Saturday, January 31, 2009

Russia, Iran seek out Philippine bananas

Fruitnet.com 27 January 2009

Philippine bananas are in great demand from Russia and Iran, where importers are largely unaffected by the global economic crisis

Demand for Philippine bananas in non-traditional export markets Russia and Iran is strengthening despite the global economic crisis, reports the Mindanao Times.

Russian fruit importers are largely unaffected by the recession crippling many of the world’s economies, US-based Russian fruit supplier Double D Trade LLC is quoted as saying. And Russian consumers in metropolitan areas such as St Petersburg, Moscow and Vladivostok actively seek out high-quality bananas from the Philippines, Double D’s Andrei Melnicuic said.

Meanwhile, Iranian importers are pushing for regular weekly shipments of Cavandish bananas from Davao to Iran, according to the Mindanao Times.

"Even the big multinational firms here are already shipping regularly to Iran, but other Iranian traders are trying to get their supply of cheaper bananas from small independent growers for bigger profits," a spokesman for Davao-based export broker Goldelyonn Export Import said.

Banana sector urges EU to stand firm

Fruitnet.com 28 January 2009

The European Banana Producers Association has urged the EU not to concede to Ecuador over the banana tariff dispute

The European Union must not give in to Ecuador’s “threats” to take further action through the World Trade Organisation (WTO) against Europe and must instead redouble its defence of the banana tariff system, according to leading figure in EU banana sector.

The president of the European Association of Banana Producers (APEB), Leopoldo Cólogan, has called on EU leaders to reject Ecuador’s demand that Europe implements the staged reduction in the tariff as agreed at the Doha trade talks in July 2008.

Under the proposals, the EU had initially agreed to gradually reduce the current import tariff for non African, Caribbean and Pacific bananas to €114 by 2016.

“It’s unacceptable – the European Union can not give in to the threats from Ecuador and put in place a banana tariff that wipes out European banana producers,” Mr Cólogan told Diario de Avisos. “We hope that the governments of Spain, France and Portugal have something to say on the matter.”

According to Ecuador, the EU has refused to apply a reduced tariff of €148 – as required by a WTO ruling on the dispute – which was due to come into force on 1 January 2008, arguing that the ruling was subject to the conclusion of the abandoned Doha trade talks.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

New banana ripening center in Poland

Citronex is currently one of the largest private banana companies in Europe. From the beginning of the year the direct import from Ecuador to ports in Germany and Poland has already amounted to 600.000 boxes. At present, over 50% of yellow bananas sold in Polish chains of supermarkets come from Citronex.

The construction of new center for banana ripening has been begun in order to meet the requirements of our customers. 60 modern ripening chambers are built on the surface area of 10 000m². The construction will be finished in April and Citronex will be able to ripen over 140.000 boxes every week. Thanks to it, Polish company will become a true magnate on the European banana market.

The position of the company is enhanced by its own transportation fleet. Citronex has 300 trucks at its disposal that can be found on the roads of the whole Europe.

Masters of Citronex invite all interested in cooperation for FruitLogistica in Berlin (Hall 6.2 C11)

More info:
MAREK SZULC
General Manager
Citronex I Sp. z o.o.
ul. II Armii Wojska Polskiego 64
59900 Zgorzelec
Poland
Tel. +48 757721943
e-mail
www.citronex.pl

Publication date: 1/29/2009

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

UK: Banana price wars

Moves last week by Asda and Morrisons to slash the price of bananas were branded shockingly irresponsible by development charities today. They say the price cuts are a serious setback in the ongoing battle to improve the appallingly poor conditions endured by plantation workers in the developing world. Campaigners fear that other supermarkets will follow suit and slash prices.

Jenny Ricks, ActionAid campaigner said, "Asda and Morrisons are guilty of dealing in double standards. Plantations can't live up to retailers' demands for decent working conditions if they hammer down prices like this. This move only highlights the need for the new supermarket watchdog proposed by the Competition Commission which is stongly opposed by both retailers."

While supermarkets say they will absorb the cost of the price cuts, there are no guarantees that they will stick to their promises. Previous rounds of price reductions have shown that ultimately it's workers who bear the brunt.

The fresh salvo in the ongoing supermarket price war was launched by Asda, who dropped prices from 87p to 78p per kilo, which were quickly matched by Morrisons.

