Vietnam
fishers losing US catfish market
Controversial
new legislation in the US that toughens inspection rules for catfish imported
from foreign markets is striking fear into the hearts of fishers in the
Vietnamese farm raised catfish industry.
Farmers
and other actors in the industry are now deeply concerned they won’t be able
to comply with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) new
inspection rules for catfish that become mandatory in August 2017.
There is
legitimate concern they may lose the entire US market altogether, says the
Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP).
Under the
new rules, that technically were passed last March, catfish are no longer
considered seafood by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but are
designated as a "species amenable to" the Federal Meat Inspection
Act.
As a result,
catfish and a few other species of fish will be inspected by the US
Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service rather than by
the Food and Drug Administration's seafood inspection program. All other
seafood will continue to be inspected by the FDA.
In
substance, catfish are now recognized for import purposes as – meat – similar
to beef or pork and as such are subject to an additional level of inspections
that will increase the expense and difficulty for Vietnamese consignments to
the US.
The USDA's
inspections are also much more burdensome and frequent than the FDA's and
have a separate "equivalency" test for imports, which adds a layer
of regulations only on imports and could take Vietnam years to implement.
In the
meantime, the Vietnam farm raised catfish industry would be completely barred
from the US market, in its entirety. The catfish rule doesn’t become
mandatory until August 2017 due to an 18-month transition period.
The US
Senate recently voted to scrap the new inspection program altogether on the
grounds it was duplicative, wasteful and unnecessary.
However, the
Senate bill would still need the approval of the US House of Representatives
and President Barack Obama’s signature to become law, a proposition that
appears highly unlikely to happen.
The US is
the leading export market for Vietnamese catfish, accounting for more than
20% of the Southeast Asian nations overseas sales. These sales totalled
US$318 million in 2015.
Truong Dinh
Hoe, general secretary of VASEP, said the stiffer requirements will create a
huge financial burden for the industry as a whole in Vietnam – if it is even
possible for them to comply – as there are huge differences between rearing,
transporting and processing catfish in the US compared with Vietnam.
US catfish,
principally farmed in southern US states of Mississippi, Alabama and
Louisiana, are grown in specially constructed shallow ponds that are filled
with well water and fed with expensive extruded feed made from grain.
In Vietnam,
catfish are grown in ponds that are supplied continuously with treated water
from the Mekong River, and are fed a less expensive diet consisting
principally of soybean meal.
Catfish
harvested in the US are transported to the processing plants live on-board
trucks equipped with aerated water tanks. In Vietnam, they are transported
live, but in well boats and not in aerated water.
Processing
plants in the US are, in general, better equipped than in Vietnam, although
there are in-country factories that possess state-of-the-art technology such
as those of Vinh Hoan Corporation, the leading supplier of catfish to the US
market.
Nguyen Ngo
Vi Tam, CEO of Vinh Hoan, said his company is one of a handful of
entrepreneurs that has an established integrated production chain running the
gamut from breeding, farming and processing to export.
Only three
local companies in Vietnam currently export catfish to the US economy,
according to Mr Tam, with his company accounting for a 45% market share.
Many – both
inside and outside of Vietnam – argue the new USDA inspection program is
simply a means of protecting the domestic US channel catfish industry by
throwing up barriers to trade by complicating the import process.
The value of
Vietnamese catfish exports to the US has been declining over the past five
years, according to VASEP. It jumped from US$358 million in 2012 to US$380
million in 2013, but has since dropped to US$318 million in 2015.
This decline
in export value was not caused by US regulations, Vo Hung Dung, vice chairman
and general secretary of the Vietnam Pangasius Association, admitted, but was
“a result of our own internal problems.”
Vietnamese
authorities have recognized for years that merely aiming to supply cheaper
product, with little regard for quality, is not the way to build a
sustainable and expanding industry, said Mr Dung, but they have failed to
act.
Dung has
called for a package of technical support from the US.
This would
be to upgrade the quality of Vietnamese catfish from farming and transport to
processing and export. He said that forcing an upgrade in quality would
provide an effective marketing tool.
Vietnamese
catfish would no longer be in the “lower segments” of the fish trade so its
export value would improve, he concluded.
VOV
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Thứ Bảy, 16 tháng 7, 2016
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