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<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> Papaya production taking a tumble <br /> Honolulu Advertiser Sunday, March 19, 2006, By Sean Hao <br /> Hawai'i papaya production sank to a more than 25-year low last year despite record demand among U.S. consumers for the <br /> tropical fruit. <br /> <br /> Americans on average now eat 1 pound of papaya annually, which is up from less than one-third of a pound just 10 years ago. That <br /> should bode well for growers of HawaiTs second largest fruit crop. However. last year papaya production fell 17 percent to 28.5 <br /> million pounds the smallest crop since before 1980, Sales dipped 14 percent to $10.6 million. the lowest amount since 1985. <br /> Imports from countries such as Mexico and Brazil are helping to fill America's increasing appetite for papaya. <br /> HawaiTs papaya farmers, as with most farmers on the Islands, are dealing with a long list of challenges, including foreign <br /> competition, high costs, fickle weather, insects and disease. "Plenty of people are not growing papaya anymore," said Alberto <br /> Belmes, who grows papaya on about 70 acres of land seven miles outside of Hilo. "The price is going down and still the costs of <br /> farming goes up." <br /> Unlike most other Hawai'i farmers, papaya growers have one other issue with which to deal. Many Hawai'i papaya growers are <br /> raising a genetically engineered product that has yet to generate the market acceptance and higher sales prices that non- <br /> genetically modified apayas command Japan for example does not accept genetically modified papaya Papaya growers <br /> elsewhere are not using the genetically modified product. <br /> Developed in part by the University of Hawai'i, the genetically modified papaya was designed to be resistant to ring spot virus, <br /> which results in fewer and lower quality fruit. The virus was first detected in 1992 on the Big Island, where the bulk of papayas are <br /> grown. The genetically modified papaya was introduced in 1998. Papaya production picked up that year and for the following three <br /> years. In 2002, production resumed its slide and has declined each year since. <br /> Genetically modified papaya proponents argue that there would be no papaya industry if not for the new variety. They also point out <br /> that the widespread use of genetically modified papaya helps control the virus, so non-genetically modified papaya can be grown <br /> virus-free. <br /> "I've seen the (Big Island papaya) industry go down from the first day it was infected in 1992," said Dennis Gonsalves, an inventor <br /> of the genetically modified papaya and director for the USDA Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center in Hilo. "If you kept the <br /> situation like that the curve would have gone down until it was no longer feasible to grow." <br /> Environmentalists and other critics contend the virus could have been managed in part by reducing the size of plantings and by <br /> diversifying the types of plants grown at any one time. While the genetically modified papaya may reduce problems with the ring <br /> spot virus, it introduced other problems by raising the risk of cross-pollination with non-genetically modified and organic papayas. <br /> Proponents contend the risks of cross-pollination are manageable. <br /> Nevertheless, the use of genetically modified papaya in Hawai'i results in a more rigorous testing regime for non-modified papaya <br /> to maintain exports to markets that don't accept genetically modified papayas, said Melanie Bondera, a board member for Hawaii <br /> Seed, an advocate for sustainable agriculture and a GMO-free Hawai'i. The genetically modified papaya did not save the industry <br /> as its backers contend, Bondera said. "They're apparently not looking at the bigger picture of the economic problems that <br /> with it the cross-contamination- the market loss the testing costs." Bondera said "Did we really have a problem that <br /> come would have killed the industry if we did not have the GMO (genetically modified organs papaya? That's their contention. <br /> The bottom line is the GMO papaya has never sold for as much as the non-GMO papaya." <br /> Because Japan doesn't allow imports of genetically modified papayas, Hawai'i exports of papaya to Japan fell from $10.3 million in <br /> 1998 to $4.6 million last year, according to the Foreign Trade Zone Division of the state Department of Business, Economic <br /> Development and Tourism. <br /> "In this sense you can say that the GMO is not any good, but you would not even have a market in Japan without GMO papaya," <br /> said Gonsalves. Canada, Hawai'i and the U.S. Mainland remain big buyers of genetically modified papayas. There are no <br /> requirements that genetically modified foods be labeled as such. In Hawai'i, the Kapoho variety of papaya is not genetically <br /> modified, while the Rainbow variant is. <br /> With all the challenges facing papaya, the fruit's rank among major Hawaiian crops is slipping. In 2004, algae, which is used as a <br /> nutritional supplement, displaced papaya as the state's eighth largest commodity with sales of $12.6 million. Papaya was pushed <br /> down to ninth place with sales of $12.3 million. <br />