Shrimp sector must cut costs
CẦN THƠ – Việt Nam’s shrimp industry should reduce production
costs and improve food safety to improve its competitiveness.
Trương Đình
Hòe, secretary of the Việt Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers
(VASEP), made the statement at a round table on improving the competitiveness
of Việt Nam’s shrimp industry. The meeting was held by the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development’s General Department of Fisheries, VASEP
and GIZ’s Integrated Coastal Management Programme in Cần Thơ on Tuesday.
The dialogue
attracted 100 participants from central and local state offices, businesses
and farmers in Cửu Long (Mekong) River Delta.
The General
Department of Fisheries said Việt Nam had 700,000ha shrimp rearing land in 30
provinces and cities. The total area of rearing shrimp was expected to
increase to bring millions of jobs and develop a supply chain for medicine,
feed, services and processing activities.
Hòe said in
2015, Việt Nam was the second largest shrimp producer in the world,
accounting for 14 per cent of global market share. Việt Nam’s shrimp
exporters exported large amounts of giant tiger prawns to the US and
Australia.
Local shrimp
enterprises have expanded their market shares while the shrimp industries in
Thailand and China have been hit by diseases, he said.
Việt Nam
would face difficulties in exports when Thailand and China’s shrimp
industries recover if local enterprises don’t reduce production costs and
improve the quality of export shrimp, Hòe said.
Võ Văn Phục,
director of Việt Nam Clean Fishery JSC, said at the dialogue that the shrimp
industry has had low output and high production costs and was dependant on
the demand of Chinese traders.
In addition,
farmers and processing enterprises have not created production and business
chains, he said. The local supply industry has not met demand of the
processing sector while the state has not paid much attention to developing
the processing sector.
Hòe said
domestic production costs had risen, including feed, varieties, electricity
and water costs. The shrimp industry lacks strong links between farmers and
processors and has few value-added products. Some state policies for industry
have been insufficient. Meanwhile, markets such as Japan and Australia have
enhanced regulations controlling food safety for imported shrimp.
Hòe said to
improve the competitiveness of Vietnamese shrimp on the world market, the
local shrimp industry must reduce production costs and improve food safety.
The
enterprises should make use of preferential tariffs under free trade
agreements and follow export markets closely to create reasonable business
plans, he said.
Phục said
the State should only give operation licences for enterprises meeting
conditions about food safety and operation environment. It should also
enhance management for quality of material, chemical products and animal
medicines.
Many
participants said the local shrimp industry should have transparency of input
production and increase the quality of varieties and feed.
VetNamNews
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Thứ Năm, 17 tháng 11, 2016
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