Pesticide
use unjustly blights tea industry image
The global tea markets prefer
mass-produced teas that are standardized in quality and taste, said speakers
from the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) at a recent business forum in
Hanoi.
At the
conference, chaired by the Plant Protection Department under MARD, speakers
told those in attendance that the domestic market to the contrary has had a
traditional preference for low-production handmade teas.
Today, most
exported teas cultivated in Vietnam are grown as a commodity in specially
designated areas and shipped to foreign markets where they are further
processed and packaged for resale.
This
movement towards standardization has led to an increase of administrative or
so called ‘non-tariff barriers to trade’ in markets such as the EU and Japan,
as these economies ignore the reasonable thresholds for pesticide use as
established by the World Health Organization (WHO).
The WHO has established perfectly rational CODEX
Alimentarius thresholds for residue levels, yet the EU, Japan and other
markets have routinely been imposing residue standards that are three to five
hundred fold these levels.
The EU and
Japan have virtually frozen out imports of tea from Vietnam, while the US is
performing many more food safety inspections than in the past. Iran, another
major export market, is now also requiring additional documents attesting to
the cleanliness of the tea on shipment.
Vietnam is
just the latest tea supplier to suffer a loss of reputation.
Previously, it was India. As a result, the upward trajectory of exports has
been thwarted and the sales revenue in several key tea categories is off the
mark.
For the
seven months leading up to August of 2016, the volume of tea exports jumped
4.9% to 69,000 metric tons but the overall value dipped 2.1% to US$110
million, according to official statistics.
For 2015,
exports dropped 5.5% in volume to 125,000 metric tons from 2014, which in overall
general terms means that for the past two-years the volume of sales has been
holding fairly steady but revenue has fallen significantly.
The average
price of Vietnamese tea for the seven months January-July 2016 dropped 6.6%
to US$1,160 per metric ton, against the average price for the same
seven-month period in 2015.
Meanwhile
the sales price of exports per metric ton has traded for about 60-70% less
than that of competitors from Kenya, Sri Lanka, China and India – the largest
four players in the global tea markets for the first seven-months of 2016.
While
surveys support the fact that some abuse of pesticides exist in the tea
industry, there is also little doubt that much of the alleged abuse is
overstated and there are not in reality the serious quality issues as has
been reported, said MARD speakers.
Much of the
problem lies with competitors in importing markets throwing up administrative
‘non-tariff barriers to trade’ as a red herring to disguise their real intent
to protect themselves from foreign competition.
The goal of
those throwing up these barriers is either to stop Vietnamese teas from
entering the market or, in the alternative, to trash the industry’s image and
drive the price of its tea downwards so as to make exports to the market
unprofitable.
Certainly,
more can be done by the industry to market higher quality green and fermented
teas, said speakers from MARD, - but they noted the pesticide problem cuts
across the entire global food supply.
Vietnamese
tea is neither more at risk nor more protected from it.
VOV
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Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 8, 2016
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