#banana Archives - FertiGlobal

October 23, 2025
News from the market

Banana Drama

A third-quarter earnings call from Fresh Del Monte – one of the world’s largest suppliers of bananas – has intensified concerns about destabilisation of supplies of the world’s most popular fruit.

Keen readers of the FertiGlobal blog will recall our earlier story about the threat facing the common banana. That stepped up a gear last week, as Fresh Del Monte chairman and CEO Mohammad Abu-Ghazaleh highlighted the ‘mounting pressure’ on the industry.

Abu-Ghazaleh’s warning was starkly illustrated by confirmation that Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 (TR4) was now present in Ecuador, the world’s sixth-biggest banana producer and the largest in Latin America.

He also warned that the ‘serious escalation’ of TR4 now present in Ecuador meant it was now ‘just a matter of time’ before TR4 spread to Central America.

The Fresh Del Monte CEO also pointed to the effect of another devastating banana disease, black sigatoka, in Costa Rica – where the company grows bananas on its own farms. He said the disease – caused by the fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis – had seen production decline by 22% in a year. “That’s 18 million boxes lost,” he said.

Growers were taking every possible measure to control the disease, he said, but were facing severe financial strain as the price of the preferred fungicide has risen by nearly 50% over the past two years.

Against this background, it’s a sensible time to revisit the trials work conducted by FertiGlobal to identify additional measures available to banana growers. We looked primarily at our EnNuVi Technology, the patented nutrient-polyphenolic molecule whose main effect is strengthening the plant’s natural defence systems.

All the evidence shows that when a plant has access to a balanced combination of nutrients, its susceptibility to both biotic and abiotic stresses is greatly reduced. What’s more, the increased energy levels attributable to higher, more efficient photosynthetic processes mean that it can better use its own defence systems to ward off attacks by pathogens such as those responsible for black sigatoka.

If a plant can resist infection through its own means, then the need for expensive fungicides is greatly reduced – not only saving input costs for the grower but helping to lessen the chance that the fungus will adapt to the chemicals in use, lessening its effectiveness.

In trials conducted in India the FertiGlobal technical team examined the losses induced in banana plants through leaf wilting. Where plants were treated with the EnNuVi-enabled Semia, the percentage of wilting plants was slashed to less than 10%, compared with more than half for those managed with farmer standard practice. What’s more, while farmer standard practice led to a loss in crop ROI of over $200/ha, the investment loss in Semia-treated plants was reduced by 85%.

Meanwhile, in the Philippines – one of the countries where Fresh Del Monte has its own farms –, the trial proposed whether EnNuVi could increase the number of functional leaves on each banana plant, boosting overall plant health and energy levels to help it fight stress and attack.

Mantus provided the best result: a 44% increase in functional leaves, over the standard practice, after 45 days.

EnNuVi products will never be a direct replacement for mancozeb – they are not fungicides and don’t exhibit any fungicidal properties – they do fully express the concept of Total Crop Management. If applied at the correct time in the crop cycle, they can provide growers with an earlier alternative that may alleviate the need for subsequent applications of fungicides.

It’s not an outright solution, but it’s a positive step in the right direction.

February 28, 2024
Crop focus

Going bananas

It’s the world’s most popular fruit: every year, the 100 billion bananas we chomp our way through account for more than three-quarters of the tropical fruit trade. But as news of the first genetically modified banana has recently revealed, it’s a precarious trade.

Nearly every banana sold in every shop, in every country, on every continent, is a clone. They’re all examples of the Cavendish banana. Its ubiquity came about in the 1950s and 1960s because the previous global favourite – the Gros Michel – succumbed to the devastating Panama disease, caused by a form of Fusarium known as Tropical Race 1 (TR1).

The Gros Michel banana was itself a genetic clone, lacking the diversity that might have allowed it to evolve a genetic defence against attack by TR1. Instead, the Cavendish – a higher yielding variety, with thicker skin that made it even better suited to export – was selected from a naturally occurring hybrid that displayed the necessary resistance to TR1. It quickly became the world’s dominant banana variety, grown everywhere from South America to Africa and throughout Asia and into Australia.

But in 1990, a new disease – TR4 – was detected in Taiwan. Now widespread in more than 20 banana-producing countries, according to the FAO, it has put the Cavendish in potentially the same precarious position as the Gros Michel, eighty years ago. We could be facing a banana crisis on a global scale: in an industry worth $25bn, with annual production of more than 125 million tonnes, that’s a chilling thought.

What’s so devastating about Panama disease? Effectively, the total death of the plant: yellowing leaves quickly brown, before falling off. Then the fungus moves into the stem and roots, killing the tissue as it moves throughout the plant. Even replanting is not the solution. Once in the soil, TR4 becomes virtually impossible to eradicate.

It’s for this reason that the Australian government has approved an application from Queensland University of Technology to release QCAV-4, a genetically modified Cavendish variety developed to show resistance to TR4.

