Weather reduces coffee crop

Jun 10th at 11:05
10-06-2013 11:05:10+07:00

Weather reduces coffee crop

Viet Nam is expected to produce a 25 per cent lower output of coffee this year against a record output of 315,500 tonnes last year, according to the Viet Nam Cocoa and Coffee Association (Vicofa).

 

The fall is due to lack of rain during the time coffee trees were flowering.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) said coffee exports would slow down in coming months due to low stockpiles and slow sales.

The export of Vietnamese coffee fell by 29.9 per cent in April to 110,000 tonnes and was estimated to drop further in May.

Coffee exports in the first five months this year fell by 23 per cent in volume to 697,000 tonnes and by 22 per cent in value to US$1.49 million.

National stocks are low because growers sold a large volume of coffee when the price was VND43 million per tonne.

This could make coffee prices higher in coming months, the ministry said.

On Wednesday, coffee beans sold for VND41 million per tonne and the export price stood at $1,934 per tonne in the Tay Nguyen (Central Highland) provinces.

The association expects consumption of coffee on the world market to increase in the next 18 months from the 139 million bags (60kg/bag) last year.

Meanwhile, the world stock fell by 17.1 per cent to 15.1 million bags compared with the same period of last year.

In 2012, Viet Nam earned $3.5 billion from coffee exports, accounting for 5 per cent of the nation's exports.

At present, coffee is grown on more than 500,000ha, but in an industry development plan, the Government wants to lower this figure.

To increase the quality of coffee plants, the association said one-third of the plants were ageing and need to be replaced.

It is forecast that in the next 10 years, about a half of the nation's coffee plants must be replaced.

The association has sent a petition to the ministry asking for the establishment of a stabilisation fund for the development of the coffee industry.

The fund would come from coffee export revenue, plus money mobilised from the coffee-growers.

It has also asked the Government to lend the money to farmers at low interest rates.

vietnamnews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

The business stories about the 200 businessmen with Nguyen family name

The number of profitable businesses managed by Nguyen businessmen was five times higher than the unprofitable ones. However, not all of them felt satisfactory about...

Viet Nam eyes co-operation with Turkey

A delegation of Turkish firms operating in electronics, machinery and information technology met yesterday with 100 Vietnamese business leaders to explore business...

Thai Nguyen targets $4-5 billion in FDI

The northern province of Thai Nguyen has set a target of attracting up to US$5 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI) this year.

Bright outlook for trade ties with Brazil

Viet Nam's exports to Brazil had a higher growth rate than other Asian countries in the first four months of the year, reports Thoi bao kinh te Viet Nam (Viet Nam...

Bright outlook for trade ties with Brazil

Viet Nam's exports to Brazil had a higher growth rate than other Asian countries in the first four months of the year, reports Thoi bao kinh te Viet Nam (Viet Nam...

Bright outlook for trade ties with Brazil

Viet Nam's exports to Brazil had a higher growth rate than other Asian countries in the first four months of the year, reports Thoi bao kinh te Viet Nam (Viet Nam...

HSBC slices GDP growth prediction

HSBC lowered its anticipation on Viet Nam's GDP growth to 5.1 per cent this year from the previous 5.5 per cent in its monthly Viet Nam at a Glance report released...

Local exporters slowly regaining their mojo

The export and import turnovers of Vietnam’s domestically-owned enterprises have produced a $3 billion trade deficit for the first five months of the year, a...

Both trade deficit and surplus cause big worries to Vietnamese

Just within half a year, Vietnam’s foreign trade has gone from one extreme to another. However, both the trade deficit and trade surplus cause worries.

Tourism year to focus on Highlands

The mountains and forests of the Central Highlands will come into sharp focus at the year-long National Tourism Year 2014 event, organisers said last Friday.


MOST READ


Back To Top