Rome: The United Nations warned today of the potential "massive destruction" of the world's $5-billion a year banana crop as a plant disease spreads from Asia to Africa and the Middle East.
The Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said the TR4 strain of Panama disease, which has already hit tens of thousands of hectares in Southeast Asia, had been reported in Jordan and Mozambique.
The disease is "posing a serious threat to production and export" of bananas, the fourth most important food crop for the world's least developed countries and a key revenue source for poor farmers, FAO said in a report.
There is no cure for TR4, which particularly affects the Cavendish variety that accounts for 47 per cent of world banana production - by far the biggest.
The disease affects the trees but not the bananas themselves and the only solution is to cut down the trees, dig trenches between trees to prevent its spread and impose strict quarantine measures.
Top producers in Latin America, including the world's main producer Ecuador, have so far not been affected but FAO warned there was a "potential" risk.
"I think it's sheer luck. It's not a question of whether it will arrive but when. There's no prevention," said Gert Kema, director of the banana research programme at Wageningen University in the Netherlands who manages the site panamadisease.org.
Kema said the availability of bananas in Europe and the United States had not been affected by the disease because their main suppliers were in Latin America and the economic impact has been focused mainly in Asia.
But he said the key problem was a "reluctance" in the industry to realise the scale of the problem and its excessive reliance on the Cavendish variety.
"The sooner we have replacements for Cavendish that are resistant to Panama the better but this is going to take years," he said, warning there was a risk of repeating mistakes made during a 1950s epidemic.
Panamadisease.org estimates the global banana crop is worth around $5.0 billion and over 100 million tonnes of bananas are traded every year, with the biggest market being the United States.
The Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said the TR4 strain of Panama disease, which has already hit tens of thousands of hectares in Southeast Asia, had been reported in Jordan and Mozambique.
The disease is "posing a serious threat to production and export" of bananas, the fourth most important food crop for the world's least developed countries and a key revenue source for poor farmers, FAO said in a report.
There is no cure for TR4, which particularly affects the Cavendish variety that accounts for 47 per cent of world banana production - by far the biggest.
The disease affects the trees but not the bananas themselves and the only solution is to cut down the trees, dig trenches between trees to prevent its spread and impose strict quarantine measures.
Top producers in Latin America, including the world's main producer Ecuador, have so far not been affected but FAO warned there was a "potential" risk.
"I think it's sheer luck. It's not a question of whether it will arrive but when. There's no prevention," said Gert Kema, director of the banana research programme at Wageningen University in the Netherlands who manages the site panamadisease.org.
Kema said the availability of bananas in Europe and the United States had not been affected by the disease because their main suppliers were in Latin America and the economic impact has been focused mainly in Asia.
But he said the key problem was a "reluctance" in the industry to realise the scale of the problem and its excessive reliance on the Cavendish variety.
"The sooner we have replacements for Cavendish that are resistant to Panama the better but this is going to take years," he said, warning there was a risk of repeating mistakes made during a 1950s epidemic.
Panamadisease.org estimates the global banana crop is worth around $5.0 billion and over 100 million tonnes of bananas are traded every year, with the biggest market being the United States.
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