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Vietnam may outstrip Thailand as world top rice exporter in five years
24.07.2009 14:01
At the recent Thai Rice Conference, there was speculation among businessmen that Thailand is in danger of losing its position as the world’s leading rice exporter. First place may fall to Vietnam in five years as high offer prices restrain world demand for Thai rice.
| Vietnam’s rice gaining market share; record exports foreseen | | 12:38' 21/07/2009 (GMT+7) | VietNamNet Bridge – Domestic rice prices are climbing as brokers are trying to collect rice to fulfill export contracts. Exporters have been advised to be careful when signing contracts, to be sure they will have enough rice for export. Saigon Tiep Thi reports that the Mekong Delta rice market has come alive over the last week.Prices are on the increase. Farmers are selling lower quality IR50404 rice from the summer-autumn crop at 3,800-4,000 dong per kilogramme, and high quality long-grain rice at 4,350-4,500 dong per kilogramme. White and perfumed five percent broken rice is trading at over 7,000 dong per kilogramme. The Price Control Agency has forecast that prices for Vietnam’s export rice will rise over the second half of 2009, responding to growing demand. Meanwhile, baht appreciation against the dollar has made Thailand’s rice much more expensive than Vietnam’s, and has motivated the Thai Government to delay plans to sell two million tonnes of reserved rice. In the first 15 days of July, Vietnamese enterprises signed contracts to deliver another 195,000 tonnes of rice, raising the total of committed rice exports for 2009 to 5.2 million tonnes. To date, 3.85 million tonnes have been delivered, worth $1.8 billion. Exporters’ efforts to collect rice to fulfill contracts has been driving up Mekong Delta rice prices steadily.In addition, Saigon Tiep Thi has learned that Cambodian dealers are buying up perfumed and white five percent broken rice to sell to Thai buyers. Market favourable Current activity belies recent forecasts that said world rice market demand would lessen. on July 22, the Philippines will issue a tender to import 75,000 tonnes.Bids will serve as the benchmark for that country’s import of 700,000 tonnes of rice from now to the end of 2009. Information about rice prices from other big exporters like Thailand and India seems favorable to Vietnam.A source said that Thai enterprises now cannot bid for five percent of broken rice at less than $600 per tonne. Thai enterprises stocked 7,000,000 tonnes of rice at high prices before the market dipped, and are reluctant to release it at current prices.Indian plans to sell more than one million tonnes of rice have also been canceled because of the high collection price and politically uncertainties. Malaysia has purchased 500,000 tonnes of rice from Vietnam.It will import another 100,000 tonnes of rice to the end of the year and intends to buy rice from Vietnam. Other big consumers -- Africa, the Middle East, Cuba, South Korea and Japan – are also expected to be in the market during the last months of the year, which means that Vietnamese enterprises will have opportunities to sell rice in big quantities. Rice exporters advised to proceed cautiously It is estimated that another two million tons of Delta rice can be put on the world market this year, after deducting provision for replanting, human and animal consumption, and food security reserves. Bearing in mind that only about 600,000 tonnes of this amount remains uncontracted by exporters, the Vietnam Food Association has urged exporters to be careful not to promise foreign buyers more than they will be able to deliver. Many localities have reported that 25-30 percent of their rice growing land has been planted in lower quality IR50404 rice, but the signed contracts demand high quality products. Enterprises have also been reminded by VFA that they will easily collect high quality rice from farmers as they must compete with Cambodian buyers. Vietnam may outstrip Thailand as top rice exporter in five years At the recent Thai Rice Conference, there was speculation among businessmen that Thailand is in danger of losing its position as the world’s leading rice exporter. First place may fall to Vietnam in five years as high offer prices restrain world demand for Thai rice. According to the Thai Rice Association Chairman Chookiat Ophaswongse, Thailand plans to export 8-8.5 million tonnes in 2009, while Vietnam may export a record volume of six million tonnes, narrowing the gap between the two nations’ exports to 2-2.5 million tonnes from 5 million tonnes in 2009. |
VietNamNet/SGTT |
Vietnam Matures Into World's Second-Largest Coffee ExporterBuon Me Thuot, Vietnam - "The Germans are particularly picky when it comes to their coffee," says Vietnamese coffee tester Le Anh Tuan, as he produces a testing sheet to note his findings.
The sheet mentions a number of palate sensations: moldy, woody, sour and tangy, among others. "The Germans reject any of these, thus ideally I must fill in a 'zero' for all," he explains, and then slurps noisily from a freshly brewed cup.
Germany's coffee drinkers are his most treasured customers, because the country is Vietnam's largest export market for coffee.
The South-East Asian country's coffee industry has experienced rapid development over the past 25 years.
Between 1980 and 2008 coffee plantations have mushroomed from a mere 22,000 hectares to currently half a million hectares, which makes Vietnam today the world's second-largest coffee producer behind Brazil.
In 2007, Brazil harvested 36 million sacks of 60 kilograms each, while Vietnam's harvest tallied in at 18 million sacks.
Number three producer Colombia trailed with 12 million sacks.
Some 85 per cent of Vietnam's coffee is cultivated in the central highlands, about 700 kilometres north of the southern metropolis Ho Chi Minh City, formerly known as Saigon.
Almost everyone in Buon Me Thuot, the capital of Dak Lak province, is involved in the industry one way or another.
An old woman lines up neat rows of almost-black coffee bean fruits to dry in the sun. Nearby, a man shovels the dried fruit into large sacks.
The owner of a funeral parlor displays caskets at the right side of his double garage, while he has converted the left into a café, in front of which he has heaped coffee bean fruits for drying.
