Illegal imports sinking local aquaculture

Apr 29th at 07:50
29-04-2021 07:50:24+07:00

Illegal imports sinking local aquaculture

While local aquaculture has started to grow significantly in recent years, the business community is increasingly facing competition from illegal imports, according to the Cambodian Aquaculturist Association (CAA).

The CAA on April 27 expressed concern on social media that the import of fisheries products to compete with local products in an unfair and inequitable way, combined with the dishonest business practices of a handful of people, will harm local aquaculture.

CAA president Sok Raden told The Post on April 27 that the illegal importation of large quantities of aquaculture products from neighbouring countries on a daily basis is a constant source of difficulties for local farmers.

These difficulties could mar the government's plans to boost production capacity to meet domestic demand and have enough to spare for export, he said.

He added that illegal imports not only generate losses of tax revenue for the state, but also skirt suitable quality-control measures and originate from dubious breeding sources, which could harm consumers' health.

"Illegal imports with unclear quality control not only undermine plans towards exporting Cambodian aquaculture products to international markets, but even the breeding operations that serve domestic needs could face bankruptcy," he said.

He encouraged importers to stock up on fish from local farmers and limit imports to products that locals cannot produce.

However, he acknowledged that Cambodian aquaculture products could be slightly more expensive than in neighbouring countries due to the Kingdom's well-organised environment, water control and high-quality feed.

According to Raden, Cambodia is well-capable of supplying some species of fish, especially “pra” (Pangasius djambal), “po” (Pangasius larnaudii), “andeng” (catfish of the Clarias genus), “chdo” (giant snakehead or Channa micropeltes) and “kranh” (climbing perch or Anabas testudineus).

Kandal, Pursat, Kampong Thom, Prey Veng, Siem Reap, Kampong Cham, Tbong Khmum and Takeo provinces now account for the majority of the Kingdom's fish farms, he said.

The owner of a fish farm in Kampong Cham province's Batheay district, Phan Phirum, who has eight ponds on an area of 6ha with an average production capacity of 7,000 tonnes per year, said the import of fish from Vietnam that can be produced domestically has had a very negative impact on local fish farmers.

He encouraged importers to wait after farms had all sold their harvest before bringing in fisheries from abroad.

"The situation with the Covid-19 outbreak has severely affected fish farmers in Cambodia because it is difficult to sell, due to the large imports from neighbouring countries," he said.

He added that the problem is universal across all fish farms and may cause farmers to quit the business.

Aquaculture production stood at 400,400 tonnes last year, up 30.25 per cent from the 307,408 tonnes posted in 2019, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries reported in December.

phnompenh post

 



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Three firms join food market drive for red zones

Aeon Mall, Makro and Virak Buntham Express on April 26 said they will work with the Ministry of Commerce to provide essential food items for sale in designated red...

Cambodian exports to Thailand dip by nearly half in first quarter of 2021

Cambodian exports to Thailand plunged 48.93 per cent to $329.54 million in the first quarter (Q1) of 2021, from $645.23 million in the year-ago period, according to...

Trademark registration moved online

The Ministry of Commerce has suspended in-person requirements for trademark registration and other related procedures, and opened up an online portal tentatively...

COs still issued amid lockdown, logistics bottlenecks

The Ministry of Commerce urged producers and exporters to continue applying for certificates of origin (CO) despite transport and logistics issues stemming from the...

Livestock sector asks gov’t to let supplies through blockades

Livestock industry players have asked the government to allow the movement of raw feed materials and medical supplies across blockades amid lockdown to support...

Safe foods stores keep prices steady amid lockdown

A number of safe-agricultural-product specialist stores in Phnom Penh have expressed their commitment to maintain the prices of their commodities and contribute to...

Garment lobby calls for understanding as lockdown halts production

Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia (GMAC) on April 19 urged buyers and stakeholders not to penalise its members for failing to honour pre-agreed delivery...

Aquaculture group urges authorities to enforce import rules, ease transport issues

The Cambodian Aquaculturist Association (CAA) on April 19 called on relevant authorities and institutions to enforce compliance with fish-import regulations and...

Commerce ministry rolls out mobile markets to Red Zones

The Ministry of Commerce on April 20 dispatched five trucks to seven “Red Zones” to sell food products and groceries at below-market prices during the ongoing...

Revenue from international tourism dips 80 per cent in 2020

Cambodia booked just $1.023 billion in international tourism revenue last year, representing a 79.4 per cent nosedive from $4.919 billion in 2019 due to the...


MOST READ


Back To Top