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Vietnam’s exports of farm and seafood products to China amid Covid-19 outbreak 

 Monday, March 30,2020

AsemconnectVietnam - Amid Covid – 19 outbreak, Vietnam’s exports of agricultural products to China show positive signs, according to businesses.

The trade and customs clearance for agricultural products at the border with China are slowly returning to normal due to strict regulations to prevent a further outbreak of COVID-19.
Vietnam’s exports of goods and agricultural products to China in the first two weeks of March
According to Nguyen Van Giang, an official from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, China had controlled the coronavirus pandemic so the market for agricultural products would recover later this month, boosting demand for imported products, especially food.
Mr. Giang said China has paid special attention to restoring logistics services to promote domestic consumption. He said “besides administrative reforms, China has reduced taxes on 80 food items (out of a total of over 800) to boost imports. This will be an opportunity for Vietnamese businesses to promote exports, including agricultural products,”.

The statistics figures showed that in the first two weeks of this month showed that more than 15,000 tonnes of food, including fruit, seafood and cassava powder, had been exported through the Mong Cai border gate in the northern province of Quang Ninh. However, in Lang Son Province, there were still more than 1,000 container trucks, mostly carrying fruit and agricultural product, stuck waiting for export clearance.

Hoang Van, the Deputy Director of Truong Giang Seafood Joint Stock Company in the southern province of Dong Thap, said Chinese partners have come back in the recent two weeks, however their import of seafood products is only by 30 per cent prior to the COVID-19 pandemic because their logistics system has not yet completely restored.
To stabilise the market and ensure the quality of tra fish, Van said many businesses have directly exported, not via intermediaries like before.
Nguyen Lam Vien, vice president of the Viet Nam Farms and Agricultural Enterprises Association, said the Chinese market had shown signs of reviving, but remained unstable.
Vien, who is also chairman and CEO of Vinamit Joint Stock Company, said agricultural and food products would recover sooner than others, but it would be a few months before the market could be properly assessed.

“China has basically controlled the COVID-19 pandemic, but strict measures remain in place, affecting the circulation of goods. The Chinese market is in need of high quality food products, which can be good for the health and improve resistance,” Vien said.
CEO of Trung An High-tech Agriculture Joint Stock Company in the southern city of Can Tho, Pham Thai Binh, said many Vietnamese rice enterprises were confident that exports of rice to China would remain stable in the long term.

Binh said that rice exports to China plummeted in 2019. Early this year, the forecasts were that China would import more rice. “Unfortunately, the disease in China has become complicated, so rice exports have not bounced back yet.”
“After the Chinese market recovers, this country’s inventory of rice will decrease because production has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. They will increase imports,” Binh said.
He predicted that Viet Nam’s rice exports to China this year would be higher than 2019’s volume of 500,000 tonnes.

Vietnam’s seafood exports to China to fall in the first quarter of this year
According to Viet Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP), Vietnam’s seafood exports to China by land account for around 20 per cent of total value, and so the border closure has heavily impacted exports in the first quarter.
VASEP forecast that in the best case, seafood exports to China in the first quarter would be 40 per cent lower than in the last quarter of last year though still 10 per cent higher year-on-year. If the disease persists for a long time, full-year export to China could see a 6 per cent drop, it warned.
Mr. Truong Dinh Hoe, general secretary of VASEP, said the disease's effect on exports in the first few months of the year had not been too drastic, and China's seafood imports usually pick up after March or April.

Meanwhile, Mr. Doan Chi Thien, a management board member at Nam Viet Corporation, said the Lunar New Year holiday was extended until February 9 in most of China’s provinces, and so businesses were unable to export shark catfish to them.
While shark catfish exports to China are expected to take a big hit, it is only temporary, while other markets are importing the product normally, with ones like South America and Europe in fact increasing shipments, according to Mr. Thien. His company has been focusing on diversifying its markets and reducing dependence on only one market, he added.
Pham Thanh Tung of seafood supplier Vinh Hoan Corporation said his company hoped demand would pick up in the second quarter, adding that it had already been working on expanding its markets.
CK
Source: VITIC/Vietnamplus.vn/VOV.VN/VNS

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