Daily Nation Newspaper

BATTLING TO SAVE THE WORLD'S BANANAS

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VISITING the Matanuska banana plantation is not easy these days. After a two-hour drive from the nearest city in northern Mozambique, visitors who make it to the farm are stopped at the entrance and asked to dip their feet in pools of disinfecta­nt. Even the cars get a bath.

Once an apparent miracle - a massive banana plantation in the middle of a dry, flat part of a desperatel­y poor country - its formerly lush greenery has now been devastated by a deadly fungus called Panama disease.

Five years ago, Tropical race 4 (TR4), as it's formally known, was spotted here for the first time in Africa after killing off millions of bananas in Asia from the 1980s onwards.

The failure to contain the disease set off alarm bells around the world.

Could the banana, the world’s most exported fruit and the source of nutrients for millions of people, be at risk of extinction?

The BBC was the first to be given access to the farm since it was hit with the disease.

We travelled all the way to Matanuska not just to observe the devastatio­n but because the story of the plantation is about more than just bananas.

It’s emblematic of unintended consequenc­es of global trade - and the way that solutions to those consequenc­es might come from some very unlikely places.

After our disinfecta­nt baths, we continued down a long, red dirt road to what remains of the farm. It’s strikingly lush.

Trundling along on metal zip lines are hands as they’re known - carrying hundreds of bananas to a processing facility, where they too get the bath treatment before being shipped off in Dole-branded containers to the Middle East.

Standing over this procession is Elie Matabuana, the farm’s head of technical services.

He spends all his time looking at every banana grown here to see if they are exhibiting the yellowing leaves and tell-tale rotting smell that indicate a plant has been infected with Panama disease. “When (I wake) up in the morning the first thing I have in my mind is; what can I do to stop the disease?” he says.

“It’s a really big struggle but we are winning,” he says, before amending his answer. “We are going to win.” CONTAINMEN­T

But Elie and the Matanuska team are fighting an uphill battle. The disease has spread swiftly over the past five years.

“When I first came to Matanuska, it was just after we identified the pathogen and at that stage the farm was just beautiful,” says Stellenbos­ch university professor Altus Viljoen, who was the first to confirm that the disease had in fact escaped Asia.

“I knew that that might change. “But I never knew the extent of that change and how severe it would be.”

Today, only 100 hectares are left of Matanuska’s original banana plants.

Of the farm’s 2,700 workers, nearly two-thirds have been laid off -- sending the surroundin­g economy into a spiral.

And containmen­t, along with finding a resistant banana strain, has become a pressing priority.

It’s estimated that more than half a million people are employed in the banana industry in Mozambique.

‘BAD LUCK’

Neighbouri­ng countries like Tanzania, just 600km north of Matanuska, also depend on banana cultivatio­n for a significan­t portion of their economic activity. And though the type of banana grown for sustenance in Uganda and Congo - where residents get something like 35% of their daily nutrients from bananas - is thought to be resistant, no one knows for sure.

“All African countries are worried about what’s happening in Mozambique,” says Antonia Vaz, the head of plant pathology at Mozambique’s Ministry of Agricultur­e.

She says the Mozambican government has implemente­d control measures to ensure that the disease does not escape the northern part of the country.

She’s also quick to note the disease isn’t endemic to Mozambique. The government thinks it came from the boots of two workers from the Philippine­s.

“It was just very, very bad luck,” she says.

Each year, more than $12bn worth of bananas, primarily of the Cavendish variety, are exported globally making it the world’s favourite fruit both by value and by volume.

NO CURE

Usually if there are millions of dollars at stake, solutions aren’t that hard to find.

But the problem in fighting Panama disease is the way that bananas are cultivated today.

The bananas that we eat are Cavendish bananas - often grown to the exclusion of all of the other thousands of types of bananas found in the world.

 ??  ?? Is this the future for many of the world's banana farms?
Is this the future for many of the world's banana farms?

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