General electrical items..
Construction, Building, Renewable Energy and Generator System.turn Key Solution Provider
Electrical & Civil Construction.
Electronic products, electronic weighing scales, salter scales, coin counters, note counter, cash registers.Spare parts, servicing os scales and cash registers
Spare parts.
Office machines, office supplies and its hardware and software.Support IT
.Carting services, supplying farm produces and electrical winding services
Hardware, electrical, electronic, automotive parts.
.Maintenance work of electronics, component level
Kia Hyundai Genuine Parts.
Packaging, canned food, bottle water, coconut oil, white sugar, brown sugar, rice.Source and supply
Crops such as kava, dalo & cassava.
CD.
Mobile phone.
Furniture, fuel, cosmetics, hardware, auto parts.
Native timber, tyre rubber.
A3, A4 and A5 copy paper, polypropylene bags, paper bags, thermal paper rolls.
Paints, natural water, salt, starch, potatoes, paper, safety matches, mosquito coils, toilet paper, milk ( powdered, liquid), fumigation gas ( ecofume).Consultancy environment , procurements , merchant trading
Reef fish are products of local wholesalers from Lomaiviti Group, Totoya, Moala, Ra and primary suppliers around the Vanua Levu corridor, where a mini branch is located All reef fish purchased are later graded into 3 categories specifying its quality and its purchasing price. Grade A fish are bought at $7.00 a kg; grade B are bought at $6.00 a kg; and grade C at $5.00 a kg. After grading the fish is then weighed, washed and distributed for local and overseas orders. Fish that is prioritised for overseas orders include Sabutu, Kawakawa, Kawago, Walu and Salmon Chord, while the rest are for local supplies
Taro [also known as Dalo] is grown all year round in Fiji and is a stable food crop to majority of Fiji's population. It is a crop that is grown mechanically and traditionally and contains large amount of Vitamin A, /Vitamin B1, Vitamin B2 and Vitamin C. Taro is a crop planted by most families and is a source of income to most rural farmers. Taro is exported to New Zealand, Australia, Canada and other Pacific Islands. Agricultural Marketing Authority sources it supply from the two main islands in Fiji and is touching the very untouchable areas that do not access to any market. To assist our rural farmers, AMA has a policy to pick, weighed and pay at farm gate before it is transported to the Warehouse. It is peeled, washed and is stored in blast freezers with temperatures of minus 21 degrees for 24 hours before it is packed for overseas and for our local markets