MINISTER HARRIS PRESIDES OVER SPECIAL ECCB MONETARY COUNCIL MEETING ON TOURISM  

WHAT'S HOT

TWENTY-THREE BOYS HONOURED FOR EXCELLENCE IN SAINT KITTS

TWENTY-THREE BOYS HONOURED FOR EXCELLENCE IN SAINT KITTS

June 13, 2025
SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS REINFORCES COMMITMENT TO REGIONAL COOPERATION AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE AT BRAZIL-CARIBBEAN SUMMIT

SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS REINFORCES COMMITMENT TO REGIONAL COOPERATION AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE AT BRAZIL-CARIBBEAN SUMMIT

June 13, 2025
MINISTER OF EDUCATION VISITS CONSTRUCTION SITE OF NEW BASSETERRE HIGH SCHOOL AS WORK OFFICIALLY BEGINS

MINISTER OF EDUCATION VISITS CONSTRUCTION SITE OF NEW BASSETERRE HIGH SCHOOL AS WORK OFFICIALLY BEGINS

June 13, 2025

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • 2025
  • Attorney General, Ministry of Justice and Legal Affairs
  • Bills
  • Featured
  • Featured Ministry
  • Government Projects
  • Home Page Slider
  • In Focus
  • In The News
  • Interviews
  • Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Marine Resources; Cooperatives; Entrepreneurship and Creative Economy
  • Ministry of Education, Youth; Social Development; Gender Affairs; Aging and Disabilities
  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs, International Trade, Industry and Commerce and Consumer Affairs; Economic Development and Investment
  • Ministry of Public Infrastructure, Energy and Utilities; Domestic Transport; Information, Communication and Technology; and Posts
  • Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment; Climate Action and Constituency Empowerment
  • Ministry of Tourism, Civil Aviation; International Transport; Employment and Labour; Urban Development
  • Notices
  • Parliament
  • PMO Press Releases
  • Press Conferences
  • Press Releases
  • Prime Ministers Office, Ministry of Finance; National Security; Citizenship and Immigration; Health and Social Security
  • Register of Voters
  • Round Table
  • The Cabinet Secretariat, Cabinet Secteatry
  • Uncategorized

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

Facebook Pagelike Widget

LOCATION

St. Kitts Nevis Information Service
Government Headquarters
Chruch Street
Basseterre
St. Kitts
Tel:(869)467-1416

FOLLOW US

  • Government of St. Kitts & Nevis

© 2020 St. Kitts & Nevis Information Service. Developed by E-Government Unit

No Result
View All Result
  • Home

© 2020 St. Kitts & Nevis Information Service. Developed by E-Government Unit