The resistance gene, labelled RGA2, has been taken from a wild banana variety found in South-East Asia. Interestingly, the gene is already present, although dormant, in the Cavendish variety. Approval of the variety gives the researchers the go-ahead to trial it in real conditions on farm; there are no plans yet to allow consumers to buy the new GM banana.

They’ll also try to use the CRISPR technique – gene-editing – to introduce the resistant gene, as gene-editing poses fewer hurdles when it comes to acceptance by regulators and consumers.

Another disease the researchers have identified as a target for gene-edited varieties is black sigatoka, brought on by the fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis. A foliar disease that causes lesions, chlorosis and physical collapse of the leaf, black sigatoka will ultimately cause the death of the plant. Chemical control is possible but requires an intense spraying programme of up to 50 applications every year. Even then, yield may be slashed by as much as 50%.

Adding to this grim outlook is the loss of many of the active ingredients that are most effective against black sigatoka. Mancozeb, for example, has already been banned in many countries; growers still permitted to apply it may nonetheless be prevented from using it, owing to production protocols imposed by their buyers.

But with any genetic solution still some way off, what’s the best option for banana producers facing the headache of black sigatoka? It’s a challenge that FertiGlobal took up.

Finding and commercialising these breakthrough solutions, that can assure farmers of yield and quality while observing regulatory parameters and environmental obligations, are FertiGlobal’s ‘bread and butter’. To help farmers navigate the threat of black sigatoka, we turned to our EnNuVi Technology, the patented nutrient-polyphenolic-molecule that focuses on facilitating the strengthening of the plant’s natural defence systems.

There’s a wealth of evidence to show that a balanced combination of nutrients – putting the plant in good stead – fortifies the plant, reducing its susceptibility to both biotic and abiotic stresses. With better health comes increased energy, allowing it to use its own in-built mechanisms to ward off attack by pathogens such as Mycosphaerella. If a plant can resist infection, a farmer’s need for fungicides is much reduced.

FertiGlobal took EnNuVi technology to India and the Philippines – respectively the world’s largest and sixth-largest banana producers – for trials.

The first trial, conducted in India, examined the losses induced in banana plants through leaf wilting. Farmer standard practice often saw wilting in more than half of all plants, leading to a loss in crop ROI of over $200/ha. But in plants treated with the EnNuVi-enabled Semia, the percentage of wilting plants was slashed to less than 10%, reducing investment loss by 85%.

Meanwhile, in the Philippines, the trial proposed to see whether EnNuVi would increase the number of functional leaves on each banana plant, boosting overall plant health and energy levels to help it fight stress and attack. Of all the EnNuVi products tested, Mantus provided the best result: a 44% increase in functional leaves, over the standard practice, after 45 days.

So while EnNuVi products can’t be seen as a direct replacement for mancozeb, because they don’t exhibit any fungicidal properties, they can – if applied at the correct time in the crop cycle – provide growers with an earlier alternative that may alleviate their need for fungicides at a later date.

We’re not stopping at bananas, of course. FertiGlobal is committed to ensuring continuing success in every crop in which we have an interest. If we can help farmers, wherever they are in the world, reduce the use of agrochemicals and maintain or increase their crop’s productivity and yield, we’ll find a way to do it. It’s the FertiGlobal way.

Semia and Ok on Banana India
August 25, 2022
News from India

Semia and OK give satisfaction in growing banana

🍌 Are you ready for a potassium boost?

We are in the South of India, in the Country’s second largest banana market located in Tamil Nadu. Our local team has been following a field trial to test Semia formulation, powered by #EnNuVi technology and OK solution, powered by Foliarel.

These banana plants tell us a lot about the benefits of this powerful combination of active ingredients:

🌿 broad and greener leaves

💪 overall better plant health

📈 excellent growth

The farmers appreciated a significant decrease of infection of Sigatoka (banana leaf-spot disease) and a better resistance against abiotic stresses.

Agriculture of the future ➡️ here we come!

Semia and Ok on Banana India
Banana plant treated with Semia and Ok
Semia and Ok on Banana India
EnNuVi Semia and Foliarel Ok gave satisfaction in growing banana in India
Semia and Ok on Banana India
EnNuVi Semia and Foliarel Ok gave satisfaction in growing banana in India
February 25, 2021
Coping with climate changes in India

Banana management with EnNuVi and Foliflo

⛈️ Of all countries in the world India is the most affected by climate change and its entire agricultural sector is striving to cope with bad consequences.
In this brief video you will hear the experience of a local farmer who was about to lose his whole yield due to high temperatures and a massive rainfall that struck his banana field.
A prompt intervention was needed to save his harvest. And this is where FertiGlobal comes to the rescue with advanced bioactivating technologies EnNuVi and FoliFlo.
After only 5 days from the first application, bananas already started growing with new green leaves. 🍌🍌
The farmer could not believe his eyes comparing the recovery of his field with his neighbours.
🎥 Have a look at this brief interview to learn more on his story!



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