On a working visit to Donduseni district, Prime Minister Dorin Recean went to see two businesses promoting competitive agriculture.
In Rediul Mare village, the brothers Eugen and Vitalie Terzi are developing a business of sorting and packaging vegetables. With their own investments, the entrepreneurs transformed an abandoned building into a modern space, equipped with sorting machines, in which over 500 tons of vegetables, of 8 different varieties, were processed annually. In just 7 years since its foundation, Sabroso company – the name of which is registered with AGEPI – has managed to become known and appreciated in the country and abroad, the finished product being exported to several European countries: Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria, North Macedonia and soon Portugal.
Recean spoke to businessmen about the measures taken by the government to support entrepreneurs, and urged them to participate in the 373 government program to support small and medium enterprises.
Eugen Terzi welcomed the program launched by the government, especially appreciating the 3-year grace period for the advantageous loans accessed. The entrepreneur said he was determined to participate in the programs and to benefit from support from the state in order to further develop his business, by growing his own crops, purchasing harvesting equipment and opening a can production line.
Recean also visited the business of Ion Panfil in the village of Plop, which dealt with the production of cereals, managing an area of 1000 cultivated hectares. The entrepreneur developed his business thanks to the support programs launched by the government, benefiting from grants, subsidies and assistance for the procurement of machinery and the modernization of technology.
This allowed the businessman to increase the volume and quality of agricultural products, becoming one of the largest grain producers in the country, which practices a conservative European model of agriculture, including applying no-till technology to obtain a healthier soil, long-term. (Moldpres/Business World Magazine)