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Banana farmers in KwaZulu-Natal’s Ugu District have received 6,000 litres of agrochemicals to fight Banana Bunchy Top Virus (BBTV). The virus has been wiping out crops before harvest, severely hurting incomes.
On 11 November 2025, Deputy Minister of Agriculture Nokuzola Capa returned to the district with 3,000 litres of agrochemicals for smallholder and subsistence growers. This follows an earlier batch given to commercial farmers in October.
BBTV is spread by banana aphids. Farmers in Ray Nkonyeni, Umzumbe and Umdoni municipalities have been the hardest hit. Some trees were dying before the 13-month fruit cycle could complete.
Where and how support was delivered
The intervention was part of a promise made by the Deputy Minister during her visit in September.
Agrochemical Distribution Breakdown:
| Date Delivered | Recipient Group | Amount Supplied |
|---|---|---|
| October 2025 | Commercial Farmers | 3,000 litres |
| 11 November 2025 | Smallholder + Subsistence Farmers | 3,000 litres |
Officials attending the handover included the Director-General of the Department of Agriculture, Mooketsa Ramasodi, Ray Nkonyeni Mayor Cllr Zodwa Mzindle, and Inkosi Xolo of the KwaXolo Traditional Authority.
What’s next for banana farmers
The Department of Agriculture says chemical supply alone won’t solve the problem.
In addition to the chemicals, the department will:
- Provide training and awareness on BBTV
- Work with the KZN Department of Agriculture to reach local communities
- Arrange learning visits to other African countries for farmers
“Farmers must unite to protect the banana sector, a key driver of the Ugu economy,” said Deputy Minister Capa.
She stressed collaboration between government, farmers, academia, and the private sector to build sustainable control strategies for BBTV.