Alistair Smith, co-ordinator of the campaign group Banana Link said, "This is another blow for plantation workers and small farmers who thought that supermarkets had finally understood the consequences of pushing down prices. The move also flies in the face of evidence that most consumers want to know that the products they buy are not traded at the cost of decent wages and conditions in developing countries."

The supermarket giants announced the price cuts in the run up to Fairtrade Fortnight next month, which showcases a world record Fairtrade banana eating attempt. British shoppers now spend over half a billion pounds annually on the fruit, with Fairtrade bananas making up a quarter of total sales.


Source: alertnet.org

Publication date: 1/28/2009

Bananas: import forecast between January and March 2009

At the present the import of bananas is in its high season. In next months the following countries will be the leading exporters of bananas to Poland: Ecuador, Colombia, Costa Rica, and from Africa Cameroon and Cote d'Ivoire.

In next month the prices of bananas on wholesale markets will be probably fluctuating from 3.40 to 4.20 PLN (0.77 -0.96 euro)/kg. According to forecast the import of bananas to Poland between January and March 2009 will amount to 37 thousand t.

Source: fresh-market.pl
2009-01-27

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

UK: Cheap bananas 'hurting growers'

Plantation workers in developing countries will suffer as a result of banana price cuts, charities warned today. They claim supermarket reductions mark a major setback in efforts to improve life for poverty-stricken labourers.

Campaigners fear other supermarkets will follow Asda and Morrisons, which slashed banana prices last week.

Jenny Ricks, ActionAid campaigner, said: "Plantations can't live up to retailers' demands for decent working conditions if they hammer down prices like this."

According to ActionAid, there are no guarantees that retailers will absorb the cost of the price cuts in the long term and in previous price reductions workers ultimately paid the price.

British shoppers now spend more than half a billion pounds annually on bananas with bananas imported to Britain mainly coming from countries in South America and west Africa. According to ActionAid, for every £1 UK shoppers spend on bananas, around 2.5p will go to workers on plantations in Costa Rica.

An Asda spokesman said: "Rest assured our growers are absolutely not missing out. The price we pay them is not affected."


Source: guardian.co.uk

Publication date: 1/27/2009

Russia, Iran buy more bananas even amid the economic crisis

More fresh cavendish bananas from the Philippines are in big demand in non-traditional markets like Russia and Iran.

Russian trader Andrei Melnicuic of Double D Trade LLC (DDTLLC) based in Washington state USA, disclosed in an email to Davao-based export broker Goldelyonn Export Import (GEI).

Melnicuic told the GEI "the Russian Far East port of Vladivostok is the unloading port for millions of dollars worth of fresh meat and fresh fruits from all over the world."
"Demand for fresh fruits like bananas will always be there because Russian consumers will be looking for them in the fresh markets of Petersburg, Moscow and Vladivostok---and many still prefer the high quality bananas from the Philippines," said Melnicuic.

DDTLLC is currently shipping fresh fruits, vegetables and meat to their own marketing branches in St. Petersburg, Russia and Vladivostok.

These food products are exported there directly by exporters from the US, Argentina, Chile, Vietnam, China and the Philippines, according to Melnicuic.

Backed up by global buying offices worldwide, the Russian trading firm also runs its own big cold storage facilities in the land-locked city of St. Petersburg and the port city of Vladivostok in the Russian Federation.

The buying operations of most Russian companies, said Melnicuic, has not been affected much by the current global recession now crippling many of the world's top economies.

"With or without a recession, people all over the world still have to eat to live normally," said Melnicuic in one of his emails.

Iran on the other hand, has been in regular contacts directly with several suppliers and exporters in Davao for weekly shipments of fresh Cavendish bananas to the port of Bandar Abbas in the Middle East.

A spokesman from Goldelyonn said one Iranian fruit trader Salvu Micallef of Super Fruits Company Ltd. had been sending regular inquiries asking for regular weekly shipments of Cavendish bananas from Davao to Iran.

"Even the big multinational firms here are already shipping regularly to Iran, but other Iranian traders are trying to get their supply of cheaper bananas from small independent growers for bigger profits," the spokesman said.


Source: mindanaotimes.com.ph

Publication date: 1/27/2009

Panama banana companies dying

The government has invested more than $30 million in them, to no avail
Panama Star Puerto Armuelles has 3,000 hectares of fertile land planted with banana trees, but nobody is tending them since the transnational United Fruit Company left the area after a dispute.

The Panamanian government said that they have received al least 8 proposals from different bidders to acquire the land and continue to exploit the banana plantations.But so far it has not accepted any of them.

