An employee
holds up a sample of black pepper that has gone through a machine that
tumbles and rounds out the seeds, at the Pacific Basin Partnership Inc.
processing plant in Hanoi,
Vietnam.
At a time when commodity producers are enduring a slump in
prices for everything from crude oil to iron ore to soybeans, Vietnam’s
pepper farmers are prospering.
Black pepper
trades at about $9 a kilogram (2.2 pounds), from $2 a decade ago, while white
pepper costs as much as $13, a threefold gain, according to the International
Pepper Community, a producer group in Jakarta.
Consumption has exceeded supply for about eight years, boosted by demand for
seasoning as Asia eats more meat, said Greg
Estep, the global head of spices and vegetable ingredients at Singapore-based
Olam International Ltd.
The surge in
the $2.5 billion pepper export market contrasts with a fourth consecutive
year of declining commodity prices as supply gluts emerge. Vietnam’s crop expanded 15-fold over two
decades, displacing India
as the biggest supplier, the United Nations’ Food & Agriculture
Organization says.
“I came to
this land empty-handed,” said Nguyen Van Thanh, a 54-year-old who’s planted
pepper for the past 14 years in Dak Lak province. “Income from pepper allowed
me to provide for my family, buy motorbikes, build and renovate my home.”
Thanh now
harvests about 4.5 to 5 metric tons a year on his 1.5 hectare (3.7 acre) plot
in the Central Highlands. He sells the pepper for about 190,000 dong ($8.90)
a kilogram, or more than nine times his production costs, he said by phone
Nov. 14.
Vietnam’s
agricultural industry was boosted by the “Doi Moi” reforms of the 1980s,
which opened up international trade to farmers. They responded by planting
more pepper, coffee and rice. The Asian nation produced 1.3 million tons of
coffee in 2012, an 11-fold gain in two decades and second only to Brazil,
according to the Rome-based FAO. Robusta futures jumped 23 percent this year
in London
trading, while the Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 raw materials fell 6.1
percent.
Global trade
Through the
centuries, India and Indonesia’s Sumatra
were the biggest pepper suppliers, said Marjorie Shaffer, author of “Pepper:
A History of the World’s Most Influential Spice.” While pepper is a
traditional crop in Vietnam,
it only emerged as a major producer recently, said Shaffer, a science editor
at the NYU School of Medicine Office of Communications.
“Before the
1990s, we didn’t even produce enough pepper for domestic use,” Do Ha Nam,
chairman of the Vietnam Pepper Association, said from Ho Chi Minh City on
Nov. 11. “Then output increased unbelievably after we opened up the economy.”
Vietnam
harvested 122,000 tons last year, while Indonesia
produced 63,000 tons and India
58,000 tons, according to IPC data. Global output was 375,800 tons in 2013,
little changed from a decade earlier, even as exports surged 23 percent to
278,033 tons, IPC data show.
European
trade
Rising
pepper prices helped farmers prosper and allowed them to buy cars and bigger
houses, Nam
said. Almost half of Vietnam’s
labor force is employed in agriculture and the sector accounts for about a
fifth of the economy, according to data in the CIA World Factbook.
Pepper is
cultivated on vines, which grow best in tropical climates from 1,500 feet
(460 meters) above sea level, according to the IPC. Vietnam’s
harvest runs from February to April, according to the FAO, which says pepper
and ginger are the oldest traded spices. While the first exports were
recorded 4,000 years ago, trade took off from the 1400s after Europeans
pioneered maritime trading links with Asia.
An employee removes foreign objects
from black pepper at the Pacific Basin Partnership Inc. processing plant in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Almost half of Vietnam’s
labor force is employed in agriculture and the sector accounts for about a
fifth of the economy, according to data in the CIA World Factbook.
The
ratio of global pepper stockpiles to consumption now stands at less than 10
percent, from as much as 75 percent in 2004, according to Olam, which grinds
pepper at plants in Ho Chi Minh City
for export.
Small farms
“Vietnam becomes more and more important
because it focuses on exports and does not have a rapidly expanding market
for domestic consumption,” Estep said from Fresno, California.
The country “has done a very good job of maintaining yields, maintaining
productivity,” he said.
Growers have
small farms in Vietnam,
often 1 to 2 hectares, according to the IPC. Output averages 2.2 tons per
hectare, compared with 400 to 500 kilograms in Indonesia.
Vietnam’s
output should hold steady at 130,000 tons to 135,000 tons next year, said Nam of the
Vietnam Pepper Association. Prices will also be similar, at $7,000 to $8,000
a ton, he said. That should be enough for Thanh, the Dak Lak farmer who’s
planning to expand.
“I could buy
a car if I liked,” he said. “But I want to buy more land to expand production
first.”
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