Here are the latest developments on potato wart as of May 2026, based on the most recent publicly available reporting.
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Canada: A recent potato wart detection in Prince Edward Island (PEI) soil samples was reported in mid-May 2026, marking the first finding since 2023 in that region. This underscores ongoing surveillance but does not indicate widespread outbreak or immediate changes to trade restrictions. The CFIA emphasized that Canada’s regulatory and surveillance framework remains in place to manage and prevent dissemination, and that existing transport and market protections remain intact.[1]
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Context from PEI and US industry responses: Industry voices in North America have highlighted concerns about the broader disease footprint, with calls to reinforce import suspensions or travel restrictions for seed and table potatoes from affected areas. However, PEI and Canadian industry statements continue to assert that the national wart response plan and ongoing testing are effective at keeping PEI potatoes safe for export.[1]
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Historical and planning backdrop: Canada completed a nationwide national survey for potato wart and publicly reported that no wart was detected in earlier cycles, which supported ongoing international assurances about Canadian seed potatoes’ safety. The national plan and related public consultations reflect ongoing updates to containment and response measures to adapt to evolving risk.[4][6][7]
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Broader scientific and policy context: Potato wart is caused by a soilborne pathogen that can persist in infested soils; global experience emphasizes robust surveillance, traceability, and strict phytosanitary controls to prevent spread, with national and international bodies advocating transparent reporting and science-based management.[5]
What this means for you in São Paulo, Brazil
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If you’re sourcing seed or table potatoes from North America or regions with wart detections, be mindful of regulatory advisories and ensure suppliers provide country-specific phytosanitary certificates and pest-free assurances in line with CFIA guidelines and international standards. Although the recent PEI finding is a single detection within a regulated framework, ongoing surveillance means continuous risk assessment and potential changes to import conditions if further detections occur.[6][1]
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For exporters or growers, staying aligned with the National Potato Wart Response Plan and any updates from CFIA and Canadian authorities is advisable, as these updates shape border measures, testing requirements, and communication with trading partners.[7][8][6]
If you’d like, I can:
- Summarize the official CFIA statements from the latest detection and provide a quick checklist for importers and exporters.
- Build a brief regional risk matrix (countries/regions vs. wart status) to help you assess sources for potato products.
- Create a one-page briefing with recommended actions for buyers in Brazil who may be concerned about wart exposure in international supply chains.
Note: The above reflects the latest public summaries; for the most precise, current official details, I can pull the latest CFIA notices and PEI potato board statements if you’d like me to check them directly.[4][6][1]
Sources
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has confirmed another positive in its testing of 3,500+ soil samples for potato wart in Prince Edward Island. The detection of the disease in a field near the two October 2021 findings is not surprising to industry.
thegrower.orgThe Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has completed its national survey for potato wart ahead of schedule, and potato wart was not detected.
www.canada.caFrom March 5 to June 30, the CFIA collected over 17,000 soil samples, and testing on those samples is still ongoing. The discovery of a potato wart was not unexpected during the investigation, according to the agency. This detection demonstrates that the investigation process is working and is an important part of ensuring crop health and maintaining access to export markets. “We will update this finding on our website as part of our quarterly updates with the next update in October 2022,” the...
www.potatobusiness.comPhytosanitary measures to help contain, control, and prevent the spread of potato wart from any regulated areas in Canada, except Newfoundland.
inspection.canada.caPhytosanitary measures to help contain, control, and prevent the spread of potato wart from any regulated areas in Canada, except Newfoundland.
inspection.canada.caThe Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has launched a final public consultation on a proposed National Potato Wart Response Plan (Response Plan). This Response Plan includes new measures to improve the Agency's processes to help contain, control, and prevent the spread of potato wart. This will replace the current Potato Wart Domestic Long Term Management Plan.
www.canada.caAPSnet Feature. June, 2007...Introduction Potato wart is an important and serious disease of cultivated potato (Solanum tuberosum) with numerous accounts of disease detections occurring worldwide [e.g., (1,4,6)]. Potato wart is known by various names, including black scab, black wart, cauliflower disease, potato tumor, pota...
www.apsnet.orgMay 2024 Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and Canadian Food Inspection Agency
science.gc.ca