Another company wants to grow oil palms in the 3,000 hectares The only problem is the 2,800 workers. The oil plantation needs the services of only one man for every eight hectares, which means that 1,800 men would lose their jobs. The workers just want the government to make a decision and sell the land. At the moment the only operation benefiting is the workers union, still collecting dues from its members.


Source: laestrella.com.pa

Publication date: 1/27/2009

Monday, January 26, 2009

CMR acquires banana marketer

Fruitnet.com 26 January 2009

Barcelona-based CMR Group has announced the acquisition of Canary Islands-based banana marketer Tomás Valentín Pastor
Spanish fresh produce marketer CMR Group has announced that it has completed its takeover of Canary Islands-based banana distribution company Tomás Valentín Pastor.

Under the agreement reached, CMR has now taken over control and management of Tomás Valentín’s assets, including the company’s facilities at Mercamadrid, Mercaleón, Torrejón and La Palma in the Canaries.

CMR launched its bid for Tomás Valentín through its Madrid-based subsidiary CMR Infinita earlier this year and CMR Group marketing manager Carlos Molina said the successful takeover would allow the company to expand geographically and increase its product range.

In a statement, Mr Molina said that Tomás Valentín Pastor had been marketing Canary Island bananas from the island of La Palma for several years, achieving considerable prestige thanks to the quality of its produce and its innovative presentation of the products for wholesale.

“Following the takeover, CMR has pledged to build on these solid foundations, and to this end has absorbed the Tomás Valentín management and sales team into the group structure, from where they will continue with their normal duties,” he said.

Mr Molina said the acquisition would increase CMR’s presence in Spain, building on work of parent company Fruits CMR in Barcelona and CMR Infinita in Madrid and Mercaleón.

“The operation also effectively increases the CMR product portfolio, adding bananas to the already extensive range of goods marketed by the different companies in the group,” he added.

Australia: Suckers needed for new dwarf bananas

NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) trials of new dwarf lady finger banana plants at Coffs Harbour have determined that any expansion in plantings will have to come from suckers because tissue culture propagation is not viable for this particular variety.

"Dwarf lady finger banana plants are creating a lot of interest among Coffs district growers because the new variety is around 1.5 metres shorter than the standard Ladyfinger variety" said Minister for Primary Industries Ian Macdonald.

"Banana bunches on the shorter plants are, in some cases, reachable from the ground - in contrast with conventional lady finger plants which require workers to climb a three metre ladder to tend the bunches," Minister Macdonald said.

"Already many local growers have planted small quantities of the dwarf variety but the amount of new planting material has been limited."

NSW DPI horticulturist Peter Newley said NSW DPI had been looking at ways to increase the availability of the new variety, being commercialised by Gerri Rossi, a private grower.

"Tissue culture propagation would have meant thousands of new plants could have been generated quickly, reared in the nursery and made available to meet increasing demand," he said.

"Unfortunately about one third of the tissue-cultured plants in the trial at Coffs Council’s Re-use Farm did not grow true to type but reverted back to the tall type.

"This off-type rate is too high for commercial plantations which require plants to be uniform to warrant the expense of establishing them in the plantation.

"New plantings will have to come from suckers taken from the small number of mother plants currently growing in local plantations - limiting the rate of expansion of the dwarf plantings."


Source: farmonline.com.au

Publication date: 1/26/2009

Friday, January 23, 2009

USA: Retailers try to keep banana prices down

By Bob Luder, thepacker.com

(Jan. 16, 12:06 p.m.) It’s a dilemma that would make even the most sane, well-meaning retailer go … well … bananas.

By all accounts, the cost of bananas to retailers is going up. Flooding in Ecuador dating back to last February, along with weather issues and a recent earthquake in Costa Rica have contributed to significant reductions in global supply. That, along with increased demand globally, has put pressure on costs.

In many instances, those rising costs would be passed along to consumers in the way of higher prices in the grocery produce aisles.

Except, we’re talking bananas here. And consumers really keep tabs on prices and care what they pay for when it comes to this favorite fruit staple.

“Among all prices visible in the produce industry, bananas are probably the most visible,” said Bill Bishop, chairman of Willard Bishop LLC, a Barrington, Ill.-based consulting firm. “And the reality of (the economy) today is that more and more individuals are focused on the prices of goods they’re buying.”

