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Friday, May 30, 2025

Royal Caribbean seeking

T&T producer partnerships

by

Geisha Kowlessar-Alonzo
673 days ago
20230726
Booths of manufacturers are shown in this overhead picture taken at the Trade and Investment Convention last Friday, when the Business Guardian spoke with two Royal Caribbean executives who were looking to connect with local producers.

Booths of manufacturers are shown in this overhead picture taken at the Trade and Investment Convention last Friday, when the Business Guardian spoke with two Royal Caribbean executives who were looking to connect with local producers.

ABRAHAM DIAZ

Roy­al Caribbean Cruise Line is ex­plor­ing the pos­si­bil­i­ty of en­ter­ing in­to part­ner­ship with lo­cal farm­ers and man­u­fac­tur­ers to pro­cure goods for their ves­sels.

This can take place as ear­ly as No­vem­ber with the dock­ing of Jew­el of the Sea ex­pect­ed to call at Port-of-Spain when the cruise sea­son opens.

Roy­al Caribbean is the world’s sec­ond-largest cruise line in the world with 26 ves­sels in its fleet,

Rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the com­pa­ny vis­it­ed the Trade and In­vest­ment Con­ven­tion (TIC), which con­clud­ed last Sat­ur­day, to con­nect with lo­cal man­u­fac­tur­ers and en­tre­pre­neurs, whole­salers and po­ten­tial busi­ness part­ners.

Wendy Mc­Don­ald, re­gion­al vice-pres­i­dent, gov­ern­ment re­la­tions for Roy­al Caribbean spoke to the Busi­ness Guardian about the ven­ture.

She said con­ver­sa­tions ac­tu­al­ly be­gan last year through Tourism Min­is­ter Ran­dall Mitchell, fol­low­ing which talks then in­clud­ed the Min­istry of Trade and In­vest­ment.

“We are here be­cause Roy­al Caribbean is very in­ter­est­ed in sourc­ing lo­cal prod­ucts across the re­gion. Its im­por­tant for us to not just vis­it our des­ti­na­tions but to part­ner with our des­ti­na­tions.

“We look for the op­por­tu­ni­ties where we can buy prod­ucts/pro­duce from our dif­fer­ent is­lands across the re­gion to en­sure that we are able to pro­vi­sion our ships and to en­sure that we cre­ate part­ner­ships with our re­gion­al des­ti­na­tions,” Mc­Don­ald ex­plained.

She added that a meet­ing with lo­cal farm­ers al­ready took place.

“We looked at with Namde­v­co (Na­tion­al Agri­cul­tur­al Mar­ket­ing and De­vel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion) and we al­so vis­it­ed a cou­ple farms to see the pro­duce that are grown out there. We saw some cu­cum­bers, kale and pep­pers.

“This is sort of a dis­cov­ery trip for us and we will con­tin­ue to have the con­ver­sa­tions with our sup­pli­ers and pro­duc­ers but we have seen some re­al­ly good qual­i­ty prod­ucts so far so we are very ex­cit­ed about this part­ner­ship,” she added.

Al­so present at TIC with Mc­Don­ald was Vina Jumpp, food and bev­er­age di­rec­tor, pro­cure­ment at Roy­al Caribbean.

A first-time vis­i­tor to T&T, Jumpp al­so echoed that Roy­al Caribbean’s role is to help sup­port var­i­ous economies where pos­si­ble.

“We have a ves­sel that will be home port­ed in­to Trinidad soon; The Jew­el of the Sea. We are here to look at lo­cal farm­ers to see the items that are pro­duced lo­cal­ly such as ba­nanas, plan­tains and wa­ter­mel­on.

“We are look­ing at lo­cal di­ary com­pa­nies and see prod­ucts that fit in­to the port­fo­lio and hope­ful­ly we can start a part­ner­ship to sup­ply the ves­sel while she’s call­ing in the port here (in (T&T),” Jumpp fur­ther de­tailed, adding that the com­pa­ny has been suc­cess­ful in work­ing with coun­tries in Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean as it con­tin­ues to forge fruit­ful link­ages.

Jumpp added that Jew­el of the Sea will have 20 calls in Trinidad.

“So we ex­pect that on a week­ly ba­sis the itin­er­ary will be sev­en days so, on a week­ly ba­sis, we will look to get pro­vi­sions for this ship,” she said.

