Large local firms to invest in green agricultural growth
HA NOI
(VNS) — Vietnamese business tycoons announced their plans to invest in
agriculture to keep up with rising demand for high-quality produce.
The move should help the agriculture sector with
its reform process. Vingroup, Viet Nam's top real estate developer, launched
a new unit this week, VinEco, which will supply green, organic agricultural
products for domestic and overseas markets. Its investments are worth VND2
trillion (US$92 million).
To start out, the unit will grow organic fruits
and vegetables that comply with VietGAP and GlobalGAP farming standards for
food safety.
Last week Vingroup asked authorities in the
northern province of Quang Ninh to allow the firm to set up large-scale farms
for vegetables, fruits and other agricultural products.
Prior to Vingroup's announcement, Hoa Phat Group,
one of the country's big names in steel production and real estate, said the
firm's long-term strategic investments would focus on agriculture.
Initially Hoa Phat Group will invest VND300
billion ($14.1 million) in establishing an animal feed plant with a capacity
of 300,000 metric tonnes a year in the northern province of Hung Yen.
Viet Nam's animal feed market is worth around $6
billion annually, and the country is expected to churn out 15.6 million
metric tons this year, up 6.1 per cent on the year, according to the Ministry
of Agriculture and Rural Development.
However, this number cannot meet market demand.
According to the sector's development strategies, Viet Nam needs 18 to 20
million metric tonnes of animal feed by the end of this year, and around 25
to 26 million metric tonnes by 2020.
Doan Nguyen Duc, chairman of the conglomerate
Hoang Anh Gia Lai, which previously concentrated on real estate, said the
company turned to agriculture and set up rubber, sugarcane, palm oil and
maize plantations in Laos and Cambodia in 2008 after recognising that the
local realty sector had many potential risks.
As of mid-2014, Hoang Anh Gia Lai owned about
44,500ha of rubber, 8,000ha of sugarcane, 17,300ha of palm oil and 5,000ha of
maize. Taking advantage of available agricultural by-products, the firm
executed a plan last year to raise 100,000 cows in Viet Nam.
Nguyen Tri Ngoc, former head of the Cultivation
Department of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, said that
without businesses' investments, Viet Nam's agriculture would face great
difficulties in its development.
"I'm glad businesses are paying attention to
this sector," Ngoc said.
However, certain difficulties remain for
businesses that need support from the Government.
Dang Kim Son, director of the Strategic Institute
of Agriculture and Rural Development, said enterprises find it hard to
identify large areas for agriculture production, because regulations on land
compensation and taxes are unclear.
Nguyen Van Bo, former head of the Viet Nam
Academy of Agriculture Sciences, said the Government should support
enterprises looking to buy land so that they could afford to invest in
high-tech production methods. — VNS
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Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 3, 2015
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