The sensitivity of the banana buyer prompted Milwaukee-based Roundy’s Supermarkets to issue a consumer alert Jan. 8 stating that costs for bananas were on the rise, but that the chain of 152 retail grocery stores under the Pick ‘n Save, Copps, Rainbow and Metro Market banners pledged to do its best to keep retail prices from continued increases.

“We’re doing the best we can,” said Vivian King, media relations director of Roundy’s. “We’ve held off raising prices as long as we can. Other retailers have gone up in the past while we’ve held firm.

“Our contract was up recently, so we entered a new contract. Our prices have gone up about five cents per pound. It’s not a big increase, but significant enough to alert our customers as to why prices went up on one of their favorite items.

“We feel we’ve remained competitive with our prices. We just want to keep our customers informed.”

Other major retail grocery chains say they have been doing all they can to hold the line on banana prices as well.

“The market has been very tight and will be very tight over the next month,” Maria Brous, director of media and community relations of Publix Super Markets Inc., Lakeland, Fla., said in an e-mail. “However, we work extremely hard with our suppliers to control cost. At this time, we are not forecasting an increase in banana pricing at Publix.”

And Susie Bell, corporate public affairs manager at Supervalu, Eden Prairie, Minn., said, also via e-mail: “We have been working since the floods in Ecuador last February to actively manage the situation so that customers at Supervalu banner stores likely will not see a price increase on bananas.”

According to consultants, there are a number of ways retailers can control pricing.

“What retailers are concerned about are consumers backing off buying bananas,” said Ed Odron, owner of Ed Odron Produce Marketing & Consulting, Stockton, Calif. “Back in the day, the thought was you couldn’t go over 49 cents per pound, or you’d lose the value. We overcame that.

“It’s a very sensitive item. Retailers have been looking hard at ways to maybe raise (profit margins) in other areas so they can hold the line on bananas. They’ve probably been doing that the last six or seven months.

“At some point, you have to bump them up. I don’t know if now is the right time to do that, however, given the state of the economy.”

Bishop added, “There could be any number of strategic interventions. One thing to look at is a way to use promotion more aggressively. For example, instead of selling bananas at, say, 89 cents and discounting to 59 cents one out of every eight weeks or so, have an 89-cent regular price and go to 69 cents for two weeks.”

It’s also quite possible the banana-consuming public has grown perhaps a bit spoiled with low pricing of their favorite fruit.

“You really haven’t seen a lot of inflation in produce,” said Dick Spezzano, president of Spezzano Consulting Services, Monrovia, Calif. “Even in some retail circles, we’ve been seeing some deflation because delivered prices have been brought down with decreased costs in shipping.

“For a long time, we’ve had very, very cheap costs for bananas. (Consumers are) sensitive to bananas because they’re such a consumed staple in America. You look at the consumption of bananas with regard to other fruits and vegetables, and it’s not even close.”

Odron added, “Bananas are still probably the cheapest piece of fruit you’ve got.”

On Jan. 13, the U.S. Department of Agriculture was reporting a price range of $11.50-$16 on bananas moving through the Miami produce terminal, up about $2 from the $10-$14 range of a year ago.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Ecuador may ‘take reprisals’ against EU

Fruitnet.com 22 January 2009

Ecuadorian minister says economic reprisals may be considered as a means of pressuring the EU to reduce its banana tariff

Ecuador has not ruled out taking “economic reprisals” against the European Union in a bid to pressure member countries to reduce Europe’s controversial banana import tariff system.

With the South American nation having submitted a fresh complaint to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) over the tariff system this week, Ecuador’s chancellor, Fander Falconí, told Reuters that reprisal measures were being considered.

A government delegation from Ecuador is set to travel to Brussels next week to seek a rapprochement with the EU over a proposal that was agreed between the two sides at the Doha Round of trade negotiations to lower the tariff from E176 per tonne to E114.

However, Mr Falconí told reporters: “We do not rule out taking reprisals.

“We have begun a diplomatic offensive to outline what Ecuador has lost as a result of the tariff and the effect this has had on business and the balance of payments, which is vitally important given the current global crisis.”

Ecuador this week submitted a new complaint against the EU to the WTO for allegedly failing to comply with the terms of a ruling made in July 2008 over the tariff regime.

Under the terms of last year’s WTO ruling, the EU has been told to gradually reduce the current tariff level from €176 per tonne to €114 per tonne by 2016.

Costa Rica backs Ecuador in EU banana battle

Costa Rica is supporting Ecuador's latest move in the World Trade Organization to challenge the European Union's refusal to lower tariffs on banana imports from this region, trade officials said Wednesday.

