Australia - Cyclone crop damage to hit supply as farmers count cost

21.12.2023 578 views

Mangoes, bananas, papaya and avocados are among produce destroyed in far north Queensland as producers assess damage from Cyclone Jasper.

Consumers are likely to face shortages of produce from the region and may have to pay more for fruit such as papaya.

The agricultural powerhouse far north was inundated by rain with one property receiving 1.2 metres at Mareeba, near Cairns, in five days.

Skybury Farms is Australia’s biggest papaya producer and supplies Australia with up to 40,000 kilograms of the fruit per week.

Skybury’s Candy MacLaughlin said at least 20 per cent of their trees at Mareeba had been ruined.

“There will be supply shortages because the region is the primary papaya growing region for Australia,” she said.

And she expects consumers to experience price increases with major freight delays.

With supply routes cut, some dairy farmers have been forced to dump milk, while growers have struggled to get their produce to market.

“Every farmer in the region that’s been affected has been impacted,” Jo Sheppard from Queensland Farmers Federation said.

Prawn farmers were able to get most of their harvest done before the cyclone hit, Sheppard said.

Agriculture and Emergency Management Minister Murray Watt says the clean-up is well under way but damage is significant.

“This is going to be a long recovery effort, this has been a major national event,” Senator Watt said while visiting Cairns on Thursday.

Mango farmers already struggling to produce a good crop face extensive damage.

Joe Moro says his mango farm near Mareeba copped a deluge of 1.2 metres of rain over five days, ruining about half his crop and costing him half-a-million dollars.

His 14 workers resumed harvesting on Thursday after a two-week delay.

“Half my crop has either been damaged by the flooding, totally black, can’t be harvested at all, or it’s ripening and dropping onto the ground,” he said from his farm west of Cairns.

Moro is president of Queensland’s fruit and vegetable growers association and said the damage to agriculture across the region has been severe.

“Every crop has been affected in some way,” he said.

“Papaya trees are falling down, heavily blemished fruit, banana trees are falling down and sometimes some of that crop is also in water.”

Banana and avocado grower Dennis Howe said it’s still not clear how much damage has been done.

“The damage is unknown for the avocadoes at the moment cause we don’t start harvesting till February,” he said.

“Fence lines have been washed down, roads washed out, there are definitely trees over.”

Nursery owner Elaine Duncan is counting the cost of the damage.

“The worst of it was the torrential rainfall and coming to work and seeing a nursery full of rotting plants,” she said.

She estimated damage and loss of crop and trade would cost $300,000 to $500,000.

The nursery is a major grower of seedlings for far north Queensland, supplying home gardeners and hydroponic farmers with everything from tomatoes to basil and capsicums.

Disaster assistance loans of up to a $250,000 are available to producers impacted by the cyclone.

Source - https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au

28.04.2026

Philippines seeks 500 million USD for engineered bamboo development

The project is currently at the concept stage, with feasibility studies expected to take five to six months and overall preparation about a year. Implementation could begin in 2027, pending loan approval.

28.04.2026

Insurance compensation of 186,000 manats paid to tobacco farmers in Azerbaijan

To date, 186,000 manats of insurance compensation have been paid to farmers and farms in the tobacco industry in Azerbaijan.

28.04.2026

USA - Climate Disasters Are Straining Hawaii’s Insurance System

Frequent and costly disasters are driving up premiums and leaving many properties uninsured or underinsured. 

28.04.2026

Brazil - São Paulo releases R$400 million in rural credit in a record package for farmers, agricultural insurance, machinery, and land regularization

The package announced at Agrishow in Ribeirão Preto combines rural credit, agricultural insurance, land tenure regularization, mechanization, inclusion of women, innovation, and environmental actions, with R$ 455 million in investments aimed at strengthening São Paulo’s agribusiness.

28.04.2026

When will Moldovan authorities announce a call for applications for subsidizing agrarian insurance?

To date, the MAIA Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry has not yet announced the start of the next stage of accepting applications for subsidies under agricultural risk insurance contracts concluded in the fall and winter period. While waiting for this announcement, some insurance companies are being "restrained" in the agricultural segment - they insure only livestock farms and perennial crop plantations of their regular customers.

28.04.2026

USA - USDA just doubled disaster payments, and gave farmers until August 12

SDRP disaster payment farmers 2026 just got a major upgrade. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced on April 24 in Higginsville, Missouri that USDA is raising the Supplemental Disaster Relief Program payment factor from 35 percent to 70 percent. 

27.04.2026

India - Crop Ruined by Parrots is 'Damage by Wild Animals', says HC; Gives Relief

Holding that citizens cannot be forced to bear losses caused by protected wild animals, the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court has ruled that denying compensation to a farmer merely because parrots were omitted from a government list would breach principles of equality. 

27.04.2026

The World Bank: Agri-risk management in Bulgaria

CAP has steered Bulgarian agriculture toward greater resilience, but the sector continues to suffer from an absence of a comprehensive risk management strategy and limited research on internal and external risks, the report concludes.