The table towards the revival of the mulberry industry in Vietnam

Published Jun 10, 2023

Tridge summary

A seminar was held in Yen Bai province, Vietnam, to discuss the development of mulberry production and consumption. The presentation highlighted a recovery and increase in mulberry cultivation areas over the past six years, reaching 13,166 hectares by 2021. The Central Highlands is the largest mulberry-growing region, and there's potential for growth in the North, especially in Yen Bai province. Despite challenges like manual labor, weather dependence, and low actual yield, advancements in mulberry variety breeding and cultivation techniques have been noted. The article also emphasizes the need for mechanization, improved technology in value-added products, and efforts to raise quality and efficiency in mulberry production. The article also mentions the start of mulberry cultivation and silkworm rearing in Van Chan district and the introduction of GQ2 mulberry cultivars by the Research Center.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Mulberry recovered, increased continuously in the last 6 years On June 8, in Viet Thanh commune (Tran Yen district, Yen Bai province), the National Center for Agricultural Extension, the Vietnam Academy of Agricultural Sciences and the Research Center The Central Committee of Silkworm coordinated to organize a seminar on solutions to develop production and consumption of mulberry products in Yen Bai province. The seminar was attended by more than 100 delegates from the National Center for Agricultural Extension, the Vietnam Academy of Agricultural Sciences, the Central Mulberry Research Center, representatives of the agricultural sector in Tran Yen and Van Chan districts. (Yen Bai province) and communes in the planning area for mulberry development, businesses, cooperatives, households growing mulberry and raising silkworms in Yen Bai province. At the seminar, Dr. Nguyen Thi Min, Deputy Director of the Central Mulberry Research Center assessed: Thanks to the strong and ...
Source: Agriculture

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