“All the producing countries feel tricked,” Foreign Trade Minister Marco Vinicio Ruiz said of Latin America's dismay at the EU's failure to meet an agreement signed during the July 2008 Doha round. “(European nations) have left Latin American exporters totally defenseless.”

Ecuador and Costa Rica, the world's second- and third-largest banana exporters respectively, after Philippines, have condemned the EU's preferential treatment toward former colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific in allowing duty-free, quota-free access into the European market, while maintaining tariffs for Latin American countries.

Last year, countries in this region signed an agreement with the EU that says Europe would reduce its tax on bananas imported from Latin America from €176 ($229) to €114 ($148) a ton from 2009 to 2014.

The tariff was supposed to drop to €148 ($193) on Jan. 1, but the EU argued that the agreement was no longer binding as it was reached during a Doha round that broke down. Ruiz said the issue will be key during a meeting between Central American trade officials and the European Commission representative Catherine Ashton set for Monday in Brussels, Belgium.

“Central American countries must be united around this issue,” Ruiz told reporters Wednesday.

Source: ticotimes.net

Publication date: 1/22/2009

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Bananas "recession resistant" says Chiquita

Fruitnet.com
07 January 2009

Group CEO Fernando Aguirre has called bananas "great value" during difficult economic times across the globe

Chiquita Brands International can rely on sales of bananas throughout the global economic crisis, according to the group's chief executive officer Fernando Aguirre.

In a conference call, he described the fruit as "recession resistant" due to its low prices in stores, Cincinnati Business Journal reported.

"Bananas are a staple and a great value compared with other food items," he said. "A banana sells on average for only US$0.30 (€0.22). Nowhere else in the grocery store can consumers find such great value."

BB&T Capital Markets analyst Heather Jones said that she felt the group was in a strong position to ride out the economic downturn.

“Banana demand should also benefit from higher food at-home consumption as its exposure to retail is meaningfully higher than its exposure to food service,” she said.

Morgan Joseph analyst Dean Haskell added that the group could boost profits by up to US$0.46 (€0.34) per share annually when an African banana sourcing deal, agreed with companies representing private growers in Angola and Mozambique in March, comes into force.

Ecuador calls for action over EU tariff

Fruitnet.com
21 January 2009

Ecuador has lodged a fresh complaint with the WTO over the EU’s ‘failure to comply’ with a ruling over its banana tariff system

Ecuador has submitted a new complaint against the European Union (EU) to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) for allegedly failing to comply with the terms of a ruling made in July last year over the Europe’s banana import tariff regime.

Under the terms of last year’s WTO ruling, the EU has been told to gradually reduce the current tariff level from €176 per tonne to €114 per tonne by 2016.

But, according to Ecuador, the EU has refused to apply a reduced tariff of €148, as required by the WTO decision which was due to come into force on 1 January 2008, arguing that the ruling was subject to the conclusion of the abandoned Doha trade talks.

According to news agency AFP, Ecuador has now demanded that the WTO’s ruling be put into immediate effect, accusing the EU of continuing to operate protective measures that favour subsidised producers in the Canary Islands, Guadaloupe and Martinique.

“Banana imports from former European colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific regions can enter the EU free of charge, while we are subject to a tariff of €176 per tonne, which has been condemned by the WTO,” an Ecuadorian official told AFP.

The WTO’s appeals panel had earlier rejected a claim by the EU against the ruling in December last year, finding that the current €176 tariff was “contrary to the promises made by the EU to the WTO”.

Disease threatens African banana industry

Experts concerned with Africa's banana sector are trying to increase production of the crop that currently feeds about 100 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. But their efforts are threatened by diseases that result in banana farmers across the continent losing half their yields – and sometimes even more. Scientists warn that this could soon lead to more severe food shortages in some parts of Africa. For many on the continent, the green boiling banana is a staple food, and they depend on it to save them from hunger.

Bananas are particularly susceptible to disease, says Dr. Irie Vroh, a molecular geneticist with the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture. He explains that this is because bananas grow directly from "mother plants," and not from seeds.

"From the roots of the mother plant grow many small progenies…. They are clones of the mother. So, if the mother is sensitive to a disease, the progenies are also automatically sensitive to that disease," Vroh tells VOA from his office in Ibadan, Nigeria, where he leads his organization's West African banana program. "Disease is one of the main problems affecting banana and plantain…. Diseases and pests are a major problem for these clonally propagated crops."

