Việt Nam shrimp exports remain buoyant
HCM CITY -
Shrimp exports increased sharply last year and the trend will continue this
year, according to the Việt Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and
Producers (VASEP).
Workers at a shrimp
processing plant. Việt Nam’s
shrimp exports surged last year and good growth is also expected this year. -
VNA/VNS Photo
The exports were worth an
estimated US$3.8 billion last year, $700 million up from 2016 and $400
million higher than the association’s target.
There was big demand for
shrimp in key markets such as the EU, China,
Japan, and South Korea
especially during the year-end festive season, VASEP said.
In the first 11 months of
last year, the EU was the largest importer of Vietnamese shrimp, with
shipments to the market going up by 42.4 per cent to $780 million and
accounting for 22.2 per cent of Việt Nam’s exports.
Shrimp exports to China surged by 60.2 per cent to $637.9
million in the period, but shipments to the US fell by 7.8 per cent mainly
due to high anti-dumping duties.
Trương Đình Hòe, VASEP’s
general secretary, said the strong growth in shrimp exports last year was
mainly thanks to better control of antibiotic usage in breeding the crustacean,
an increase in exports of processed products, and buyers’ increased
confidence in Vietnamese shrimp products.
In the EU, Vietnamese shrimp
exporters enjoyed preferential treatment under the bloc’s Generalised System
of Preferences while Thailand
and China,
the two main competitors, did not.
India’s shrimp
exports to the EU were down because antibiotics were being frequently found
in its products, and Indian companies faced the risk of bans, he said.
This meant European importers
were looking for safer shrimp products, including from Việt Nam, he said.
The depreciation of the US
dollar against the euro and yen had also supported Vietnamese exports, the
association said.
Trần Văn Lĩnh, chairman of
Thuận Phước Seafood and Trading Corporation, told Việt
Nam News that an increase in the shrimp farming area, an
improvement in farming technology and the quality of shrimp used for
breeding, reduction in the use of antibiotics, and an expansion of
eco-friendly farming had helped create reliable supply sources for processors
besides helping them meet export standards.
“A number of Vietnamese
shrimp processors have invested in producing value-added shrimp products,
heralding a new export age.”
Last year his company earned
$91 million from shrimp exports compared to $75 million in 2016, he said.
“Export volume went up by
only 5 per cent last year, but thanks to an increase in export of value-added
products, which accounted for 90 per cent of the exports, export revenues
were up.
“Việt Nam has a
good reputation for value-added shrimp products.”
Shrimp exports in 2018
This year his company would
strive to maintain a strong foothold in its key markets, including the EU and
Japan,
Lĩnh said.
This year the market would be
more favourable than 2017, he said.
“The Việt Nam-EU Free Trade
Agreement, which is expected to come into effect this year, will help make
Vietnamese shrimp more competitive than Thai and Indonesian, and Việt Nam’s
shrimp exports to EU will be better this year.”
VASEP has also forecast that
shrimp exports would rise strongly this year, especially to the EU, China, Japan,
and South Korea.
China has high
demand for seafood and its domestic output has reduced due to diseases and unfavourable
weather.
Since December that country
has cut import tariff on frozen shrimp from 5 per cent to 2 per cent.
These factors would boost
Việt Nam’s shrimp exports
to China, and the country
could surpass Japan
to become the second largest market.
But Lĩnh said currently
shrimp exports to China
were mainly in the form of border trade, with the key items being unprocessed
products with low added value.
Vietnamese authorities should
work with their Chinese counterparts to increase official shrimp exports and
Vietnamese exporters should increase shipments of processed products to
increase revenues, he said.
Despite many advantages, the
shrimp industry could also encounter some challenges this year, including
risks like unfavourable weather and diseases.
Hồ Quốc Lực, general director
of Sao Ta Foods JSC, said “The biggest challenge to the industry is its small
scale of farming, often making it difficult to trace product origin whereas
import markets lay much emphasis on food safety and traceability of products.”
In this context, the industry needs
to enhance quality control and build breeding areas of international
standards to mitigate its weaknesses and boost exports this year, Lực added.
VNS
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