Summary
· In November 2022, the European Commission suspended exports of Tanzania’s bitter gourd fruit into EU market, citing detection of quarantine pest
Arusha. A recent move by the European Union to lift a ban on
bitter gourd fruit imports offers new hopes of increased incomes to
horticultural farmers in Tanzania.
Ms Martina Chakupewa, who owns a
20-acre bitter gourd farm in Arusha said here at the weekend that the EU
blanket ban was a blow to farmers who had invested heavily into production of
the fruit in 2021.
“But now prospects are high that
farmers would raise glasses to toast for windfall earnings this year, thanks to
the removal of export restrictions to a lucrative EU’s market” said Ms
Chakupewa.
The EU’s ban had lasted for two
months but the lifting of the ban on imports from Tanzania has boosted the
moral of farmers.
In November 2022, European
Commission suspended exports of Tanzania’s bitter gourd fruit into EU market,
citing detection of quarantine pest, demanding the country to present the pest
surveillance report proving the absence of Thrips palmi Karny.
The Tanzania Horticulture
Association (Taha), through the UNDP funded Horticulture Transformation for
Inclusive Growth (HOTIGRO), had to intervene by working closely with Tanzania
Plant Health and Pesticides Authority (TPHPA) in conducting pest surveillance
in all bitter gourd producing areas in Tanzania.
Taha’s chief executive officer, Ms
Jacqueline Mkindi explained that her organization in collaboration with TPHPA
had to collect samples from the bitter gourd growers for laboratory test to
substantiate whether they had the Thrips Palmi Karny or not.
In her statement, Ms Mkindi said
that the results of the laboratory test proved that Tanzania was free from
Thrips palmi Karny, and that the bitter gourd were also produced in an area
that was free from Spodoptera frugiperda.
As it happened, the scientific report
was then presented to the EU for its consideration, which led to lifting of the
ban on export of Tanzania’s grown bitter gourd fruit to its markets.
“After comprehensive analysis on the
Tanzania’s pest surveillance report, the Plant Health Unit under the European
Commission declared Tanzania to be eligible to export bitter gourd fruit to the
EU under condition (a) of point 71 of Annex VII of Commission Implementing
Regulation (EU) 2019/2072,” she explained.
The European Commission commended
Tanzania for achieving the important milestone in the phytosanitary
certification system in compliance with the EU phytosanitary requirements.
“With your written communication
notifying the commission that Tanzania is free from Thrips palmi Karny,
Tanzania is therefore eligible to export bitter gourd fruit to the EU,” reads a
statement written by a policy officer in the Directorate-General for Health and
Food Safety (DG SANTE) of European Commission, Dr Leonard Shumbe.
In its efforts to capture
international markets, Taha through the HOTIGRO project had incorporated bitter
gourd with high demands in European countries, thanks to its nutritional
values.
“We’ve added a bitter gourd in the
list of our commercial and high horticultural value chain” she said, adding
that between January 2021 and July 2022, Tanzania exported nearly 220 metric
tons of the crop to United Kingdom, Netherlands, Italy, Belgium and
Switzerland, earning the economy $691,000 (Sh1.5 billion).
Horticulture exports have become a
major foreign exchange earner for Tanzania. The country targets $2 billion in
horticulture export earnings by 2030.
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