Nir­mala De­bysingh-Per­sad, CEO of Namde­v­co, who wel­comed the move, ex­pressed con­fi­dence that lo­cal farm­ers can meet the de­mand.

“For the va­ri­eties that they (Roy­al Caribbean) re­quire yes and for the dif­fer­ent com­modi­ties that they re­quire yes,” she said, not­ing that the re­quired pro­duce in­clud­ed pineap­ple, cel­ery, cit­rus, cab­bage, let­tuce and toma­toes.

More­so, De­bysingh-Per­sad said this will en­able farm­ers to step up their game to meet in­ter­na­tion­al re­quire­ments.

“This is a pos­i­tive mar­ket­ing op­por­tu­ni­ty for the farm­ers on the Namde­v­co cer­ti­fi­ca­tion pro­gramme. For Roy­al Caribbean food safe­ty and trace­abil­i­ty is im­por­tant and our pro­gramme of­fers those fea­tures where we are able to mon­i­tor farm­ers and have a trace­abil­i­ty sys­tem in place so that we are aware at all times where the pro­duce is com­ing from and how it is han­dled be­fore it goes to the ship,” she added.

Ac­cord­ing to De­bysingh-Per­sad in the event of a re­call, this will en­sure that all of the per­ti­nent in­for­ma­tion is avail­able.

On the man­u­fac­tur­ing side, pres­i­dent of the T&T Man­u­fac­tures As­so­ci­a­tion Roger Roach al­so ex­pressed con­fi­dence in the abil­i­ty of lo­cal man­u­fac­tur­ers to en­sue the sup­ply is met.

“We have lo­cal­ly-man­u­fac­tured prod­ucts on the shelves all over the world. We sup­ply all the di­as­po­ra coun­tries; Cana­da, the Unit­ed States, the UK and Eu­rope so there are com­pa­nies that stand ready, have been ready and they are cher­ish­ing this op­por­tu­ni­ty be­cause we all know that we need to di­ver­si­fy the econ­o­my away from the hy­dro­car­bon sec­tor and this is yet an­oth­er op­por­tu­ni­ty to do that and to earn for­eign ex­change so that we are not de­pen­dent on the com­mer­cial bank for all our for­eign ex­change,” the TTMA pres­i­dent said.

Roach re­in­forced that this was a tremen­dous op­por­tu­ni­ty to have lo­cal­ly made goods on­to the in­ter­na­tion­al cruise line which con­stant­ly tra­vers­es the Caribbean.

Speak­ing on the ini­tia­tive Mitchell said, “Roy­al Caribbean is an im­por­tant part­ner in the de­vel­op­ment of our lo­cal cruise in­dus­try. Their re­turn to the des­ti­na­tion dur­ing the 2022 to 2023 sea­son and the in­creased num­ber of calls ex­pect­ed for the 2023 to 2024 sea­son are tes­ta­ments to their com­mit­ment to T&T. This, cou­pled with their re­cent re­cruit­ment dri­ve in the des­ti­na­tion, au­gurs well for a strength­ened re­la­tion­ship go­ing for­ward.

“We are hap­py to have Roy­al Caribbean Cruis­es as one of our guests dur­ing this im­por­tant event. They are a val­ued part­ner in our tourism in­dus­try and a key con­trib­u­tor to our eco­nom­ic de­vel­op­ment.

“We ap­pre­ci­ate their com­mit­ment to pro­vid­ing qual­i­ty cruise ex­pe­ri­ences to our vis­i­tors and their sup­port for our lo­cal goods, ser­vices, cul­ture and arts. We hope that their vis­it dur­ing TIC 2023 will not on­ly in­spire more col­lab­o­ra­tion but al­so ben­e­fit the lo­cal sup­pli­ers.”

Chief ex­ec­u­tive of­fi­cer of Tourism Trinidad, Car­la Cu­pid, al­so wel­comed Roy­al Caribbean Cruis­es dur­ing the TIC 2023.

“We are nat­u­ral­ly very in­ter­est­ed in the out­comes of Roy­al Caribbean Cruis­es be­ing here. They are a lead­ing cruise com­pa­ny with a glob­al rep­u­ta­tion and a loy­al cus­tomer base. They al­so share our vi­sion of re­spon­si­ble trav­el and sus­tain­abil­i­ty, which are cru­cial to the fu­ture of tourism on our is­land. We look for­ward to work­ing with them to pro­mote Trinidad as a pre­mier cruise des­ti­na­tion,” she added.


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