Grenada

Source: FAO-Forestry. Disclaimer.
Version: 2000
Geography and population
Grenada is a tri-island state, located at longitude 61o
4' W and latitude 12o 4' N, situated 110 km southwest of St. Vincent and 145 km
north of Trinidad and Tobago. It is the most southerly of the Windward Islands. The
largest island, Grenada (311 km2), is 34 km long and 19 km wide, with two much
smaller islands Carriacou (34 km2) and Petit Martinique (3.2 km2),
thereby giving a total land area of 348.2 km2. Grenada is mostly volcanic in
origin, of steep rugged topography, with a main mountain chain running almost northsouth
in two main sections. The island is subdivided into seven parishes, six on Grenada with
Carriacou and Petit Martinique together constituting the seventh.
The Draft Land Development Policy of the Ministry of Agriculture (1995)
classifies 74.9% of the total land mass as being suitable for agriculture. Of the total
land area of the three islands, the land use classification estimates that 63.7% (22 300
ha) is under permanent crops, 4.3% (1 500 ha) under temporary crops and an additional 2.6%
(300 ha) left to fallow for up to three years. The remaining 29.4% includes forests,
woodlands, grasslands and other uses.
Of a total population of 93 000 inhabitants in 1997, 63.4% are
classified as urban. In the period 1990-1997 an average annual growth rate of 0.3% was
registered in the overall population. In 1996 agriculture's share in the island's GDP
was 10.4%, showing a decline from the 1981 contribution of 17.5%. At the end of 1995, 4.5%
of the workforce was employed in the agriculture and fishing sector, as compared to a
figure of 32.8% in 1999.
Climate and water resources
Climate
Grenada's climate can be classified as
semi-tropical with a marked dry season from January to May and a wet season running from
June to December. Spatial variations in annual rainfall range from about 1 500 mm to more
than 5 000 mm, with an average totalling 2 350 mm.
Water resources
Water resources originate mainly from a system of permanent streams
and rivers but there is some groundwater available from the limestone areas along the
northwest coast. The entire population (rural and urban) has access to the domestic water
supply. About 80 percent of the island is connected to the public water supply, 7 percent
to standpipes while the remainder is supplied from rain water catchments. However, there
is very little available from that supply that can be diverted to agriculture.
Irrigation and drainage development
Irrigated agriculture is largely undeveloped in Grenada. The
irrigation potential has not been quantified and though there is water available from a
number of surface and groundwater sources, these sources have not been tapped nor is the
extent of this resource known. Currently for the island of Grenada alone, a total of 218.5
ha, or 1.5% of the area under cultivation, is under irrigation as compared to 4.8 ha in
1973. Micro-irrigation is utilized in more than 90% of the area, the remaining area being
under sprinkler irrigation. Crops grown under irrigation include mainly vegetables (90%),
fruit trees and grapes (5%), cut flowers (2%) and maize, roots, tubers and pulses (3%). Of
the irrigated area, less than 1% is from river diversion, 6.5% from reservoirs while the
remainder is from direct pumping from rivers. There is one limiting factor to the
development of irrigation that has so far been observed, and that is that significant
amounts of arable land are located in areas where there is no available water source,
either domestic or otherwise. Costs for sprinkler and micro-irrigation systems are 6 200
and 8 700 US$/ha respectively.
Institutional environment
The National Water and Sewerage Authority (NAWASA) is responsible
for the development of drinking water supplies as well as the sanitary disposal of sewage.
The Ministry of Agriculture's Forestry Division is responsible for the protection of
water catchment areas, while its Agronomy Division is responsible for the development of
irrigation on the island.
Trends in water resources management
There is growing recognition of the potential importance of
irrigation to Grenada's agricultural sector. Within the banana industry, with the
recognition of a potential increase in yield averaging from 17 to 25 t/ha, investment in
irrigation is being encouraged. In addition, attempts to encourage a more diversified
agricultural production have resulted in a number of large estates being subdivided and
made available to small farmers. As these farmers increasingly move into vegetable and cut
flower production, this will necessarily create a greater need for supplementary
irrigation to ensure year-round production.
Main sources of information
Central Statistical Office. May 1997. Annual Abstract of
Statistics, 1996. Ministry of Finance, Grenada.
Ministry of Agriculture. 1996. Grenada Agricultural Census 95.
Planning Unit, with technical assistance of FAO.Grenada.
Ministry of Agriculture. 1997. Agricultural
policy and Programme of the Ministry of Agriculture 1997-2010. Grenada
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