Business

 GAHE members
GAHE members

The business of Home Economics

Up until a few weeks ago when the Stabroek Business covered a meeting of the Guyana Association of Home Econo-mists (GAHE) relatively few people outside the professional circle knew about the existence of the organization and fewer still were aware of the fact that in April 2015 GAHE will be hosting a forum of the Caribbean Association of Home Economists.

Stock market updates

GASCI (www.gasci.com/telephone Nº 223-6175/6) reports that session 576’s trading results showed consideration of $2,672,849 from 39,432 shares traded in 21 transactions as compared to session 575’s trading results which showed consideration of $374,841 from 5,693 shares traded in 8 transactions.

Craft at the Festival

Guyana Festival didn’t attract legions of tourists

By Analyst   When the Tourism Ministry and the Guyana Tourism Authority sit down to assess the outcomes of the August 8-10  Guyana Festival they will be able to make a sound judgment only if those outcomes are measured against the aspirations which had been articulated  in the first place.

GRDB General Manager
Jagnarine Singh

Guyana’s rice exports to rise by 50,000 tonnes

Consolidation of traditional markets in the hemisphere and in Europe and the realization of new ones  have meant that Guyana will boost its rice exports this year by more than 50,000 tonnes over 2013, General Manager of the Guyana Rice Development Board, Jagnarine Singh has told the Stabroek Business.

Cane juice vendor Gordon Lashley

The Lashleys are taking their cane juice to The Guyana Festival

This weekend, Gordon Lashley and his wife Carol are taking their cane juice mill and their entrepreneurial optimism to the Providence Stadium where they hope that the first ever staging of the Guyana Festival might provide some measure of breakthrough for a beverage which, as much as any other, can be considered  ‘local drink’.

The Guyana Festival: Getting the right outcomes

Nothing would please this newspaper more than an outcome to this weekend’s Guyana Festival that realizes all of the ambitions of the organizers including those that have to do with showcasing and hopefully finding markets for indigenous food and craft products and having large numbers of Guyanese and visitors to the country enjoy a taste of what the tourism sector has to offer and, better yet, come back next year.

Beyond prospecting: The New Mining School will teach enhanced methods of finding and mining gold.

Mining School moving ahead with plans for mercury replacement regime

The recently established Guyana Geology and Mines Commission Mining School is seeking to raise levels of environmental sensitization across the local mining community by including environmental training as one of the core areas on its curriculum, the School’s Coordinator John Applewhite-Hercules has told Stabroek Business.

Miners at school

Mining School aiming to curb prospectors ‘hit or miss’ methods

Curbing what Prime Minister Samuel Hinds once described as “the wild west situation” that obtained in the approach to prospecting in the country’s gold-bearing regions is one of the “critical aims” of the training curriculum being delivered by the Guyana Mining School, according to a senior official of the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission (GGMC).

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