Thomas Dubois, a Belgian scientist with the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, adds that when farmers take cuttings from banana plants they're unaware are infected with disease, and replant them, or sell or exchange them with fellow growers, they unwittingly spread plant sicknesses. In so doing, he says, their crops are often "wiped out."

In Kampala, Uganda, Dr. Fen Beed studies diseases afflicting African banana crops.

"I try to determine how exactly the disease spreads and how it infects plants, and try to identify interventions based on this," he says.

Beed explains that bananas in Africa, and especially in East Africa, are currently succumbing to a disease that was first diagnosed in Ethiopia in 2001.

Wilt attacks African bananas

Bacterial wilt – scientific name, Xanthomonas – causes banana plants to literally waste away. The leaves of infected plants turn yellow, and ooze yellowish fluid. Bunches of bananas ripen prematurely and rot. Beed says the disease has destroyed up to seventy percent of crops in afflicted areas. As a result, some countries aren't producing enough cooking bananas to feed their populations.

"(Bacterial wilt) has spread right across Uganda, and more recently has spread into Rwanda, Tanzania, Kenya, Congo and is suspected in Burundi," says Beed.

He says the disease has "devastated" banana production in Uganda, which harvests 10 million tons a year, making it the world's second largest banana producer after India. Analysis of the situation in the East African nation reveals that the disease, if uncontrolled, will result in the loss of almost 60 percent of production in the near future.

The scientific website, Science Development Net, has quoted a Ugandan government official saying bacterial wilt could cost his country up to eight billion dollars in the next five to ten years, with the majority of the population likely to be in danger of hunger.

Incurable disease

Experts say no matter what measures are taken by Africa's agricultural sectors against bacterial wilt, the disease is extremely difficult to prevent and control. Beed says the sickness affects banana plants at such a "rapid" rate that by the time farmers become aware that there's something wrong with their crops, it's too late to respond effectively.

Certain insects are also carriers of the disease, and most African farmers can't feasibly spray their banana crops with chemicals to protect them against infection by pests. Dubois says because of the "immense" size of banana plants, the crops would require a lot of chemicals, and this proves too expensive for the vast majority of African farmers – even in places where such pesticides are available for sale.

Scientists say plants infected with bacterial wilt can't be cured; the best farmers can do is to take preventive measures to control the disease.

"We advise farmers to uproot infected crops," Beed states, but then continues, "one of the things that was most disappointing was that once we did recommend the removal of infected plants, there wasn't a system in place within the national frameworks of the countries in which we're operating to actually replace this infected material with new, clean material."

Beed says African banana farmers are trying to get clean plants in an effort to resume production. But in most cases, they're too poor to do this.

"And that system wasn't in place to try and combat the losses that they'd suffered. That's actually resulted in some farmers moving away from banana to growing cassava and maize; this is true of central Uganda."

Beed acknowledges, though, that impoverished African farmers are hesitant to destroy their only means of livelihood. Yet even when they've taken this radical step, the negative consequences have mounted.

"The perennial qualities of the banana enable the soil to be maintained. This prevents erosion and environmental degradation, retains the structure and the water within the soil. So when bananas are removed as a consequence of disease, it's not just damaging to the banana industry, it's damaging to the environment…. It causes erosion," Beed explains.

Scientists are constantly advising that farmers not use implements that they've used on infected plants on other plants, and to sterilize their tools. But Beed says information about preventive measures such as this often doesn't reach farmers, most who live in very isolated areas.

He posits that the wilt "catastrophe" offers evidence that "no system is ever that durable because the pathogens can always adapt, or new pathogens can be introduced. This is particularly apparent when we see that both trade and commerce of agricultural products is increasing all the time, so there's always this risk of a disease coming in (to a country)."

Other diseases set to hit Africa

Beed warns as well that Panama disease, one of the "most notorious" of all plant diseases, is set to strike in Africa in the near future. This sickness has wiped out production in South America of the previously popular "Gros Michel" dessert banana.

Beed says Panama disease is particularly hard to control, as it's constantly mutating and is set to threaten production of the Cavendish dessert banana in Africa.

"The difficulty we're facing now is that there's another race of Panama disease, which is called tropical race four, which is present in Asia and will come to Africa at some point, and this will knock out Cavendish, because the Cavendish doesn't have any resistance to this particular form of the disease," Beed tells VOA.

