A bountiful year ahead
for pepper exports
The nation’s farmers are having a
prosperous year, having shunned coffee and switched to growing peppers in the
face of higher prices and robust global demand, said the Vietnam Pepper
Association (VPA) in a recent report on the industry’s status.
The
VPA says the nation’s farmers have increased cultivation areas under pepper
by as much as 15%.
In
the nine months leading up to October the average export price of black
pepper jumped 25.3% year-on-year to US$9.500 per metric ton with the figures
tallying in at 117,000 metric tons valued at US$1.11 billion.
The
VPA now forecasts exports to climb to a hefty 130,000 metric tons at US$1.2
billion for calendar year 2015 and that the country will retain its leading
exporter status of the treasured black pepper commodity.
Pepper
production has climbed 36% during the past five years says the VPA, helping
the country to supply about half of the global demand. Meanwhile pepper
prices have spiked three-fold over the past five years.
The
cultivation area rose to 83,800 hectares in 2014 from 55,500 hectares in
2011, producing 147,400 metric tons of pepper last year, much more than
India, which produces about 70,000 metric tons of pepper from an area
of about 1,22,000 hectares.
Meanwhile
world pepper consumption is estimated to have been growing at an average pace
of 2-3% per annum over the past few years, which growth sees no sign of
abating.
“The
industry has attracted leading brands from Japan, the US, Singapore, India
and the Netherlands, which have constructed a number of processing plants
throughout the nation,” said Head Tran Duc Tung of the VPA.
Tung
said they have most significantly helped the industry improve overall quality
of its products, which has helped improve the industry’s image around the
globe.
At
present, pepper has been shipped to more than 100 nations around the globe.
However, the country should improve the added value of its pepper to make
further inroads into the global wholesale markets.
Growing pepper trees under
VietGAP standards
The
VPA noted there is a movement afoot among farmers who want to improve pepper
output, leading to the expansion of cultivation areas and the reduction of
abusive uses of pesticides in pepper cultivation.
The
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) has issued a number of
decrees and policies related to production and harvest activities to help
farmers tackle these thorny problems.
“In
addition, MARD has launched a number of trade promotion programs to improve
the situation,” said Mr Tung.
Mr
Tung said to meet export demands, the ministry has instructed farmers in
remote areas and the Central Highlands to grow pepper trees in compliance
with VietGAP standards and apply advanced post-harvest preservation measures.
In
addition, MARD has constructed a research centre to develop pepper trees in
the Central Highlands and publicize scientific knowledge to farmers and the
general public.
Mr Tung emphasized pepper processing should also strictly comply with
food hygiene and safety requirements and, if properly implemented, exports
should be looking at many bountiful years ahead.
VOV
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Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 11, 2015
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