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Lychee
marketers on a roll
Wholesale markets and
distributors in HCM City have plans in place to boost sales of lychee, a city
leader told a meeting in HCM City yesterday.
Nguyen Thi Hong,
People's Committee dep-uty chairwoman, said last year the city had consumed
60,000 tonnes, or 50 per cent of the nation's total.
About 80,000
tonnes are expected to be sold in the city this year, she said, adding that
wholesalers and retailers had met with businesses in Hai Duong and Bac Giang
provinces to discuss transport of the fruits to the south.
According to the
Ministry of Industry and Trade, the country's lychee output was likely to top
200,000 tonnes this year, with 40 per cent being exported.
Trinh Diep Thanh
Thao, deputy director of the Thu Duc Wholesale Market, said the market had
set up three new stalls to sell lychee after getting 11,500 tonnes in the
period between May 17 and June 9.
Co-opMart
supermarket chain expected to sell 800 tonnes of lychees this year.
It now sold 10-15
tonnes daily and the volume could reach 30 tonnes at times, Nguyen Thi Thu
Thuy, deputy general director of Sai Gon Co.op, said, adding that the
supermarket offered promotions to boost consumption.
Ho Quoc Nguyen, Big
C's public relations director, said the supermarket was likely to sell more
than 300 tonnes this year and it too offered promotions.
Previously, Ha
Noi authorities also said that they would soon grant trading licences to
lychee traders in Hai Duong Province so they can open mobile lychee shops at
vacant places in Ha Noi.
Ha Noi Industry
and Trade Department director Le Hong Thang said his city and Hai Duong
Province would introduce one more distribution system for lychees, apart from
other distribution systems in wholesale markets, trading centres and
supermarkets. The authorities of communes and market management boards would
arrange vacant lots for enterprises and traders from Hai Duong to sell their
lychees in Ha Noi, he added.
Improve quality
At the meeting
yesterday in HCM City, authorities also called on lychee farmers to adopt
VietGap and Global-Gap standards on more areas to improve the quality of
their fruits and meet hygiene and food safety requirements in both domestic
and export markets.
Hong said lychee
was now mainly consumed as fresh fruit, and so preservation methods to keep
it fresh for longer were needed.
Besides, research
should be done into processing fresh lychee so that a spike in supply after a
harvest did not send prices crashing, she said.
Thao said
businesses should pay attention to packaging and building brands for the
fruit.
Deputy Minister
of Industry and Trade Tran Tuan Anh said building a value chain for the fruit
was very important.
"It took
almost 10 years for Viet Nam to complete necessary procedures to export
lychee to the US and Australia.
Yesterday, with
the shipment of more than three tonnes of lychees to Australia and two tonnes
to the US, Rong Do Company was the second company to export lychees to the US
and the first Vietnamese company to ship the fruit to Australia.
Robert Guillermo,
pre-clearance specialist with the US Department of Agriculture, who inspected
the shipment yesterday, said the lychee quality met the standards for export
to the US market.
"It is fresh
and sweet, and meets the quality standard," he said. "We have had
two previous shipments sent to the US. They were the same quality as this
one," Guillermo said.
He predicted that
the volume of lychees exported to the US would increase sharply in the near
future, depending on the state of the US economy.
Alex Alexopoulos,
national sales manager for PanasiaFresh, which imports litchis from Viet Nam
and sells them in Australia, said he was satisfied with the quality of the
lychees in Viet Nam and that the packaging facility was very good.
All of the
lychees will be sold in wholesale markets and supermarkets in Australia.
After this first shipment, his company plans to buy as much as possible if
customers in Australia like the Vietnamese lychees.
"We hope
this season we can import 15 to 20 tonnes of lychees every week for
distribution in Australia," Alexopoulos said, adding his company also
plans to import coconut, mango and dragonfruit from Viet Nam.
Deputy Trade
Minister Tuan Anh said:"Exports will add value. Therefore, the producing
stage must be stable in terms of quality and quantity to export to existing
markets and expand to other markets."
He said that his
ministry would work with the ministries of Agriculture and Rural Development
and Science and Technology to fix quality standards for fruits, including
lychee.
It would also
work with relevant ministries to find packaging and post-harvest solutions,
he said.
Authorities from
Bac Giang and Hai Duong provinces said they would increase the area under
lychee adopting VietGap and GlobalGap standards to improve quality.
Nguyen Doan
Quang, director of the Hai Duong Department of Industry and Trade, said the
province would strive to ensure safe production processes were adopted on 50
per cent of the cultivation area by 2020, including VietGap and GlobalGap
standards on 20-30 per cent. — VNS
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Thứ Năm, 11 tháng 6, 2015
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