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FARM NEWS
Crops rot as Italian farmers hit by virus, drought
By by Giovanni Grezzi with Celine Cornu
Fasano, Italy (AFP) April 20, 2020

Floriana Fanizza gazes desolately at her celery crop, lost to the coronavirus because it could not be harvested.

Italian farmers are being brought to their knees by a six-week lockdown aimed at stopping a deadly epidemic in its tracks. They are also suffering a drought caused by the driest spring in more than half a century.

Border blocks, restaurant closures and a lack of seasonal workers mean nearly four out of 10 businesses in the fruit and vegetable sector are struggling, according to Italy's biggest agricultural union Coldiretti.

On the Fanizza family farm in Fasano, a town near the Puglia coast in southern Italy, some pickers, fearful for their health, stayed at home as the country went into shutdown at the start of March.

That meant there were not enough hands to harvest the celery and turnip crops, which were ruined. The clock is now ticking on seeding vegetables for harvesting this summer.

"To sow properly, we need seven or eight people," 41-year-old Fanizza says.

"We hope we'll be able to find them, otherwise we will have to reduce production."

Some 350,000 foreigners are usually employed seasonally in Italy's agriculture sector.

The coronavirus crisis means this year there is a shortage of between 250,000 and 270,000, according to the farming ministry.

- Urgent action needed -

"Something must be done urgently, as the harvests of strawberries, asparagus, artichokes and greenhouse fruits (such as melons, tomatoes and peppers) are already underway," Coldiretti said in a note.

And others will soon begin, such as cherries, apricots and plums, it said.

The production crisis could impact food availability.

Italy's agricultural sector is the third biggest in Europe in terms of overall value -- it was worth 56.6 billion euros ($61.5 billion) in 2019 -- after France (75.4 billion euros) and Germany (57 billion euros).

With Romanians alone accounting for 110,000 of the country's 350,000 foreign seasonal workers, Rome is in talks with Bucharest over "green corridors" to ease movement between the two countries.

Minister of Agriculture Teresa Bellanova has also called for mass regularisation of undocumented migrants in Italy in order to get the economy moving again.

Many are currently living in shanty towns and are exploited by the mafia and an illegal labour system known as "caporalato", where intermediaries who bring workers to farmers take a large part of their meagre wages.

The proposal, approved by Coldiretti, was slammed by the far-right.

- Driest spring in 60 years -

The virus is not the farmers' only problem. Italy is also experiencing its driest spring in the last 60 years.

It has seen just over half its usual rainfall since the beginning of the year, creating a water shortage the size of Lake Como -- the third largest lake in Italy, according to weather experts.

"It hasn't rained for a long time and the land is arid, especially for wheat," farmer Fanizza says.

"The situation is critical, we need to irrigate our fields".

The government has set up a 100 million euro fund to support agricultural businesses.

Rome has also forked over 50 million euros to buy food and distribute it to Italy's poorest, a three-pronged approach aimed at helping the hungry, cutting waste and preventing price drops.


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How did an ancient plant from Latin America become Asia's second-most-important cash crop?
Palmira, Colombia (SPX) Apr 17, 2020
Half a century ago, cassava was a simple staple crop for some smallholder farmers in Asia eking out a living in harsh landscapes. The hardy crop that Europeans brought from Latin America many centuries before was a dependable source of nutrition - as long as it was skillfully processed to remove the toxins from bitter types to be turned into food. While sweet varieties of cassava remain a staple in places like Indonesia, which is the world's third-largest producer, things have changed a lot ... read more

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