Local agriculture and seafood
industries struggle
Despite exports for
the agriculture, forestry and aquatics sector having struggled during 2015,
their annual total should still should be close to the target of US$30
billion set by the National Assembly, according to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
At a recent
conference in Hanoi, a representative of MARD disclosed that collective total
overseas shipments for the eleven months leading up to December dipped 2.8%
year-on-year to US$27.41 billion.
On the downside, exports of
agricultural commodities fell 4% to US$12.74 billion while fish and seafood
overseas consignments dropped precipitously by 16.4% to US$6.01 billion, the
MARD representative said.
Meanwhile, forestry shipments for
the eleven-month period January-November jumped 8.2% to US$6.4 billion.
Commodity exports witnessed an
across the board decline led by the nation’s key exports of rice, coffee,
fish and seafood.
Rice posted a 3.6% increase in
volume to 6.24 million metric tons and a 4.9% drop in value to US$2.65
billion while coffee fell 27.7% in volume to 1.13 million metric tons and
30.2% in value to US$3.3 billion.
Meanwhile, a year-on-year uptick
was recorded in the relatively less important foreign shipments of peppers,
cashew nuts, cassava and cassava-based commodities, with revenue increases
ranging 2.9 to 19%.
The most significant drops in fish
and seafood exports were to the US of over 25%, Japan of 13%, and the
Republic of Korea of 14%.
Notably, the US market has been a
tough market for all fish and seafood exporting nations in the Asian region,
said the rep.
In August, USFDA inspectors set a
monthly record by refusing 72 shipments of shrimp, much of it from Malaysia,
that either tested positive for antibiotics or lacked evidence of being drug
free. Most of the shrimp was turned away from the agency's Southwest Import
District, which includes Texas ports.
Through October, the FDA had
refused 377 separate shrimp entries – from large containers to small packages
– citing antibiotics or veterinary drug residues. In all of 2014, the agency
turned away 208 shrimp shipments due to illegal drug residues, and that was
nearly four times the refusals of a year before.
So it isn’t just Vietnamese shrimp
that is being turned out of the US market, as the upturn in refusals
demonstrates that the agency is getting more vigilant at the borders and
refusing more and more shipments from all of Asia.
In the near future, the MARD
representative said the ministry planned to take remedial action in the name
of responsible aquaculture to better implement VietGap and ASC certification
to reduce the negative impact of fish and seafood farming on the nation’s
economy.
Additionally, it is taking steps to
boost marketing and advertising efforts in foreign markets, said the
representative specifically citing attempts to sell dragon fruits in the
Japanese market and chicken in Russia.
He said the ministry would also
prop up production levels to bolster quality and competitive advantages for
products of Vietnam such as rice, coffee, rubber, and fish, in addition to
peppers and cashews.
VOV
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Thứ Hai, 28 tháng 12, 2015
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