Coffee farmer Nguyen Tan Huy and his wife Vo Thi Nhanh from Dak Lak's Krong Buk district are busy at work. With swift movements they strip the red and green coffee bean "cherries" from the branches.
In 2001, global output was 112 million sacks, but this year the figure is expected to reach 132 million sacks.
"We have produced coffee for some 100 years," says the chairman of Vietnam's Coffee and Cocoa Growers Association Luong Van Tu.
Annual production has reached about 1 million tons this year with an export value of roughly 2 billion dollars.
Vietnam primarily cultivates Robusta coffee. Higher-quality Arabica beans only grow at relatively cool, higher elevations, which Vietnam only has in the northern mountain ranges bordering China.
But the country already plans to increase its Arabica plantations there from the current 20,000 hectares to 100,000 hectares over the next few years.
Last year, Vietnam exported about 177 tons of coffee to Germany, 134 tons to the United States and some 95 tons to Spain, its three largest customers.
Despite increasing output, quality is still a major problem. It is estimated that up to 30 per cent of Vietnamese coffee exports are rejected as "sub-standard" in ports like Rotterdam.
"If the Vietnamese would produce less and instead put more emphasis on quality, that problem would not exist. Of course, there is competition, but the coffee market is large enough to accommodate every producer," Nestor Osorio, director of the World Coffee Organization, said at a conference in Ho Chi Minh City this year.
It appears that Vietnam has taken the hint seriously, because quality improvement has now become a government programme driven particularly by the Agro-Forest Research Institute in the western highlands.
Foreign organizations like the German Society for Technological Cooperation (GTZ) lend a helping hand.
Under the organization's tutelage, farmers learn how much water the trees need for optimal growth, how much fertilizer, and how the trees have to be pruned to enhance the harvest quality.
GTZ is also supporting several cooperatives striving to adhere to the so-called 4C (Common Code for the Coffee Community) standard that prescribes rules for sustainable coffee farming under social and ecological minimum requirements in production and processing.
As with other agricultural produce, more importers are putting importance on quality certifications.
A buyer for one of the large foreign importers is likely to pay a higher price for coffee under 4C certification.
Coffee drinking, meanwhile, lags far behind production and export. only some 7 per cent of annual production stays in the country.
"I may drink a single cup in the morning to wake me up for the working day. But we are Asians. We prefer to drink tea," says farmer Nguyen Khee Tao.
| Government offers tax breaks to housing developers | | 18:44' 24/07/2009 (GMT+7) |  | Apartment blocks built for low income people in Tan Binh District of Ho Chi Minh City. | VietNamNet Bridge - The Government has amended regulations to reduce value added tax (VAT) by 50 percent on housing built by developers for students, workers, and poor people. They also get corporate tax waiver on income from these categories of housing this year.
The Government approved a draft resolution on housing for students, the urban poor, and workers in industrial parks and export processing zones at its regular monthly meeting on March 31. They will receive the following support: land rent and land-use fee waiver; no corporate income tax for the first four years; an increase in floor area ratio to reduce construction costs; the right to choose contractors; houses built for workers will be treated as part of businesses’ fixed assets and allowed to depreciate; soft loans and interest subsidy. The government’s target is to provide accommodation for 50 percent of workers at industrial parks and export processing zones by 2015. In the beginning of the year the Ministry of Construction drew up a proposal to encourage developers to build low-income housing. The ministry said of the 2 million officials in the country only two-thirds own a house. VietNamNet/SGGP |
| Sa Huynh culture in exhibition | | 17:28' 24/07/2009 (GMT+7) | VietNamNet Bridge – Around 440 objects and pictures related to Sa Huynh culture, which dates back 2000-2500 years, went on display at the Quang Ngai General Exhibition Centre on July 22. This is the first time antiques of the Sa Huynh ancient culture, the cradle of Vietnamese civilisation, and of the Dong Son civilisation in north Vietnam and Oc Eo in the south, have been exhibited in one exhibition. The event is jointly organised by the central provinces of Quang Ngai, Quang Nam and Binh Dinh on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Sa Huynh discovery. Traces of the Sa Huynh culture were found for the first time in Sa Huynh, Quang Ngai province in 1902. The Sa Huynh culture flourished between 1000 BC and 200 AD in central and southern Vietnam. The Sa Huynh people were most likely the predecessors of the Cham people, the founders of the kingdom of Champa. Sa Huynh sites were rich in locally-worked iron artifacts, typified by axes, swords, spearheads, knives and sickles. In contrast, bronze artifacts were dominant in the Dong Son culture sites found in northern Vietnam and elsewhere on mainland Southeast Asia. The Sa Huynh culture cremated adults and buried them in jars covered with lids, a practice unique to the culture. Ritually broken offerings usually accompanied the jars. The culture is also unique for its ear ornaments featuring two-headed animals. The ornaments were commonly made of jade (nephrite), but also glass. Glass bead ornaments were also commonly found in Sa Huynh burial sites. The Sa Huynh culture shows evidence of an extensive trade network. Sa Huynh beads were made of glass, carnelian, agate, olivine, zircon, gold and garnet; most of these materials were not found locally. Han Dynasty-style bronze mirrors have also been found in Sa Huynh sites. There are 48 relics related to the Sa Huynh culture ranging from the central province of Quang Binh to the southern province of Dong Nai. Some objects displayed at the exhibition:  | Home appliances and jewelry, which were buried in jar tombs – a unique characteristic of Sa Huynh culture. |
 | Jar-shaped tombs |
 | Jewelry. |
 | These jar-shaped tombs were restored from thousands of pieces by artisan Lam Du Xenh and experts from the Vietnam UNESCO Association. |
 | The exhibition attracts the young and also local and international archaeologists and researchers. |
VietNamNet/Tuoi Tre/VNE |
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