Kiwifruit growers facing the industry's biggest biological threat are being asked to take a brave punt - cut out the vulnerable gold kiwifruit vines that have been the industry's stellar performer and invest in a new variety that might also succumb to the destructive bacteria Psa-V.
Licences for the new G3 variety were issued this week despite vine failures at two G3 orchards near Te Puke, the heartland of an industry that is an important export earner and the biggest driver of the Bay of Plenty economy.
Gold growers who managed to get a crop to market last year have just received their last payments and face a two-year wait to get a partial crop from the new G3 variety - if it survives the critical first spring.
The cost of converting to G3 is estimated at $60,000 a hectare but gold growers have little choice but to convert as there are no buyers for the hundreds of Psa-damaged orchards.
Up to 120 growers in the heavily indebted gold sector are expected to be refused further bank loans because their property values have collapsed.