Falling coffee
prices hit farmers
A sharp fall of coffee prices has caused many difficulties for
local growers and if the situation does not improve, many of the farmers may
turn to planting other crops instead.
According to the Vietnamese Coffee Exporters’ Club, Vietnam's
coffee export price has fallen to USD1,800 a tonne compared to its peak of
USD2,100 - 2,200 USD.
If coffee prices
continue falling, farmers may turn to planting other crops instead.
The Vietnam Coffee and Cocoa Association (VICOFA) said that
Vietnam's coffee exports for 2014-15 were estimated at around 1.25 million
tonnes at USD2.62 billion, down 21.9% in volume and 20.1% in value compared
to the last harvest.
Nguyen Hai Nam, Deputy Head of VICOFA said that coffee prices in
the domestic market saw consecutive falls to VND35.4 million per tonne in
September from VND36 million in July and VND38 million in March.
The problem was attributed to exchange rate changes in the
global market as well as unfavourable weather conditions such as droughts
caused by El Nino which seriously affected coffee productivity. Meanwhile,
famers have also spent more on production costs.
Luong Van Tu, Chairman of VICOFA said that if the situation did
not improve, famers may stop growing coffee to turn into other crops like
pepper and macadamia nuts.
Vietnam is now home to around 600,000ha of coffee. To maintain
coffee production in the coming time, the coffee sector will have to boost
domestic consumption and co-operation between growers and enterprises as well
as attract more investment.
Experts suggested there should be support policies for farmers
as they have had to suffer losses over several years due to the decline in
both coffee output and prices.
By Nguyen An, dtinews.vn
|
Thứ Hai, 14 tháng 12, 2015
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