Southeast Asian fruit farmers under the epidemic have suffered heavy losses due to export difficulties to China

Published 2022년 2월 8일

Tridge summary

The article highlights the significant challenges faced by fruit farmers in Vietnam, Myanmar, and Thailand due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with a focus on the problems encountered in exporting their produce, particularly dragon fruit from Vietnam and watermelons from Myanmar. The pandemic has disrupted traditional export routes, leading to prolonged border closures, high shipping costs, and difficulties in preserving perishable goods. This has resulted in massive losses and financial distress for farmers, with some facing heavy debt and shifting their focus to less profitable crops. Thai fruit exporters are also grappling with similar issues, as their products are typically exported to China via Vietnam and Laos. In response, Thailand is developing a disinfectant for durian packaging to meet Chinese market standards and is predicting a boost in durian production. The report underscores the severe impact of the pandemic on the agricultural sector in Southeast Asia, especially due to the reliance on the Chinese market and the disruption of normal export operations.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

According to foreign media reports, many fruit farmers in Vietnam, Myanmar and Thailand are in trouble due to export difficulties caused by the epidemic. At the end of December, due to the three positive nucleic acid tests on the Vietnamese dragon fruit and its packaging, Friendship Guan took a 4-week circuit breaker on the dragon fruit. As a result, the price of dragon fruit in Vietnam plummeted by 25% within a week, and the price per kilogram was less than 25%. 5,000 VND (about 1.4 yuan). In early January, the price of dragon fruit was only 500 VND, equivalent to 0.14 yuan/kg. Many fruit farmers had to give up picking and let the fruit mature and rot. During the long epidemic, many growers have become heavily in debt, and some gave up planting dragon fruit directly, and some fruit farmers admitted that now "growing dragon fruit is like gambling". Dang Phuc Nguyen, secretary general of the Vietnam Fruit and Vegetable Association, said that more than 1 million Vietnamese dragon ...
Source: Guojiguoshu

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