Kampot pepper yield down

May 20th at 15:14
20-05-2013 15:14:14+07:00

Kampot pepper yield down

This year’s weather has proven too hot for the Kingdom’s famous Kampot pepper, as yields of the spice dropped for the first time since 2008.

Some 22 tonnes of pepper were harvested this year between January and May, short of the 27 tonnes predicted for this season, and a tonne lower than last year’s yield, said Nguon Lay, director of the Kampot Pepper Promotion Association (KPPA).


This is the first drop in output, he said, since pepper growers in the region formed the KPPA in October 2008, which today has a combined pepper farmland of 41 hectares and 102,500 trees.

The decreased yield is a result of the recent hot and dry spell, which damaged some of the yield, he said. “If there are drops in crops, we are worried about the reputation of the pepper as well.”

Similarly, Him Anna, director of Bright Starling Holdings Co, which maintains a pepper plantation, said: “The problem stemmed from [the lack of] water. It was dry around there in March, when the pepper bears crops.”

Her 2.5-hectare plantation in Kampot was expected to produce up to six tonnes this year, but eventually produced less than four tonnes, she said.

However, the quality of pepper had remained unaffected, she insisted, adding that to ensure the same situation does not repeat next year, she would drill wells to pump water from underground.

Despite the lower output, said Lay, KPPA was still able to meet the demand from buyers, because the contracts signed involved an output lower than what has been produced. Black pepper corns make up about 60 to 70 per cent of KPPA’s output each year, with the rest coming from red and white pepper.

Kampot pepper, which is grown in certain districts in Kampot and Kep, received its protected geographical indication (GI) status from the Cambodian government in April 2010, the first local produce to attain this recognition.

GI is an internationally accepted standard that protects the intellectual property rights of a product from a specific geographical region, such as Champagne from France.

In January, Lay told the Post that that prices for pepper had risen, partly in response to the strong market demand. Black pepper cost $11 per kilogram this year, compared to $8 last year, while white pepper cost $18, up from $15.

Lay also reportedly said that by 2015, KPPA’s output would reach 50 tonnes, through pepper trees that have been newly planted.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Cambodia exports to Thailand rise as nations improve economic ties

Cambodia’s total exports to Thailand sharply increased in the first quarter of the year, according to official data from Ministry of Commerce received by the Post...

Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam prepare for aviation upgrade

Civil aviation officials from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam gathered in Vientiane for the second meeting of the Regional Joint Coordinating Committee as part of...

Instalment payments for goods gaining purchase

AEON Microfinance (Cambodia) Co, part of Japan-based AEON Group, said sales by instalment for electrical appliances and motorbikes increased by 715 per cent in the...

MIME launches business award

The government wants to play a bigger role in helping local businesses remain competitive and, to this end, the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy (MIME) has...

Japan signs a $90m loan deal to improve highway

After reaching agreement late last month, the contract for a $90 million concession loan from Japan to Cambodia was officially signed in Phnom Penh yesterday to...

Cambodia’s beauty industry blossoming

The beauty business in the Kingdom is growing rapidly as incomes are rising and the middle-class is growing, industry insiders told the Post yesterday.

Bangladesh woes spare Kingdom

A recent string of disasters rocking Bangladesh’s garment industry has highlighted its factories’ shocking safety record, and stoked optimism that giant fashion...

Cambodia’s petroleum imports decrease

The Kingdom imported 412,190 tonnes of petroleum in the first quarter of 2013, compared with 471,000 tonnes in the same period the previous year, a decline of 12...

Holiday makers travel to northeast

Tourists preferred to visit Cambodia’s northeastern provinces, particularly Ratanakkiri, during the public holidays to celebrate King Norodom Sihamoni’s birthday...

Thai restrictions cap cassava exports

Cambodia’s cassava exports reached 245,438 tonnes in the first quarter this year, a 47 per cent decline quarter-on-quarter, from 465,640 tonnes in the final quarter...


MOST READ


Back To Top