Matt McGrath of the BBC Goes Climate Banana Crazy

From the DAILY SCEPTIC

by Chris Morrison

Banana prices to go up as temperatures rise, reports Matt McGrath of the BBC. What a magnificent story – adding to the fake climate emergency narrative and helping out Big Banana all in one go. Alas, the uncharitable might note that the story is slightly spoilt by banana output having doubled over the last 20 years, helped, almost certainly, by a little extra warmth and atmospheric carbon dioxide.

Bananas are set to get more expensive as climate change hits a much loved fruit, says Pascal Liu of the World Banana Forum, a UN umbrella group promoting the banana business. ‘Experts’ are reported to be concerned about the growing threats from a warming world and from the diseases that are spreading in its wake. McGrath helpfully adds that last week saw shortages in several U.K. supermarkets due to “storms at sea”. There are reported to be concerns about a relatively new strain of Fusarium Wilt, a plant disease that has been widespread in commercial banana plantations for over 100 years.

McGrath quotes the Big Banana spokesman as observing that climate impacts pose an “enormous threat” to supply, compounding the impact of fast-spreading diseases. Prices in the U.K. “are likely to go up – and stay up”. Which would appear to be very good news for those in the banana business. As the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) graph below shows, they have also enjoyed staggering high rises in recent yields.

In common with other large scale makers of agricultural produce, the last few years have had difficulties with disruptions from Covid and the war in Ukraine leading to rises in the price of fertilisers and transport. More normal conditions seems to be returning with the FAO reporting that the outlook for 2024 “looks more positive than in the previous two years, provided that price variations in real terms will continue to be favourable”.

As we can see, British taxpayer-reliant McGrath is not just doing his bit to help push up banana prices for U.K. consumers, but he combines this noble work with his usual day job nudging citizens to accept the insane collectivist Net Zero policy. The new variant of Fusarium Wilt can be spread by flooding and strong winds, it is said. M.r Liu notes that the disease will be spread much faster “than if you have normal weather patterns”. It is surprising that McGrath didn’t point out that in its latest assessment report, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) observed that estimates of the impact of human involvement in severe storms outside natural variation remained of “low confidence”. In addition to severe storms, the IPCC found little evidence of human involvement stretching out to 2100 in tropical cyclones, heavy rain and pluvial, and river and coastal flooding.

No doubt a small lapse in rigour at the BBC’s multi-staffed climate desk, given that McGrath is usually a keen student of the IPCC as a “sound scientific source”. Accepting €100,000 from the green foundation of the large Spanish bank BBVA in 2019, he noted that the media landscape was awash with ”fake news” stories. He defended the “primacy” of specialist journalists that draw on sound sources such as the IPCC. The green foundation, meanwhile, fawned all over him, noting “his extraordinary capacity to communicate complex environmental issues and science to global audiences”.

Of course, the McGrath article is just one of many that appear in legacy media outlets that attempt to insert alleged human involvement in the continually changing climate into general news stories. As regular readers of the Daily Sceptic will be aware, these stories do not appear totally by accident. Green billionaire cash floods into operations seeking to influence journalists, politicians, scientists and even Hollywood scriptwriters to catastrophise information promoting the climate collapse scare and the need for a Net Zero solution. Fake news is now endemic throughout the mainstream media. This despite signs that in the wake of the Covid experience, the general public across many Western countries is starting to lose faith in top-down controlling narratives.

Speaking of tropical fruit, the BBC’s amusingly described ‘disinformation’ correspondent Marco Silva is currently enjoying a six-month sabbatical with the green billionaire-funded Oxford Climate Journalism Network (OCJN). To “hit closer to home”, course participants are told to pick a fruit such as a mango and discuss why it wasn’t as tasty as the year before due to climate change. This will allow the subject of climate change to become “less abstract”. In a recently published essay, two OCJN organisers said their course was designed to allow climate journalists “to move beyond their siloed past” into a strategic position within newsrooms, “combining expertise with collaboration”.

Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor.

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March 18, 2024 10:47 pm

And the real reason for rising prices:

Among the issues that the banana industry will discuss at its gathering in Rome is the critical question of sustainability.

Producers are suffering from rising costs of energy and labour.

Consumers are increasingly looking to buy bananas and other commodities that are produced in a sustainable way.

For banana growers this means not only making their means of production greener, but also paying independent examiners to certify that their fruit are sustainable.

“These regulations are a good thing in a way because they help producers seize the opportunity of making their production systems more sustainable,” said Mr Liu.

But of course, they also come with costs for producers because they require more control and monitoring systems on the part of the producers and the traders. And these costs have to trickle down to the final consumers.

So not really a bit of warmer weather then, eh, Matty?

Reply to  Redge
March 18, 2024 10:55 pm

Did you know they even try to market “carbon neutral” and “zero-carbon” bananas.

Totally bananas !! 🙂

zero-carbon-banana
Jim Masterson
Reply to  bnice2000
March 19, 2024 12:33 am

Banana republic–banana crazy–it’s all related.

DavsS
Reply to  bnice2000
March 19, 2024 2:22 am

I’ve always found green bananas a bit tough to take.

Gregory Woods
Reply to  DavsS
March 19, 2024 4:09 am

Try eating plantains.

DavsS
Reply to  Gregory Woods
March 19, 2024 5:25 am

If they are anything like green bananas, no thanks 😀

Gregory Woods
Reply to  DavsS
March 19, 2024 7:55 am

Green: Fried Ripe, sweet, and fried

DavsS
Reply to  Gregory Woods
March 19, 2024 11:29 am

That sounds a lot more palatable 🍌

Mike McMillan
Reply to  Gregory Woods
March 19, 2024 6:58 am

Just to clarify to those not up on their botany, plantains are to bananas as rutabagas are to turnips. Radioactivity remains about the same.

