new internationalist
issue 317 - October 1999
CHRIS MARTIN / STILL PICTURES
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The banana trade is big business. It comes fifth
in
terms of world trade in agricultural produce
after cereals, sugar, coffee and cocoa.

Trade
Where they come from
Between 1988 and 1997 the worlds exports of bananas almost doubled,
to just over 12 million tons. This was, however, less than a quarter of the
total world production of 58.8 million tons, the remainder being consumed
locally in producing countries. Ecuador, with 4.4 million tons in 1997, is
the worlds largest exporter, followed by Costa Rica with 1.8 million
tons, the Philippines with 1.6, Colombia with 1.5 and Guatemala with 0.6.
Aotearoa/New Zealand imports the highest per capita amount of bananas in the
world, at 20.4 kilos a year, closely followed by Malta at 19.6 kilos.
Cocktail3
The chemical content
Almost all the bananas we eat are treated with chemicals throughout the production
cycle. By far the heaviest users are the plantations in dollar
countries that have minimal monitoring or healthcare services. Plantations
in Central America apply 30 kilograms of active ingredients per hectare per
year more than ten times the average for intensive agriculture in industrialized
countries.
Fungicides:
Aerial spraying up to 40 times per year. Some, like mancozebare, are suspected
carcinogens.
Nematicides:
Applied between two and four times a year. Designed to kill parasitic nematode
worms, they are extremely dangerous. The use of DBCP resulted in the mass
sterilization of tens of thousands of plantation workers from Central America
and the Caribbean to the Philippines and West Africa.
Insecticides:
Like chlorpyrifos impregnated into plastic bags and tags placed around banana
bunches.
Herbicides:
Are sprayed between 8 and 12 times a year. Glysophate is a suspected carcinogen.
Fertilizer:
Applied regularly throughout the year.
Disinfectants:
After harvest, the fruit is washed with tisabendazol and aluminium sulphate,
which can cause severe dermatitis in direct contact with human skin.
Split
Who gets what from the price of a banana
As with almost all commodities produced in the South and consumed in the North,
more than 90% of the price paid by the consumer stays in the North and never
reaches the producer. Most of the risks of producing a perishable fruit are,
however, born by the producer. The largest chunk of all is taken by the retailers
mostly the dominant supermarkets and chain stores.
Destruction1
What bananas cost the environment
Waste: For
every ton of bananas produced, two tons of waste are left behind, frequently
contaminated with chemicals and non-degradable plastic.
Deforestation:
Rising demand for bananas is met by extending the size of plantations, which
often means cutting down rainforest.
Soil: Copper
and other residues accumulate and can leave land permanently sterile. Fragility
of exposed soils, together with the concentrated water flows in irrigation
systems, cause severe soil erosion and increased flooding during tropical
storms.
Biodiversity:
Large amounts of plant, fish (including coral) and animal life are lost from
the intensive use of chemical agents. Monocultures encourage diseases, some
of which are becoming resistant to the chemicals designed to eradicate them.
Exhaustion:
Many of the plantations in Latin America are now more than 25 years old
the maximum optimal productive life for a conventional plantation. Del Monte,
Dole and Chiquita are establishing new plantations in other areas of Latin
America, India and Indonesia.
Price
Who pays for cheap bananas
The dollar fruit from the plantations of Central and South America
are cheaper than anywhere else largely because the costs are externalized,
which means they are paid by someone else; in this case by plantation workers
and the environment. If these costs were internalized, decent
wages paid and environmental damage eliminated, the difference would disappear.
Production costs
in US dollars per box, 19951
Cut
The companies that run the trade
The Big Three banana corporations Chiquita, Dole and Del
Monte control two-thirds of world banana exports. Chiquitas once-dominant
position has been challenged by the Dole Food Company. Del Monte is now owned
by a Chile-based, Miami-controlled conglomerate, backed by money from the
United Arab Emirates. Among the other major players, Fyffes was once owned
by United Fruit and is now based in Ireland. Noboa is the biggest national
company of Ecuador, owned by the richest man in Latin America.
1 Source: Banana
Statistics, FAO, Rome, 1999.
2 Anne Claire Chambron, Bananas: the Green Gold of the TNCs
in Hungry for Power, UK Food Group, London, March 1999.
3 Andrew Wheat, Toxic Bananas in Multinational Monitor,
September 1996.

