Madagascar cyclones may be boon to vanilla market 2007/03/27
March 27, 2007
A string of destructive
cyclones that have struck the Indian island nation of Madagascar, off the
southeastern coast of Africa, may serve as a boon to the depressed vanilla
market. Madagascar, the largest producer of vanilla, will likely see production
fall due to the havoc wreaked by the storms, which displaced more than 100,000
people. At the same time, the reduction in supply is sure to boost prices for
other growers able to bring product to market.
The vanilla supply glut and corresponding low prices are partly the result of
past cyclones in Madagascar. In 2002 storms destroyed much of the country's crop
causing prices of the vanilla to skyrocket. The high prices spurred other
countries including Papua New Guinea, Uganda, India, Costa Rica and Colombia to
enter the vanilla business. Their production came online in 2004-2005, just as
Madagascar's vanilla supply returned, causing wholesale bean prices the collapse
by almost 90 percent from their peak in December 2003.
Vanilla is the only orchid that produces an edible fruit. Originally from Mexico,
vanilla was introduced to Madagascar during the nineteenth century, but without
the native pollinators (bees and hummingbirds) local growers must hand pollinate
the plant. This makes vanilla perhaps the most labor-intensive crop in the world,
taking as long as five years between first planting the vine and producing aged
extract.
Due to work required to produce vanilla, beans and extract have an exceedingly
high value relative to other spices and flavorings. Vanilla growers in some
parts of Madagascar employ guards and brand their beans with small pin pricks on
each bean -- much like cattle branding -- to prevent theft. Vanilla has created
a regional income disparity on the island with the vanilla producing regions of
Madagascar being among the wealthiest parts of the country, which overall, is
one of the poorest in the world. Most Malagasy live on less than a dollar per
day and nearly half of its children under five years of age are malnourished.
For the vanilla farmers who were able to escape the recent cyclones unscathed,
their neighbors' misfortune may be their biggest break in years.
Anita, Bondo, Clovis, Favio, and Indlala are the storms that battered Madagascar
this cyclone season. According to initial government estimates, about 80 percent
of the country's vanilla production was lost to Indlala, the storm that hit
northeastern Madagascar last week.
From
mongabay.com |
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