The prices of bananas and pineapples have stabilized, the Council of Agriculture (COA) said yesterday, urging local media to stop running false or misleading reports that affect farmers’ livelihoods.
Warmer weather and less rainfall this year led to an overproduction of many crops, especially tropical fruits such as bananas, pineapples and mangoes, the council said.
As prices plunged, the council found itself under fire over the past few months.
Photo: CNA
The average price of bananas at Taipei’s wholesale markets was NT$18.4 per kilogram as of yesterday, council Deputy Minister Chen Chi-chung (陳吉仲) said, adding that the agency last week achieved its goal of raising the price to NT$15 per kilogram.
Some media reports saying banana and pineapple prices have plunged to a state out of the council’s control are incorrect, Chen said.
Referring to several reports by the Chinese-language China Times on Monday, Chen said its claim that the government’s cross-strait policy is to blame for the nation’s diminished crop exports is misleading.
Such reports have affected local farmers and might be used by retailers to demand lower prices, he said, calling on the paper to issue corrections.
Total fruit exports in the first five months of the year reached a 10-year high of 43,570 tonnes, or US$79 million in terms of value, the council said.
Pineapple exports, in particular, totaled 31,947 tonnes from the beginning of the year to Sunday, the highest since 2012, council data showed.
The council is continuing its efforts to reform the system to meet supply and demand, Chen said.
To extend the shelf life of crops, it has budgeted NT$1 billion (US$33.13 million) to construct three cooling technology centers in Taoyuan as well as Changhua and Pingtung counties, which are expected to be finished in three to five years, he said.
The council is also working on increasing the ratio of processed agricultural products, he said, adding that only 5 percent of bananas are made into food products.
Other long-term plans include adjusting the nation’s tariffs on “sensitive items,” such as garlic and onion, Chen added.
South Korean K-pop girl group Blackpink are to make Kaohsiung the first stop on their Asia tour when they perform at Kaohsiung National Stadium on Oct. 18 and 19, the event organizer said yesterday. The upcoming performances will also make Blackpink the first girl group ever to perform twice at the stadium. It will be the group’s third visit to Taiwan to stage a concert. The last time Blackpink held a concert in the city was in March 2023. Their first concert in Taiwan was on March 3, 2019, at NTSU Arena (Linkou Arena). The group’s 2022-2023 “Born Pink” tour set a
CPBL players, cheerleaders and officials pose at a news conference in Taipei yesterday announcing the upcoming All-Star Game. This year’s CPBL All-Star Weekend is to be held at the Taipei Dome on July 19 and 20.
The Taiwan High Court yesterday upheld a lower court’s decision that ruled in favor of former president Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) regarding the legitimacy of her doctoral degree. The issue surrounding Tsai’s academic credentials was raised by former political talk show host Dennis Peng (彭文正) in a Facebook post in June 2019, when Tsai was seeking re-election. Peng has repeatedly accused Tsai of never completing her doctoral dissertation to get a doctoral degree in law from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) in 1984. He subsequently filed a declaratory action charging that
The Hualien Branch of the High Court today sentenced the main suspect in the 2021 fatal derailment of the Taroko Express to 12 years and six months in jail in the second trial of the suspect for his role in Taiwan’s deadliest train crash. Lee Yi-hsiang (李義祥), the driver of a crane truck that fell onto the tracks and which the the Taiwan Railways Administration's (TRA) train crashed into in an accident that killed 49 people and injured 200, was sentenced to seven years and 10 months in the first trial by the Hualien District Court in 2022. Hoa Van Hao, a