14. Wonderland Agristock limited
For those who came in late…..
This story is about a project to use modern animal husbandry approaches to grow pigs efficiently in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea. The back ground is provided in blog chapters 1-13. This chapter (14) describes the next stage from an experiment near Port Moresby to implementation in Hela province.
After we wound up the proof-of-concept part
of the program, it took a while to get to the next stage. The plan had always been to base a commercial
project in Hela Province and launch a business that would provide jobs for the local
people and be profitable. At some point
we had to take the program to the Hela.
It could never achieve its objectives if it remained in Port Moresby.
Our modelling indicated that the program could
be profitable. Even better it would
contribute of the order of PGK 5000 (~AUD 1,800) per household for the supply
of kau kau (sweet potato), caring for the pigs and a maintenance fee for the
pig house. Village households have an average annual income of about 12,600 PGK
(~AUD 4,600) so the pigs added a handsome income for roughly half an hour work each
day, plus the work in the kau kau garden.
Business For Development (B4D) and Oil
Search recruited landowner companies (lancos) interested in investing in the
program. They included Trans Wonderland Limited (TWL), Gigira Development
Corporation (GDC), PNG Mining and Hospitality Services (PNGMHS), Mananda
Umbrella Joint Venture (MUJV) and Hides Gas Development Company (HDGC). Together
they elected to adopt the idea of a stockfeed and pork production enterprise in
the Highlands and called the enterprise Wonderland Agristock Limited (WAL).
By co-investing in the program and
establishing WAL, the lancos demonstrated their desire to diversify their
investments in the region and drive sustainable development outcomes that
support the wider community – namely smallholder farmers.
Once the idea gained traction and the lancos committed to the idea, the
TWL CEO, Larry Andagali, a huli man threw himself into the project. He and B4D's PNG lead, Noel Kuman, visited the village communities and spoke to
hundreds of people. By sheer strength of personality, he engaged their
interest.
The Hela Province has a number issues with clan violence, disputes, and murders on a too frequent basis. When we first visited the Nogoli-Hides site on a fact-finding mission in 2012, we were escorted by a police vehicle or a policeman traveled with us in our Landcruiser. This was because of the ever-present risk of clan violence. Over the four years while we were working in Port Moresby, the clan violence in the region became worse. It was not helped by the death of the governor in 2013, and then two elections that were deemed unconstitutional after 2015 high court proceedings.
Even when the new governor was finally elected the clan fighting continued. Over the six months to September 2016 about 120 people were killed in the Province as rival clans carried out their revenge for each successive insult, murder, or house burning. The root of the problem lay with land ownership, entitlement, and inheritance. At the peak of the violence a gun battle between the police and a clan ensued in Tari, the provincial capital. Tragically, a policeman’s son was killed. During the battle, the police needed to withdraw because they were simply outgunned. Historically clans have been poorly armed because their only means of accessing guns was through stealing from the military. However, more recently they have increased their access through trading arms over the border with West Papua. To stabilise the situation, the governor sought assistance from the army and 150 soldiers were deployed to the Province to achieve an uneasy peace.

In 2016, we
conducted a training at Henry’s training lodge in Nogoli. There
had been trouble the night or two before the course was due to start. The
attendees came to the course in an escorted convoy. Like all compounds in the
area, we were surrounded by a 2.5 M high mud wall (a Huli fence), so we
couldn’t really see out. During the morning, while we were waiting, we heard
what sounded like gunshots. There was a deathly silence amongst our group. The
tension was palpable. Then more shots, except they were firecrackers, and a
religious procession was underway on the road outside the compound.
The concept we developed for what became known as the Community Pig Enterprise was based on the idea of a sow farm producing about 80 pigs per week. These would be grown from 6 weeks of age in village pig houses under a contract arrangement. Based on the performance we achieved at Alstonia Farm, each villager should be able to put at least 20 pigs per year through their pig house. They would be paid a fee for raising each pig. The villagers could buy the pigs from the sow farm, if they had the funds, and own them. However, they had to sell most of them back to WAL, which owned the sow farm and the abattoir and processing facilities. The villagers would supply the kau kau or cassava (the energy source) to feed the pigs and buy from WAL the protein supplement necessary for efficient growth and high quality carcases.
Most of the villagers could not afford to buy the pigs and build a pig house. We didn’t know if the villagers, having grown the pigs, would sell them back to WAL to be processed for any price let alone the contracted price. Did they even understand a contract? It is said that in PNG, true negotiation started when the contract was signed
Photo left: Kau kau in a household garden, Nogoli
We
were also unsure if the local people could grow enough kau kau. While some men were wealthy, had multiple
wives and owned as much as 100 acres of land, it was often in small parcels,
spread over a district. This meant if the crop failed in one part there would always
be reserve plantings elsewhere
Photo above: Women preparing a field to plant with corn near Koroba
The work in the gardens was done by the women, who also looked after the pigs. At times, the women had to walk several kilometres to their gardens. Typically, at the end of a week or month, they might have a few kilograms of kau kau surplus to sell in the village market. I wanted them to produce five tonnes of kau kau to feed ten pigs, and then to do it all again in the following six months. Could they do it? And, would they do it at a price that was competitive with the value of wheat?
The
little stacks of kau kau that the villagers had to sell in the market each year
brought about 1,000 PGK per tonne. The
company could never pay that much for kau kau and expect to make a profit from
pig production. WAL was offering the
villagers an opportunity to produce kau kau in volume and make in a year about
4,000 PGK from kau kau production. END
I liked the information very much because I really want to be a pig farmer too. Currently I have 1 x sow, 3 x gilts a boar local breed.. For your information the sow farrowed twice already without mating a boar, expecting its next litter in this month April. First litter 3 x piglets and second litter 7 x piglets.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your interest. My colleagues are feeding pigs using sweet potato silage in village trails near Obai
ReplyDelete