Yeah, most banana's are produced in northern areas of Australia. Also, I should point out that the area will always be hit by cyclones every year, which do cause major damage to crops. If it is a bad year (which recently, it has been bad), most of the produce is wiped out, which means supply drops, demand doesn't drop as much, and BOOM! $20 a kilo...when I was checking for class, I saw banana's online at Woolworths for $2.50 EACH...
Also, Perth is the furthest city in the world from any other city. Its supply lines aren't exactly the best, and most produce is actually local. Since Perth is too far south to grow bananas, they get shipped from Canarvan, and when that town is hit by bad weather, they get imported from Queensland. There are no train lines from Queensland to Perth directly, there are no direct roads (the middle of the country is mostly just mine sites, and some of the interior roads in Western Australia aren't even paved), so transport from there will most likely go through Sydney. I also think they they do not use trains to move cargo, but I do believe that most cargo is moved by sea (very slow transportation, especially with the docks in Perth).
Perth is a city where you get nothing special...seriously, it was almost impossible for me to find decent coconuts...and even in the entertainment field, we get few music artists or celebrity visits, we had the Commonwealth Games once I think, and even in sports, we get very little in Perth (every year, we get 1 ICC cricket match, and never any final matches of any sports, except maybe quarter finals in AFL, where Melbourne gets a few AFL matches every week).
The isolation of Perth is the reason it is one of the more expensive cities to live.
"Who do you work for Wornstrum?"
Well, I have changed jobs a few times. I started out working in hospitality, barman or waiter, which was good pay considering the hours I put in (my record was almost 16 hours without a break...I also wanna point out I got paid by the hour, up to $25 an hour normal pay, and then bonus pay for holidays
). Whilst I was in hospitality, I was also a student, studying Network Engineering, and when I finished I went into that industry...which was tech support...I am so embarrased! Anyway, was earning $38k working on phones, so that didn't last long, and I quit that to go back to studying, which is when I started my Chinese and International Relations degree. I worked back in hospitality at the point, earning $23 an hour.
I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~