Cashew
industry: Time to make a bold move
A
recent national cashew forum in Hanoi sponsored by the Vietnam Cashew
Association (Vinacas) focusing on ways to promote sustainability of the
industry, attracted hundreds of stakeholders.
“Thousands are engaged in
the cashew industry,” said Nguyen Duc Thanh, chairman of Vinacas, in a key
speech at the forum. More than half are farmers who cultivate the crop, while
the remainder are involved in import, export and processing activities in an
estimated 1,000 businesses nationwide.
Mr Thanh pointed out that though the industry has been a major player
in the global market, accounting for a 40% market share of processed nuts, it
currently lacks long-term profitability and sustainability.
The primary constraint that stakeholders face, undermining their
efforts to realize the full trade potential for cashews is lack of access to
credit to obtain working capital to expand domestic production.
This in turn has led to an overdependence on import of raw nuts from
Africa, said Mr Thanh, which are more often than not, of low quality and
riddled with contamination from aflatoxins.
Over the past few years, the industry on the whole has imported well
over half of its annual requirements for raw nuts from foreign markets,
principally from the African continent.
Last year, Mr Thanh said, official statistics show the industry
imported some 800,000 metric tons of raw nuts.
The African cashew industry is also, he observed, notoriously dogged
by issues related to quality.
Aflatoxins contamination, he noted, particularly as it relates to
imports from Africa, is a trade issue that needs to be tackled with urgency,
as it takes a heavy toll, imposing enormous industry-wide costs.
“Since the beginning of the year, our company has been plagued by
contaminated shipments of product from Africa,” said Ta Quang Huyen, director
of the Hoang Son I Limited Company.
At US$100-150 per metric ton, one contaminated shipment can be
financially devastating and several can send a company spiralling into
bankruptcy.
Bach Khanh Nhat from Vinacontrol in turn pointed out that aflatoxins
are difficult to detect without the use of complex technology, which most
domestic businesses don’t have access to.
Currently, available diagnostic technologies – including rapid
diagnostic strips and ultraviolet absorption assessments – are not only
expensive but are not portable enough to be used in the field.
What’s needed, said Mr Nhat, is the newer technologies like infrared
spectroscopy, an ‘electronic nose’ that can predict and semi-quantify
aflatoxin levels using an application available on a mobile phone.
In addition, as it now stands, stakeholders have little recourse
against African companies who sell contaminated product— as there really are
no practical legal remedies to get monetary refunds for the damages.
The simple fact is that most African countries do not have policies,
standards, or regulations to control aflatoxins, and those that do have them,
lack adequate enforcement mechanisms.
Currently, it is estimated that contamination damages from loses due
to aflatoxin contamination costs the Vietnam industry in the hundreds of
millions of US dollars annually.
One possible alternative to developing a reliable source of raw
product from Africa is for more Vietnamese investors that possess the
financial wherewithal to take the bold move and invest in the cashew segment
of the African economy, said the Chairman of Vinacas.
Africa has a great need for high capacity cashew processing plants,
warehousing facilities and technical assistance he said, and Vietnam is well
equipped to fill that need with highly qualified entrepreneurial talent.
The situation is ripe for the taking as there are many challenging,
tremendous opportunities for enterprising Vietnamese business men and women
to investigate and capitalize upon.
Investment in the African
cashew industry, he said, would bolster its sustainability, help diversify
Vietnam agriculture, synergize trade efficiency between the two economies and
boost incomes for farmers and other industry stakeholders.
VOV
|
Thứ Hai, 20 tháng 6, 2016
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét