Manila Bulletin

Pandemic limiting banana supplies to importers

- By ANDREO CALONZO (Bloomberg)

Get your potassium while you can.

The coronaviru­s pandemic may limit supplies of bananas in Asia. Growers in the Philippine­s, the world’s second-biggest exporter, said overseas shipments may drop by nearly 40% this year as lockdowns and social distancing measures curb output and transport.

The country’s exports of the fruit are expected to plunge to about 2.5 million tons this year from 4 million last year, said Stephen Antig, executive director of the Pilipino Banana Growers and Exporters Associatio­n. Producers, including Unifrutti Tropical Philippine­s Inc., have halted some operations, he said.

“Bananas have to be harvested every day,” said Alberto Bacani, president of Unifrutti Philippine­s. “By the time we come back, a lot of that fruit will be spoiled and will have to be thrown away.”

The Philippine­s accounted for an estimated 20% of global banana shipments in 2019 and about 90% of total export volumes in Asia, with its two major markets being China and

Japan, according to a 2020 report from the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations. Ecuador is the largest exporter.

The country’s main island of Luzon has been under a lockdown since mid-March that will last through the end of April. Provinces in the southern Philippine­s, which is home to many plantation­s, have also imposed quarantine measures. Exports of the fruit will continue to be impacted after restrictio­ns are lifted, according to Antig, as social distancing measures are expected to remain in place that limit the number of workers.

Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar on Wednesday urged local government­s, particular­ly in Bukidnon province where several banana farms and packing houses are located, to allow farmers, fishers, and employees of food processing and manufactur­ing facilities to work to avoid artificial food shortage and price spikes.

The coronaviru­s outbreak has snarled food production and shipments globally as quarantine­s, sick workers, export bans and panic buying result in some empty grocery store shelves, despite mostly ample supplies.

Bacani said Japan banana imports may be impacted because many farms that export the fruit to the East Asian country are under quarantine. “In the next two weeks, you will see a drastic reduction in the banana volume in Japan,” he said, while adding that other exporters like Ecuador may fill in the gap.

Yuko Yamada, a spokeswoma­n for the Japan Banana Importers’ Associatio­n said the country depends heavily on imports from the Philippine­s but she wasn’t aware of shortages or price increases, or any notices from Philippine exporters that shipments will be reduced.

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