Uganda Honey Bee Industry Concept Paper 070225
Uganda Honey Bee Industry Concept Paper 070225
Uganda Honey Bee Industry Concept Paper 070225
S t r a t e g i c I n d u s t r y G ro w t h C o n c e p t
Pa p e r
Page 1 of 13
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Document Purpose
DOCUMENT PURPOSE....................................... 2
THE PROJECT....................................................... 2
The intent of this document is to seek support and financial backing for a
development programme that aims to empower individuals/communities
to build and develop their own sustainable beekeeping enterprises in
Uganda.
CURRENT ISSUES................................................ 6
OUTCOMES............................................................ 6
WORK PLAN.......................................................... 7
The Project
The project is a systemic approach to assisting the growth of the Uganda
honey bee industry. The project would teach people to construct their
own honey bee hives and to produce their own protective head veils and
clothing, tools, and hive smokers. It is a project that would work with
people who have very little resources.
Three main areas/phases of development would be undertaken. The
three phases would be:
Page 2 of 13
1.
2.
3.
Page 3 of 13
Nucleus colonies and queen bees Bees and queen bees may be
produced by the beekeeper for sale to other beekeepers. Nucleus
colonies usually comprise of a box of bees with three or four
frames inside (two frames of brood, one frame of honey and one
of honey and pollen). The beekeeper sells the colonies to others
to enable them to develop a new hive or replenish a failing one.
Queen bees are sold for the purpose of replacement of old or
failed queens, for the maintenance of good production and gentle
hive behaviour within a colony.
Page 4 of 13
Potential Products
There are many products that have the potential to be produced within the
industry including some of the above. They are as follows 1:
1
Page 5 of 13
Current issues
The current issues for the honey bee market are:
Point of difference
Outcomes
The changes from this project are expected to result in:
The Environment:
Beekeeping does not damage the environment. Beekeepers promote
conservation because plants produce nectar, the basis of honey. The
industry does not promote the utilisation of fertile land or the destruction of
native fauna habitat.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Page 6 of 13
However, there is a desire to capture this organic growth and provide the
industry with a strategic business focus for greater wealth creation for
individuals.
WORK PLAN
The main strategy would be implemented in Uganda in partnership with
the
industry
and
the
KIKANDWA RURAL
COMMUNITIES
DEVELOPMENT ORGANISATION. It is proposed that the development
process will be spread over a three year period:
2.
It is also proposed, while the goal is to train beekeepers and produce and
farm new colonies, that enough woodenware to establish new production
colonies and equipment would be made available to successfully trained
people. This hive equipment would be:
The project would pull together a systemic framework that can provide
the industry with a common structure for different stakeholders to work
together to lift the industry to better performance levels. Good progress
has been made to date and the industry has been winning in many areas.
2
Note: The critical success factor to building hive numbers will be the
ability to obtain brood and young bees (frames of young bees) from
established colonies. Further, queen bees will need to be produced. This
will require the use of established colonies. It is proposed that these
colonies be purchased and used to establish a demonstration farm. If this
is not practical under Ugandan conditions and with Ugandan honey bees
then swarms will need to be caught.
Copy Right James Driscoll (2007)
1.
Page 7 of 13
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
Curriculum
James Driscoll
Vitae
James Driscoll
P.O. Box 9098
London Street,
Hamilton, 2001
New Zealand
M +64-21-681107
F +64-7-8294752
E james@driscoll.pn
Date of Last Revision:
31/01/2007
Summary Resume:
Current Position:
Key skills:
Qualifications:
Nationality:
Countries of work:
Managed the New Zealand American Foulbrood (honey bee disease) PMS
strategy for the NBA
Pacific Region
Pacific Community, Secretariat of the South Pacific (SPC) apiculture industry
review, 12 countries 1999 - 2002.
Australia
Overview, Quarantine and disease control methods, Apis mellifera, 1996.
Fiji Islands
Page 8 of 13
Solomon Islands
Samoa
Curriculum
Murray Reid
22 Burn-Murdoch Street
Hamilton, New Zealand.
M +64-21 972 858
F +64-7-849 4673
E reids@ihug.co.nz
M +64-21-681107
F +64-7-8294752
E james@driscoll.pn
Date of Last Revision:
12/02/2007
Summary Resume:
Page 9 of 13
Vitae
Current Position:
Key skills:
Qualifications:
MSc, BSc
Nationality:
Countries of work:
International experience
1
Page 10 of 13
1986 USA and Canada: presented New Zealand's case for live bee
access (official meetings in Ottawa, Montreal, Washington and
New York).
1991 Canberra; access negotiations for honey and bee products.
1992 Japan and Korea; part of a MAF and beekeeping industry team
negotiating access and transit protocols for live bees.
1998 Fiji; transit protocols for live bees from New Zealand and
Solomon Islands to and from Samoa. Access for Solomon Island
honey to Fiji.
1999 Brazil; imports of bee stock from New Zealand and trade
development in honey and propolis
2005 Niue: import protocols for Niue bee products into New Zealand
2005 Samoa: import protocols for Samoan bee products into New
Zealand.
Curriculum
Robert Kibaya
P.O.BOX 494 Kikandwa
Village, Mukono, Uganda
Phone +256-712-848448
E-mail kruralcommunitiesdevorg@yahoo.com
Current Position
Project Coordinator
Page 11 of 13
Vitae
Key skills
Qualifications
Nationality
Ugandan
Functional
summary
Community
activities and
workshops/semi
nars attended
and short
courses
Page 12 of 13
agricultural
production
systems)
Ouagadougou Bukina Faso.
held
in
Volunteer
experience
Page 13 of 13