Africa: New Potato Variety Offers a Lifeline to Farmers Battling Blight

Africa: New Potato Variety Offers a Lifeline to Farmers Battling Blight


Genebanks and global cooperation deliver versatile, climate-resilient solutions for farmers 

 Lima, Peru (06 November 2025)  – The same disease that caused the Irish Potato Famine nearly two centuries ago still devastates potato crops worldwide, inflicting up to USD 10 billion in annual losses. Now, climate change is driving the disease higher into the Andes and threatening the livelihoods of smallholder farmers who grow one of the world’s most important staple foods. However, ahead of the COP30 UN Climate Change Conference in Brazil, a new disease-resistant potato variety highlights the innovation farmers need to thrive in a changing climate.

Developed by scientists from the International Potato Center (CIP) with the participation of Indigenous communities, the new potato variety, called CIP-Asiryq, resists the disease that struck Ireland, late blight. It requires fewer fungicide sprays, cooks 25% faster than Peru’s popular  Yungay  variety, and shows strong potential for both table and processing markets.

“Late blight costs billions of dollars every year in lost production,” said Dr. Stefan Schmitz, executive director of the Crop Trust. “The new resistant variety gives potato farmers an option that can reduce losses, cut costs and strengthen food security in Peru and around the world. It’s good news for everyone who likes potatoes.”


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Rooted in climate collaboration
Pronounced “asir-eek,” the new CIP-Asiryq variety was developed using Solanum cajamarquense, a wild relative of the potato conserved in the CIP genebank in Lima, Peru. This genebank safeguards the world’s largest collection of potato diversity.

The breakthrough was set in motion during the  Crop Wild Relatives  project and made possible through the Biodiversity for Opportunities, Livelihoods and Development ( BOLD ) project, both led by the Crop Trust and funded by the Government of Norway.

“Late blight has been a huge burden to potato farmers everywhere, so the development of a new resistant variety is a major step forward for food systems – in the Andes and beyond,” said Dr. Thiago Mendes, CIP scientist and lead of the BOLD potato pre-breeding project. “CIP-Asiryq is also remarkable for its versatility. Farmers in Huánuco noted its potential for both fresh consumption and processing, giving producers more flexibility to meet market demand.”

A global problem with a local solution
Late blight is the same plant disease that triggered the 19th century Irish Potato Famine, a crisis that starved Ireland and scarred it forever. In 2025, late blight still costs farmers an estimated USD 3 to 10 billion per year globally. The disease can slash crop yields by  50 to 100%  in Peru – even at elevations once thought safe from its ravages.

Farmers can spray fungicides, but  according to CIP , agrochemicals can represent 10 to 25% of the total value of a farmer’s potato harvest. Fungicide use significantly reduces family incomes, and it also poses risks to humans and the environment. In humid valleys of the central Andes, farmers spray fungicides up to six times each month to protect their crops.

Besides offering late blight resistance and thus reducing the need for spraying, CIP-Asiryq has strong market potential due to its processing qualities, which meet industry standards for potato chips. This is good for smallholder farmers, for businesses that process and sell potato products, and for consumers who love the many ways potatoes are prepared.

“This potato variety was developed for the fresh consumption – not specifically for processing – but some producers do grow for the processing industry,” said Raul Ccanto, coordinator of the agrobiodiversity area of the  Yanapai Group , which was involved from the beginning in the new variety’s development. “Small-scale farmers will be happy to earn more by selling to this market and so will the processing companies.”

Collaboration between CIP, the Yanapai Group and local farmers was essential in the development of the new variety, showing how breeders, communities and genebanks can work together to deliver solutions.

A growing global impact
CIP-Asiryq also provides hope to farmers in other parts of the world who may be struggling to contain the disease.