Vietnamese firm seeks a way out with pigs and bananas

Sep 20th at 07:59
20-09-2022 07:59:00+07:00

Vietnamese firm seeks a way out with pigs and bananas

Hoang Anh Gia Lai Joint Stock Company has captured customers' attention with a unique product: pork from pigs raised on bananas.

 

Due to the ever-increasing demand for pork, the Vietnamese company plans to expand its chain of stores to about 1,000 in the near future.

According to Doan Nguyen Duc, chairman of Hoang Anh Gia Lai, 'pigs and bananas' are the salvation for their company as they have the potential for success after years of searching for a suitable business channel.

Supply cannot meet demand

When Tuoi Tre (Youth)newspaper reporters took a peek into Bapi Food's first store selling pork from banana-fed pigs in Ho Chi Minh City on Sunday afternoon, many customers were seen flocking in.

Shoppers found their way to the Bapi Food store at 319/B10 Ly Thuong Kiet Street, District 11, Ho Chi Minh City to buy pork.

Many of them had to go back home without buying anything because the special meat sold out quickly.

Tran Ngoc Nga, a customer from District 7, Ho Chi Minh City could not buy a pork belly and had to purchase a pork shoulder instead.

When she learned about the pork from banana-fed pigs in the newspaper, she and her husband went to the store to buy it, Nga said.

"It sounds a bit strange to us, so we wanted to find out whether it is different from normal pork sold in the market," the woman explained.

"Besides, the price here is not too high and we also get gifts."

According to some employees of the store, they had to stock more pork in the afternoon, but the pork was not enough to meet the demand.

Sometimes they suspended taking online orders because they were 'overwhelmed.'

Some types of pork, such as spare ribs, pork belly, and pork collar, sold out quickly. Some customers even ordered these cuts the day before.

"To meet the increasing demand for pork, our store intends to stock a larger number of pigs instead of two pigs per day as before," the employees said.

In the first week after opening, Bapi Food will give bananas, bags, and soccer T-shirts of Hoang Anh Gia Lai Club to its customers.

Clients will also be able to buy pork at discounted prices, such as spare ribs for VND210,000 (US$8.87) per kilogram and pork belly for VND178,000 ($7.52) per kilogram.

'Banana trees and pigs save Hoang Anh Gia Lai'

At the opening ceremony of the Bapi Food store on Saturday evening, where pork from banana-eating pigs was offered for the first time, chairman Duc spoke about the path that led the company to the turning point.

His company exports hundreds of thousands of tonnes of qualified bananas every year, while the bananas that did not meet the standards were used as feed for pigs and chickens, Duc said.

This has proved to be a great advantage that will help livestock farming boom in the near future, he claimed.

Duc added that thanks to 'pigs eating bananas' and 'chickens eating bananas,' his group has been rescued from the debt crisis and turned a new chapter for the company.

In his speech, Duc recalled Hoang Anh Gia Lai's earlier years when the company painstakingly sought its opportunities in various industries, including hydropower, real estate, and rubber.

His company cultivated 80,000 hectares of rubber trees in Laos and Cambodia and invested $2 billion.

When the firm invested in rubber trees, the market price of rubber latex was over $5,000 per tonne.

At the time of harvest, the market price dropped to over $1,000, while the cost was $1,400.

Hoang Anh Gia Lai was on the verge of bankruptcy because of the price drop.

"In the past two years, Hoang Anh Gia Lai has been fortunate to discover what is called 'one tree - one animal,' that is, planting banana trees and raising pigs under the circular economy model," said Duc.

The circular economy is a production and consumption model in which existing materials and products are shared, leased, reused, repaired, renovated, and recycled for as long as possible.

In this way, the life cycle of products is extended, according to the definition on the European Parliament's website.

"Pigs eat disqualified bananas and their waste can be processed into organic fertilizer for banana plantations," Duc said.

"Thanks to the model, our group's debt has dropped from a peak of VND28 trillion [$1.2 billion] to VND8 trillion [$338 million] today.

"Despite our current debts, this is no longer a problem."

The Hoang Anh Gia Lai executive is confident that his company has opened a new business chapter because the return on investment in the agricultural industry is not small at all.

He explained that, for instance, the cost of a kilogram of bananas is VND6,500 ($0.27), while the market price is sometimes VND14,000 ($0.59) per kilogram.

The price of live pigs is VND43,000 ($1.82) per kilogram, whereas the average pork rate is VND62,000 ($2.62) per kilogram.

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