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Agriculture P A Agroindustrial Pomalca: Consumer goods Farming & fishing Chiclayo: 1996 Agriculture P A Air Perú: Consumer services Airlines Lima: 2006 Airline, defunct 2009 P D Ajegroup: Consumer goods Soft drinks Lima: 1988 Beverages P A Alicorp: Consumer goods Personal products Lima: 1956 Food, soaps, laundry P A América Televisión ...
Twenty-first century Peru grows agricultural commodities such as asparagus, potatoes, maize, rice, quinoa and coffee. [3] Peru provides half of the world supply of quinoa. [4] Peruvian agriculture uses synthetic fertilizers rather than still-abundant guano due to infrastructure issues. Peruvian maize is not exportable due to large producer ...
SENASA is responsible for protecting the country against agricultural pests and diseases in both crops and livestock. [1] SENASA handles communications, import inspections, export inspections, and treaty negotiations regarding agricultural health; for example participating in the International Plant Protection Convention [ 2 ] and making ...
Ministry of Agriculture of Peru This page was last edited on 3 December 2021, at 02:38 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Peru portal; Pages in category "Agriculture companies of Peru" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
3. Establishing a system of agricultural information allowing producers to have an efficient decision-making process for their business. 4. Facilitate agricultural producers with access to legal, administrative, management, financial, technical, sanitary, and other assistance permitting the producer to better their enterprise. 5.
The Cairns Group successfully forced agriculture onto the agenda of the Uruguay Round, which eventually led to the Agreement on Agriculture.In April 1989 in Geneva, Switzerland, the Group played a critical role in the framework agreement with United States, the EU, and Japan to cover negotiations during the remainder of the Round.
Irrigated agriculture has become increasingly important in Peru's development and growth, especially after a period of stagnation and limited development in the 1970s and 1980s. The agriculture sector employs 30% of Peru's population and accounts for 13% of GDP and more than 10% of total exports (US$1.6 billion in 2005). [7]