AgricultureLocal NewsYouth Growing Tomorrow’s Harvest to start at three schools by Shanna Moore 26/03/2025 written by Shanna Moore Updated by Barbados Today 26/03/2025 1 min read A+A- Reset Share FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 721 The Growing Tomorrow’s Harvest program was officially launched on Wednesday at Grantley Adams Memorial School, introducing a hands-on gardening project that puts students at the centre of the fight against food insecurity, poor nutrition, and climate change. Led by CARICOM Youth Ambassador Ashley Lashley, and supported by PAHO/WHO and the Minister of Agriculture, Food and Nutritional Security, the initiative uses small, low-cost wick beds to teach students how to grow their own food. It begins in three secondary schools: Grantley Adams, Parkinson Memorial, and Alleyne. PAHO Representative Dr. Amalia Del Riego and Agricultural Officer Tony Rawlins both praised the project’s potential to promote healthier lifestyles, climate-smart farming, and national food security. The project ties into Barbados’ wider goals under the CARICOM 25 by 2025 (now 2030) agenda to reduce food imports and improve youth engagement in agriculture. (SM) Shanna Moore You may also like Met Services unveil new tools for early warning 30/04/2025 Rising pensions bill a problem 30/04/2025 New CT scanner donated by Mormon Church ‘to transform emergency care’ 30/04/2025