News

Vietnam’s fruit and vegetable industry exports are in good shape

Fruits
Vegetables
Vietnam
Regulation & Compliances
Market & Price Trends
Published Jan 29, 2024

Tridge summary

Vietnam's fruit and vegetable industry has surpassed its 2023 goals despite facing challenges. The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development is focusing on exporting fresh peppers, coconuts, and frozen durian to China, with four new products, including medicinal materials, coconuts, frozen fruits, and fresh watermelons, expected to be approved for export. The industry is projected to reach new heights in 2024, with exports potentially exceeding US$6 billion or even reaching US$7 billion. The growth in 2023 was due to Vietnam signing export protocols with various markets, particularly China, and a 65% increase in durian exports, making it the highest exported product, surpassing dragon fruit.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

Although it has experienced a year full of difficulties and challenges, facing the demanding requirements and standards of global customers, as well as declining purchasing power and other issues, Vietnam's fruit and vegetable industry has still achieved breakthrough results and exceeded the goals set at the beginning of 2023. Vietnam Agriculture and Rural Affairs The Ministry of Development has taken multiple measures to promote stronger development of Vietnam’s fruit and vegetable industry in 2024. ​ Accordingly, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Vietnam is actively promoting the negotiation process for the formal trade export of Vietnamese fresh peppers and coconuts to the Chinese market. In addition, with frozen durian approved to be imported into China through formal trade channels, Vietnam's vegetable and fruit exports may increase in 2024. Substantial growth. ​ Phong Dejin, Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of ...
Source: Foodmate
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