Authorities seek ways to promote VietGap vegetables

Oct 10th at 08:47
10-10-2018 08:47:43+07:00

Authorities seek ways to promote VietGap vegetables

Cooperatives involved in growing VietGap (Vietnamese Good Agricultural Practices) vegetables should first build trust with consumers and producers before expanding cultivation, experts have said.

 

Availabe land to grow vegetables under VietGap standards is abudnant, but many co-operatives only use 50-60 per cent of land because of a lack of buyers, according to a report from the HCM City Department of Industry and Trade.

Nguyen Thanh Cong, director of Susu Cong Thanh Co-Operative in Lam Dong Province, said that his co-operative has a 42ha area for vegetables under VietGap standards, with 13 members and 207 households.

The co-operative supplies four to seven tonnes of vegetables of 56 kinds to three wholesale markets in HCM City daily.

However, in recent years, total output from the cooperatives to HCM City has dropped by 60 – 70 percent.

Nguyen Nguyen Phuong, a representative of HCM City’s Department of Industry and Trade, said that a lack of trust and linkages between consumers and producers was the main reason.

“Customers find it difficult to check the farms and cooperatives producing clean vegetables,” he said.

To improve food safety, HCM City authorities are seeking ways to trace agricultural produce sold through both modern and traditional retail channels.

By the end of this year, the city aims to have all goods sold via modern distribution channels meet VietGap standards, have proper packaging, and be traceable through mobile phones, according to the Department of Industry and Trade.

Since January of last year, the city has been experimenting with various ways to improve produce traceability..

Cu Chi District’s Phu Loc Agricultural Co-Operative has, for instance, been using QR code stamps, which allow customers to see the entire farming and transportation process.

The Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has been organising training classes for farmers and providing them with equipment to upload data about product origins.

In addition, Binh Chanh Province’s Phuoc An Agricultural Co-Operative noted that the reputation of its products improved after they began affixing QR stamps.

However, Phu Loc Cooperative lacks skilled and meticulous supervisors, and the restocking of stamps is costly as well.

In addition, data entry is inefficient, with officials having to meet each farmer to collect data, while traceable produce is not a priority for many retailers and distributors.

The most traditional markets, which account for most of the food distributed in the country, sell goods whose origins are not traceable and do not keep records or receipts.

Many farmers are still struggling to enter data using modern technology, and unstable internet connections in remote areas slow down uploading of data.

A key solution to boost consumption of farm produce would be to increase connections among producers and distributors.

The city has held activities to promote farmers’ products to consumers through trade fairs, workshops and promotions both inside and outside the country.

Better linkages between farmers and businesses will also help both producers and distributors reduce losses, and prevent a big drop in prices due to abundant supply, according to experts.

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