Dr. Irie Vroh adds that black sigatoka, a leaf spot disease caused by fungus, is also having a "devastating impact" on banana production in sub-Saharan Africa.

Beed also warns as well of the intensification in Africa of banana bunchy top virus that causes the stunting of banana plants.

"It seems to be attacking all types of banana. This is particularly worrying because we're not quite sure why it has started to spread," Beed says.

Scientists say no banana variety is resistant to this virus, with infected plants largely unable to bear fruit.

"We're doing surveys and investigating and analyzing its molecular constitution, to try to determine why it is now becoming more of a problem than it ever was before," says Beed. "We're trying to determine what the main parameters are encouraging the spread of this… such as climate, location and so on. If we can do that, then we'll better be able to identify control interventions."

Tissue culture solution

Dubois says a potential long-term answer to the disease danger facing Africa can be found in the laboratories of international agricultural research organizations.

"What farmers nowadays can do – and what is being done all over the world except in Africa – is something called tissue culture. This is a technique by which you produce small little plants in a laboratory, in a sterile condition (and in so doing) you make clean planting material," he explains. "You get rid of the pests and diseases that normally associate with banana plants before you plant them in the field. This is also a very quick way to very rapidly multiply lots and lots of bananas."

Dubois says bananas also grow much faster through the use of tissue culture.

"It gives farmers the chance to get more income, to market the products they get as a result of those tissue cultures," he enthuses.

Dubois, though, acknowledges that plants raised from tissue cultures are a "bit fragile" and require further scientific modification to enable them to survive under harsh African conditions.

"To put them in fields that are burdened by pests and diseases and that are suffering from bad management in Africa, these plants need something extra. So I put microbes in those plants, to bolster them and make them into a kind of super-plants, to stimulate their immune system," he says.

But Dubois and other scientists agree that such technological advancements are presently beyond the reach of the majority of African banana producers, who in the near future are set to continue to suffer the wrath of diseases.


Source: voanews.com

Publication date: 1/20/2009

Rwanda: Banana fibre for fabrics - a refreshing innovation

Rwandans are known for their exquisite and truly majestic Imishanana traditional attires.

Now the country has decided to venture into the creative world of fabrics, this time on a discovery mission of how to manufacture fabrics from banana fibre.

Bananas are a staple food here in Rwanda being consumed by the greater part of the population. While we consume the fruit, cloth will be woven from tree fibres.

Now imagine how the local textile industry is set for a major boom, after the announcement today of the seven-member technical team that is set for Japan, to start the process of transferring banana textile technology to Rwanda.

This team is going to study this ancient tradition of transforming banana fibre into textiles which dates back to the 13th century, in Japan.

It's a no brainer, that perhaps this will be one of the most innovative, income generating and community empowering projects of our time.

The initiative that is gaining momentum with the support of Japan's Tama Art University (TAU), who are working with the relevant government institutions and local investors, could revolutionanise the local textile industry.

This places a huge responsibility on the initiators of the project, in particular UTEXRWA, the country's major textile company, to ensure that all processes are duly complete for the project to take off.

Every bit of the process will impact national development positively in one way or another. Stages that if well coordinated, among the players involved, can actually form a positive cycle.

Money accrued from sales can be reinvested in training others on the trade of making textiles out banana fibre. One of the major criticisms made against developing countries'is the inability to develop has been the lack of diversification, particularly when it comes to locally produced products.

And so as Rwanda gears for more competition, within the East African Community, she will have a definitive competitive edge over the other regional countries, especially in the textile industry, courtesy of this venture.


Source: allafrica.com

Publication date: 1/21/2009

Governments and global business urged to help African banana sector - PART 4 of 5

Role players in Africa’s banana industry – from farmers to scientists – have launched a plan to establish the continent’s rural poor as viable producers of bananas. Objectives include enabling small-scale African banana farmers to export to lucrative global markets and to produce more bananas for local use. International agriculture organizations say this’ll ease food shortages in parts of Africa where banana is a staple diet. They’re also encouraging large businesses and African governments to become involved in the plan.

Dr. Fen Beed, a scientist with the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, says there’s “particularly encouraging recognition” from some African governments that the “time is ripe” for the expansion and improvement of continental banana production. This, he says, can’t happen without the backing of state authorities.

“You have to bear in mind that the mandate and the control over production within a country, and the opportunities that may exist within a country, and also the diseases that may come into a country – all of this is under the control of the national governments. So without their cooperation, we can’t do much at all,” Beed states from his laboratory in Kampala, Uganda.

