The PSA outbreak was preventable, a court has been told.
The PSA outbreak was preventable, a court has been told.
The PSA disease outbreak that that cost the kiwifruit industry hundreds of millions of dollars was preventable and started from a single site near Te Puke, a court has been told.
The class action suit by the 212 members of Kiwifruit Claim against the Ministry for Primary Industries got underway in the High Court at Wellington on Monday.
The growers say the vine-killing bacteria, Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae, cost the industry more than $800 million and officials were negligent in allowing it in.
Lawyer Davey Salmon opened by showing the court maps of where PSA disease broke out, at an orchard near Te Puke in 2010.
"Orchards in this area are cheek by jowl, but we are able to identify a single site where the PSA originated."
The orchard and bee pollen operation he singled out was Kiwi Pollen, owned by Jill Hamlyn and Graeme Crawshaw, he said, who got a PSA-infected shipment of pollen from China.
"It was not a difficult task to follow the arrows once the shipment was back in New Zealand."