Vietnam’s cashew industry turns to
Cambodia
Vietnam is the world’s leading
cashew nut exporter, but the industry relies heavily on imported raw
materials
Vietnam’s cashew
industry has invested in 500,000 hectares of plantations in Cambodia with
the vision of turning its southwestern neighbor into a major supplier.
Workers sort raw cashew nuts at a processing facility in Vietnam. Photo: Tuoi Tre
The Vietnam
Cashew Association (Vinacas) has pledged to provide technical support to
Cambodian farm owners to reach a yearly yield of one million metric tons of
raw cashew nuts by the end of 2028.
According to
Vinacas, as of 2017 Vietnam
was the world’s No.1 processor and exporter of cashew nuts, a position it has
held for the last 12 consecutive years.
Last year,
the country exported over US$3.5 billion worth of cashew, a 20-percent surge
on 2016.
However,
local cashew nut processors rely heavily on raw materials imported from
African countries, which have demanded a high price.
Ho Ngoc Cam,
director of a Ho Chi Minh City-based agricultural exporter, said the price of
imported raw cashew nuts from Africa had risen from $1,000 per ton to
$2,200-2,300 per ton over the past three or four years.
“Some
Vietnamese businesses have remained in operation only to provide job security
for their workers, as they make little to no profit based on the current
price of raw imported cashews,” Cam said.
Shipments
from Africa can also take up to 40 days to reach Vietnam, at a cost of $70-80 per
ton, further increasing costs of local cashew processors.
Shipments
from Cambodia
will cost a little more than $10 per ton, according to Vietnamese businesses.
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Workers sort raw cashew nuts at a processing facility in Vietnam.
Photo: Tuoi Tre
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Vinacas
president Nguyen Duc Thanh forecasts Vietnam’s cashew processing
capacity to reach two million tons per year, with domestic production
accounting for less than a fifth of that demand, at 300,000-350,000 tons a
year.
Vietnam is
currently ranked fourth globally in terms of cashew production, behind India, Ivory
Coast and Brazil.
Cooperation
with Cambodian producers to supply raw materials to Vietnamese processing
companies is a profitable business model for both sides, Thanh asserted.
Vietnam’s long-term
goal would be to turn Cambodia
into its top supplier of the nut rather than Africa,
he added.
At a meeting
with Vinacas last December, Hean Vann Horn, head of Cambodia’s
General Department of Agriculture, expressed his confidence that the country
was more than capable of growing over 500,000 hectares of cashew.
Prior to
2014, only 30 percent of Cambodia’s
raw cashew nuts were exported to Vietnam, the Cambodian official
said, but that figure had grown to 98 percent as of today.
Thanh
dismissed the idea that Cambodia
could one day surpass Vietnam
as a major cashew exporter, citing the Vietnamese businesses' use of modern
technology to produce top-quality products.
“Our
competitors are China and India. Cambodia and
African countries are our partners,” he asserted.
In 2017, Vietnamese businesses
spent over $2.5 billion importing more than 1.3 million tons of raw cashew
nuts for processing.
To realize the goal of developing
500,000 hectares of cashew plantations in Cambodia, Vinacas has provided
their Cambodian partners with monetary support of VND1.5 billion ($66,000)
to grow one million cashew trees from now until 2022.
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