Those drawing up the plan to boost banana output from Africa have praised the involvement of several of the continent’s governments in the initiative. They say authorities from Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda are especially interested.

“They showed not just their willingness to support this particular initiative, but also to follow through and communicate and to try to create an enabling environment to boost banana production in Africa,” Beed tells VOA.

FARA takes the lead

The plant disease specialist also praises the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA), which oversees the development of agriculture across the continent. FARA consists of representatives of government agriculture departments, leading agriculturalists at local and global universities, African and international research centers, farmers’ organizations and so on. FARA’s affiliated with the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD).

Beed’s “very pleased” that FARA has taken an “active interest” in cooperating with all concerned to establish the banana as one of Africa’s top crops. He says FARA’s involvement in the initiative is of particular significance.

“They would actually like to be used as a vehicle through which strategies developed could be housed…. The fact that FARA would like to take over the ownership of the strategy in the future is more important than an individual organization, because it (the initiative) does belong to Africa. And if FARA can take responsibility for organizing the further development of the strategy, that’s more appropriate (than international groups taking the lead),” he explains.

Beed emphasizes that “real empowerment and action happen at a local level,” not through international organizations.

He also says it’s “very significant” that the United Nations and regional economic blocs, such as the Economic Community of West African States and the East African Community, are “reacting with favor” and promising support for the continent’s banana industry.

This, he says, could eventually ensure that bananas become an “economic driver” for Africa.

African governments criticized

However, African farmers have often complained that most of the continent’s governments, even those flush with cash from mineral exports, aren’t investing in what is the mainstay of African life, namely agriculture. They say African governments don’t provide their farmers with capital, don’t improve crumbling transport systems which make it very difficult for farmers to get their produce to markets, and heap unfair taxes on farmers.

Thomas Dubois is a Belgian scientist working with Ugandan banana farmers to improve their yields. He says it’s “unfortunate” that African governments aren’t willing to fund agricultural inputs, such as equipment.

“Growing banana plants in Africa is really plagued by the fact that there are no inputs available; if they are available, they are very expensive. So farmers cannot reach the level of productivity you could normally reach,” Dubois explains.

Beed says African governments generally tend to concentrate development on “more saleable” cash crops such as coffee, cotton and sugar, than on staple crops such as banana that feed millions.

“And that’s because governments consider them to be an internal issue. But the reality is (that) the internal issue is a real opportunity for economic development as well,” he points out.

Dubois, though, is convinced that African governments are “coming around to the fact that the banana doesn’t just have to be a subsistence crop…. There’s also a tremendous amount of money that could be made from export revenue to exploit from bananas. I think that government is slowly but surely moving towards accepting that there is potential for banana; it isn’t simply a traditional backwater practice….”

The big international conglomerates

The scientists say some of the world’s largest banana companies are beginning to show a greater interest in investing in Africa. A recent gathering in Mombasa, Kenya, held to discuss the future of continental banana production, was attended by several representatives from major international banana enterprises. They examined opportunities for small-scale growers in Africa to participate in their supply chains.

Just five companies control the production of more than 90 percent of internationally traded bananas, most of which is grown on huge plantations in Latin America. The two biggest banana companies in the world, Dole Food Company and Chiquita Brands International, are based in the United States.

Some African nations and their farmers – their produce largely excluded from the world’s richest markets for a variety of reasons – have often claimed that large international food firms don’t want Africans to have access to these markets, because they want all the profit for themselves.

But Dubois says the operations of African farmers are mostly so small that they’re “no threat whatsoever” to the big companies’ global dominance. In fact, Dubois hopes the big global food enterprises begin paying more attention to Africa, and invest more in the continent’s banana industry.

“I am not averse towards big companies coming into Africa. To be fair, they are the only ones really that can increase banana production and make it uniform and standardized, in order to export it to, say, Europe, which is close to Africa, or the Middle East,” he says.

Dubois says without the support of large banana companies, African production will remain small scale. He says farmers in Africa don’t have the necessary capital to allow them to export to places like Europe, but that the big international firms could help them to do this. In fact, it’s already happening.

“There are a couple of the big companies exporting bananas from West Africa. Chiquita is now coming into Africa, trying to export banana from Mozambique and from Angola. There definitely are companies that are using the fact that there are reduced tariffs for export of (African) banana to Europe, which is a good thing.”


Source: voanews.com

Publication date: 1/21/2009