HÀNỘI — Việtnam’s rice export volume in 2018 is expected to increase
by 400,000 tonnes from 2017 to reach 6 million tonnes, due to increased
demand from Southeast Asia, especially from the Philippines, with China
expected to be the country’s largest rice market.
The Vietnam Food Association (VFA), in a report earlier in January,
said countries in Southeast Asia will import a large amount of rice from
Việt Nam, helping boost the country’s turnover this year.
The VFA said Indonesia will import rice from Việt Nam and Thailand
again in 2018 to increase reserves, as Indonesia’s rice price has been
rising, almost double the floor price.
Similarly, the National Food Board of the Philippines approved of up to
250,000 tonnes of imported rice to offset declining inventories, due to
unfavourable weather in 2017.
These developments are encouraging for Việt Nam’s rice export market,
said the VFA’s report, with export price of 5 per cent broken rice
rising to US$400 per tonne from $390.
Domestic rice price also increased, with the average price between to
$267 to $293 per tonne as of January’s end, having increased by $13 to
$15 per tonne from December 2017’s price.
According to the VFA’s data, throughout 2017, the country exported 5.7 million tonnes of rice worth $2.54 billion.
As mentioned by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s 2018 world
rice production forecast, issued late 2017, the main factor behind this
year’s rice trade expansion is increased output from Việt Nam, Pakistan
and Myanmar, three of the world’s top six rice exporting countries.
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The USDA’s report stated that though 2017 global rice output fell by 20
per cent from 2016’s number, as a result of weak outlook for grain
products, long, heavy rainfall and spring floods and other unfavourable
weather, meaning there should be positive signals from traditional rice
importing markets in Southeast Asia in early 2018.
In Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, whose rice crops were heavily influenced
by harsh weather, demand for rice imports will also increase in 2018.
Rising import demand is supported by increased purchasing power in
Africa and the Middle East, while China continues to be a leading
importer of rice from neighbouring regions.
As such, Việt Nam will witness an increase in revenue from rice exports to several large consumer markets.
According to the Department of Crop Production under the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development, in early January 2018, the Mekong
Delta’s rice producers harvested 860,000 hectares of rice, with an
average yield of 5.3 tonnes per hectare.
Nonetheless, problems remain for national rice production, the majority of which stem from farmers’ ignorance.
Talking to Vietnam News Agency during a late 2017 agricultural
conference in the Mekong Delta, Võ Tòng Xuân, former vice rector of Cần
Thơ University and rice expert, emphasised growing competition in global
rice markets.
Xuân warned that Việt Nam needs to find ways to make its rice exports stand out if it wants to achieve export targets.
Regarding export rice quality, he was convinced that since rice
merchants often mix different batches from different farmers into one
large batch, there is virtually no way to completely track the origin of
any batch.
Without clear origin, there are no certain product quality controls, and no major national rice brand for Việt Nam, Xuân added.
He suggested issuing contracts between rice farmers and processing
plants for sustainable production, via agricultural co-operatives
instead of relying on middlemen.
Xuân also said that there remain regulations acting as barriers to
small and medium enterprises from entering the rice market. Exporting
low quality rice and fragrant rice without a brand name is becoming
increasingly difficult for Việt Nam, especially in finding niche markets
to sell several thousand tonnes.
Source - Vietnam News