VN farmers face more
fruitful future in US
Viet Nam will be
exporting litchi and longan to the United States and is preparing to
export more fruit when it joins the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) next year.
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Nguyen Xuan Hong, Director of
the Plant Protection Department under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development. - VNS Photo
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Nguyen Xuan Hong, Director of the Plant Protection
Department under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, tells
Viet Nam News about the challenges for the fruit market at home and aboard.
What challenges will the domestic
fruit market face after Viet
Nam joins the AEC?
Viet Nam has been
importing 400,000 tonnes of fruit from other countries and exporting 1.3
million tonnes of fruit to other countries every year. This means our annual
exports are often three times higher than our annual imports.
The domestic fruit market includes Vietnamese fruits
and some imported fruits.
Meanwhile, Viet Nam
has advantages in the export of certain kinds of fruit such as dragon fruit,
litchi and mango, and many countries have a high demand for such fruits from Viet Nam.
The issue here is how Viet Nam should organise
production to meet the demand of importing countries which follow strict
standards on quality, food hygiene and safety. This leads to an increase in
the consumption of farmers, as well as in export volume.
Regarding competition pressure on local fruits from
imported fruits after the country opens the doors under the AEC commitments,
I think there is no pressure because imported and local fruits have
advantages that vary from each other.
Viet Nam has
exported tropical fruits to temperate countries which, in turn, have exported
their fruits to Viet Nam.
That is normal. Viet Nam
permits other countries to export their fruits to us, and other countries permit
Viet Nam
to export its fruits to them.
Viet Nam has a
variety of succulent fruits but few of them could enter strict markets
abroad. What are the barriers to Viet Nam's fruits in these
markets?
One of the barriers is plant quarantine. Viet Nam must pay the high cost of plant
quarantine services for fruits that have been exported to markets such as the
United States, South Korea and Japan.
The others are strict food hygiene and safety
standards. In fact, Viet
Nam has to meet these standards first to increase
its fruit exports to other countries.
In the future, Viet Nam will restructure its
plantations to further improve the quality and production efficiency of
fruits, and thereby increase the quantity and value of its fruit exports.
In the early part of September, the US Department of Agriculture opened the doors
to litchi and longan exports from Viet Nam. What did the country do
to take full advantage of this opportunity?
Viet Nam has
exported some fruits to the US
market, which has a high demand for quality food and also brings high value
to exporters. Viet Nam
has continued negotiations for the export of star apple and mango to that
market in the future.
To take full advantage of the opportunity that the US has given
to Vietnamese fruits, the country must organise large regions for large-scale
planning and production because importing countries demand for the code of
the fruit-growing regions to be able to determine the origin of fruit exports
whenever they have problems with plant quarantine, food hygiene and safety.
We must apply high technology, including preservation,
to post-harvest production to ensure the fruits' long-term quality.
Therefore, Vietnamese research institutes should
promote research and apply the technology on fruit production to meet
importing countries' standards.
Meanwhile, domestic enterprises that export fruits to
the US should pay
attention to the kinds of fruits that require export licences and plant
quarantine certificates from Viet Nam's
Plant Protection Department, as well as food hygiene and safety guarantees
from the US
environment protection office.
Viet Nam spent a
long time negotiating with the US for the export of litchi and
longan to its market. What are the reasons for this?
Negotiations for the opening of the US market to
Vietnamese fruits has depended on a number of factors. Initially, the US plant
quarantine offices must take time to assess the risk of and solutions to
plant diseases, in accordance with US standards.
The amount of time for negotiations depends on the
standards and preferences of each country, with Viet Nam spending up to five
years to get export licences for its fruit from some countries.
Now, Viet
Nam has much experience in providing
required documentation and information to importing countries during
negotiations, so these negotiations could be quickly concluded.
Quick negotiations are also the result of good
co-operation among the Ministries of Agriculture and Rural Development,
Industry and Trade, and Foreign Affairs, as well as good international
relationships.
What does the department do to
export more Vietnamese fruit to the world market?
The department has updated information on the fruit
export requirements of importing countries and released these to domestic
farmers and enterprises. Equipped with this information, farmers and
enterprises can now produce and trade in line with such requirements, to
increase their opportunities to export more fruit and earn more profits from
such exports in the future.
VNS
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