Honey exporters eye EU
market
HCM
CITY - The European market has high demand for honey, offering great
opportunities for Vietnamese honey producers to boost exports.
People
taking bees out of canvas to harvest the honey. - VNA/VNS Photo Phạm Kiên
But honey quality needs to improve
if beekeepers who make honey want to expand markets, speakers at a seminar
said on Wednesday in HCM City.
Most of the Vietnamese honey output
is exported and meets the EU’s technical requirements on chemical residue in
honey products, according to Lê Thanh Hòa, deputy director of the Việt Nam
Sanitary and Phytosanitary Notification Authority and Enquiry Point (SPS Việt
Nam).
In 2013, Việt Nam was allowed to
export honey to the EU market, but Việt Nam’s honey exports to the market
accounted for a modest ratio compared to the country’s total honey exports.
Hòa said the seminar aimed to help
local businesses understand more about EU market demand as well as quality
and technical requirements.
Đinh Quyết Tâm, deputy chairman of
the Việt Nam Beekeepers Association, said Việt Nam produced 49,560 metric
tonnes of honey last year. Of that amount, 40,174 metric tonnes were
exported, with exports to the US accounting for more than 38,500 metric
tonnes and the EU at only 1,330 metric tonnes.
EU demand for honey is as high as
that of the US, he said, adding that honey consumption is expected to remain
high.
“Europe honey production is not
self-sufficient and is dependent on honey imports from other countries
because the European beekeeping sector has shrunk in size.”
This trend is expected to remain in
the coming years, offering opportunities for Vietnamese honey exporters, Tâm
said.
In addition, when the EU-Việt Nam
Free Trade Agreement comes into effect, it will offer more favourable
conditions for Vietnamese firms to export honey to the EU market.
Compliance issues
Speaking at the seminar, Nikolaus Bieger,
an international expert with the EU-Mutrap project, said: “European importers
are keen to buy honey from Việt Nam, so this is good news for local
exporters.”
Vietnamese honey exporters to the EU
must comply with legally binding requirements, including those on food safety
and traceability, hygiene and control, pesticide residue and genetically
modified organisms, among others.
The Vietnamese Government has
established a legal basis to export Vietnamese honey into the EU, but
Vietnamese honey faces enormous problems to be accepted in the EU market,
according to Bieger.
The problems include high glycerine
and yeast content and acidity levels. All these parameters indicate ‘unripe’
harvested honey, and consequently non-desired fermentation or ‘stopped or
stuck’ fermentation, he said.
“European consumers don’t want
fermented honey because it changes the odour and taste. So if you really want
to export or to raise significantly your exports to Europe, you have to
change something in production,” he added.
Besides these main issues, there are
problems with feed residue found in honey produced by bees raised with
soybeans.
“For us honey is a health product,
so it should be something pure without contamination or any other changes,”
he said. “The solution is to find resources which can provide protein to
bees, which is now being replaced with soya. But this is difficult.”
The other solution would be to have
more space for bees to have better separation from feed, pollen and honey by
adding another section to the bee-breeding box, he said.
Currently, bees are bred in a single
box, so when honey is harvested, bee feed can easily mix with honey, he said.
This means that producers must improve their methods of operating.
Nguyễn Việt Cường, CEO of Dak Nguyên
Hồng Company, one of the largest honey exporters in the country, said besides
the US market, Vietnamese honey exporters should promote exports to EU and
other markets to diversify their markets and avoid risks.
Local exporters should also focus
more on improving product quality and building brands for their products.
The seminar, which discussed
expansion of Vietnamese honey exports to the EU market, was organised by SPS
Việt Nam with the support of the EU-Mutrap project. - VNS
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Thứ Năm, 2 tháng 11, 2017
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