AGW is Not Science
Reply to  bnice2000
March 19, 2024 3:39 am

I would deliberately avoid products that make such claims, as I refuse to feed the mass delusion.

oeman50
Reply to  bnice2000
March 19, 2024 4:49 am

Hmm, I’ve never had a banana with no carbon in it. I wonder what it’s made of?

Reply to  oeman50
March 19, 2024 9:35 am

The white stuff?

Reply to  Gunga Din
March 19, 2024 3:16 pm

chalk?… oh wait.. even chalk has “carbon” in it. !

Reply to  Redge
March 20, 2024 12:27 am

Actually, the extra certification and bureaucracy helps to keep out smaller producers, so keeping prices high for Big Banana 🍌

March 18, 2024 10:48 pm

Perhaps he should consider that the main cost is due to unrelenting rises in transport costs because of the anti-CO2 Net-Zero agenda.

BANANAS LUV CO2 !!

March 18, 2024 11:13 pm

Where’s Janice…

We need another Minion cartoon ! 🙂

March 18, 2024 11:37 pm

I complained to the BBC about this article’s content. This is their response.

Thanks for getting in touch about an article form the BBC News website “Banana prices to go up as temperatures rise, says expert”.

We’re grateful to you for making use of our services and we are sorry to learn of your concerns.

The headline of the article and the piece itself are clear that the claims being presented are that of the expert, Pascal Liu.

We appreciate that disease is an area of concern when speaking of the sustainability of bananas going forward and not solely climate change, it was however addressed in the article that rising temperatures are contributing to the spread of such infections:

“Perhaps the biggest immediate threat is the fact that rising temperatures are helping to spread disease. The one causing the most worry is Fusarium Wilt TR4, a fungal infection, which has moved from Australia and Asia to Africa and now to South America.”

I have highlighted the paragraph which is their normal excuse. Basically “its what the expert said”. My unanswered point is I don’t pay my licence fee for the BBC’s reporters to cut and paste rubbish but to actually check the facts and ask experts difficult questions.

Reply to  Ben_Vorlich
March 19, 2024 12:08 am

Typical BBC response.

I was fobbed off when I complained about an article on Africa drought which “environmentalists say” was caused by climate change.

The response to my complaint was a link to a paper “proving” I was wrong.

So I sent them a more recent paper showing they were wrong.

Despite several complaints that the BBC hadn’t considered my response, the BBC just ignored the newer paper and the article still hasn’t been corrected.

Reply to  Ben_Vorlich
March 19, 2024 1:02 am

The BBC often uses the “expert” to pretend they are not responsible for spreading alarmist mis-information.
Dr Andrew Wakefield is the exemplar. Here is the transcript of a Horizon programme that caused the measles outbreaks we have now.

CampsieFellow
Reply to  Ben_Vorlich
March 20, 2024 5:35 am

On a completely unrealted matter, when I complained about something a presenter said on the BBC, the reply was that it didn’t matter that it was untrue because the average listener would not have been misled.

observa
March 19, 2024 12:37 am
strativarius
March 19, 2024 1:20 am

“”World Banana Forum, a UN umbrella group””

UNhinged for short

DavsS
Reply to  strativarius
March 19, 2024 11:31 am

I guess the chairman of this august body is known as the top banana.

observa
March 19, 2024 1:30 am

The Beeb gushes over the usual with cherry picked Kelly-
First electric vehicle donated to Guernsey ambulance service (bbc.com)
While ignoring what’s coming because deep down they really loathe and despise you for ever questioning their omniscience and feelgood-
UK EV Ambulances put GREEN ZEALOTRY ahead of PATIENT CARE | MGUY Australia – YouTube

DavsS
Reply to  observa
March 19, 2024 11:40 am

Well in fairness range anxiety shouldn’t be so much of an issue on Guernsey, from memory you can’t drive much more than about 6 miles in any one direction.

Ed Zuiderwijk
March 19, 2024 2:23 am

Bananas are a favourite food of monkeys.

Jim Masterson
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
March 19, 2024 2:28 am

Climate scientists?

Gregory Woods
Reply to  Jim Masterson
March 19, 2024 4:14 am

I thought CSs ate chopped broccoli with their cereal.

Jim Masterson
Reply to  Gregory Woods
March 19, 2024 9:59 pm

I think what they eat makes them looney tunes.

March 19, 2024 10:10 am

The BBC, where truth goes to die.

Mr.
Reply to  Andy Pattullo
March 19, 2024 11:15 am

Nah, Truth doesn’t actually die at the BBC.

The BBC frankensteins just make numerous physiological changes to the body of Truth, then re-assign its identity as ‘Fact’.

But then like most identity re-assigned entities, the end result appears very suss.

Paul Stevens
March 19, 2024 10:57 am

So someone representing the banana producers warns consumers to get ready for higher prices. What a strange course of events.

Bob
March 19, 2024 1:39 pm

Question, what is worse than government? A world government organization.

CampsieFellow
March 20, 2024 4:01 am

One disatrous consequence of climate change is the increasing unreliability of MSM journalists. As extreme weather becomes more common they find it more and more difficult to give balanced coverage to climate matters. Indeed, statistics show a significant rise in Climate Derangement Syndrome among MSM jounalists.

DavsS
Reply to  CampsieFellow
March 20, 2024 5:29 am

Acceptance of the climate change meme is official policy at the BBC so they do not consider it necessary to give balanced coverage. Readers of this blog are likely aware of that, but the extent to which the wider public realise that this is the case I’ve no idea.

March 21, 2024 2:21 am

Apparently Matt McGrath didn’t know that there is no global warming in the tropics where bananas are commercially grown.

Most of the alleged warming is during nighttime, especially in winter and in the polar areas.

No danger to the banana.