SUGARCANE SMUT AFTER THREE YEARS: A POLICY RETROSPECTIVE
By G ANTONY; R MAGAREY; B MILFORD
THE DETECTION of sugarcane smut disease (Ustilago scitaminea) in the
Bundaberg-Childers region of eastern Australia in 2006 triggered a
comprehensive and united response from BSES Limited, Queensland
Government and CANEGROWERS. The response to sugarcane smut in
the Bundaberg-Childers area was the first test for the Emergency Plant
Pest Response Deed, an agreement between Australian governments and
plant industries to facilitate a response to a plant pest incursion. As part of
this response and the subsequent inquiry, economic models of the likely
pattern of spread and cost of the smut epidemic were prepared. This paper
reviews the predictions of those models in the light of the subsequent
three years’ experience. It examines reasons for divergence from the
modelled outcomes, some of which were good approximations of actual
experience.