SOURCE: Vietnam Net
Dragon fruit prices have fallen off a cliff after the impasse at the China border due to COVID-19 fears held up Vietnamese trucks laden with various goods since late of last year.
Pham Kim Lam, a farmer in Ham Thuan Bac District, said the current dragon fruit prices of VND1,000-3,000 per kilogramme caused him to lose VND100 million (US$4,400) this season.
“I have cut down more than 1,000 dragon fruit trees and keep only around 600 to monitor the situation. If prices do not increase in the next few months, I will cut them all down.
“I still haven’t decided what fruit tree to switch to, but it is impossible to keep dragon fruit trees because fertilisers are very expensive.”
According to farmers, one kilogramme of dragon fruit grown in the off-season must fetch VND7,000-10,000 for them to break even due to the high costs of fertilisers and electricity, while currently in some places prices have fallen to even VND500.
The cost of labour for harvesting alone is VND600 per kilogramme.
Pham Thi Lan, another farmer, said she recently sold five tonnes of the fruit to a trader for just VND2 million, and called it “fortunate”, saying many farmers just could not sell their produce but still had to hire labourers to clean their orchards.
“After this crop, my family has to temporarily stop farming because there is no money left.”
According to the Dragon Fruit Association of Binh Thuan Province, the price of the fruit has dropped sharply because export by road to China through the northern border is unviable since it is congested due to China’s tightened COVID-19 preventive measures for people, vehicles and goods packaging.
Exporting by sea is infeasible due to the scarcity of containers and high transport costs, it said.
Many dragon fruit export firms in Binh Thuan are also struggling.
Container shipping costs in Vietnam have quadrupled from pre-pandemic levels, even increased eight-fold, on certain high-demand routes, SSI Research said.
Huynh Canh, vice chairman of the Dragon Fruit Association of Binh Thuan Province, said shipping costs had increased from $1,600 per container at the beginning of 2020 to $5,000 by that year-end and to $9,100 now.
According to the Vietnam Maritime Administration, the pandemic has forced shipping companies to cut back on operations, causing a shortage of containers, and the closure of many ports around the world has increased shipping costs.
To help farmers, the association is looking at domestic consumption channels like traditional markets and supermarkets, but demand remains modest.
With exports to China falling to a trickle, it has urged authorities to step up promotion to help find customers elsewhere, especially in India, and develop the domestic market through supermarket chains to reduce the dependence on the northern neighbour.
With vegetarians making up a large proportion of the Indian population and people there consuming imported dragon fruit at weddings, it is potentially a huge market for Vietnam, experts said.
Local authorities advise farmers not to destroy dragon fruit orchards
Local authorities in the Mekong Delta have coordinated with related agencies to advise people not to destroy their dragon fruit orchards because the authorities will have a solution and dragon fruit is the main crop in the province, said Vo Thanh Long, Chairman of the People’s Committee of Vinh Cong Commune in Long An Province’s Chau Thanh District.
Today, Ms. Dinh Thi Phuong Khanh, Deputy Director of the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development of Long An Province, said that dragon fruit prices are falling sharply because they cannot be exported to China. Because of the low selling price which is not enough to cover production costs, many households have cut down and switched to growing yellow apricots and other fruit trees…
As noted, dragon fruit growers in Long An and Tien Giang provinces have currently cut down the area of dragon fruit to switch to fruit trees and some other trees.
Mr. Truong Quoc Phuong in hamlet 7, Vinh Cong Commune in Chau Thanh District has nearly 10 years of growing dragon fruit with an area of more than 10 hectares. The family spent much on fertilizer and medicine for treating diseases on dragon fruit plants, not to mention the cost of hiring workers from VND35,000 an hour to VND 40,000 an hour.
Therefore, he last year destroyed a little area of dragon fruit to grow papaya, the family has so far earned money from selling papaya enough for the family’s meals. This year, he continued destroying nearly one ha of dragon fruit and is expected to grow coconuts. The family still kept the remaining area of dragon fruit with the expectation that the border gates will clear customs soon.
Dragon fruit prices have fallen off a cliff after the impasse at the China border due to COVID-19 fears held up Vietnamese trucks laden with various goods since late of last year.
Pham Kim Lam, a farmer in Ham Thuan Bac District, said the current dragon fruit prices of VND1,000-3,000 per kilogramme caused him to lose VND100 million (US$4,400) this season.
“I have cut down more than 1,000 dragon fruit trees and keep only around 600 to monitor the situation. If prices do not increase in the next few months, I will cut them all down.
“I still haven’t decided what fruit tree to switch to, but it is impossible to keep dragon fruit trees because fertilisers are very expensive.”
According to farmers, one kilogramme of dragon fruit grown in the off-season must fetch VND7,000-10,000 for them to break even due to the high costs of fertilisers and electricity, while currently in some places prices have fallen to even VND500.
The cost of labour for harvesting alone is VND600 per kilogramme.
Pham Thi Lan, another farmer, said she recently sold five tonnes of the fruit to a trader for just VND2 million, and called it “fortunate”, saying many farmers just could not sell their produce but still had to hire labourers to clean their orchards.
“After this crop, my family has to temporarily stop farming because there is no money left.”
According to the Dragon Fruit Association of Binh Thuan Province, the price of the fruit has dropped sharply because export by road to China through the northern border is unviable since it is congested due to China’s tightened COVID-19 preventive measures for people, vehicles and goods packaging.
Exporting by sea is infeasible due to the scarcity of containers and high transport costs, it said.
Many dragon fruit export firms in Binh Thuan are also struggling.
Container shipping costs in Vietnam have quadrupled from pre-pandemic levels, even increased eight-fold, on certain high-demand routes, SSI Research said.
Huynh Canh, vice chairman of the Dragon Fruit Association of Binh Thuan Province, said shipping costs had increased from $1,600 per container at the beginning of 2020 to $5,000 by that year-end and to $9,100 now.
According to the Vietnam Maritime Administration, the pandemic has forced shipping companies to cut back on operations, causing a shortage of containers, and the closure of many ports around the world has increased shipping costs.
To help farmers, the association is looking at domestic consumption channels like traditional markets and supermarkets, but demand remains modest.
With exports to China falling to a trickle, it has urged authorities to step up promotion to help find customers elsewhere, especially in India, and develop the domestic market through supermarket chains to reduce the dependence on the northern neighbour.
With vegetarians making up a large proportion of the Indian population and people there consuming imported dragon fruit at weddings, it is potentially a huge market for Vietnam, experts said.
Local authorities advise farmers not to destroy dragon fruit orchards
Local authorities in the Mekong Delta have coordinated with related agencies to advise people not to destroy their dragon fruit orchards because the authorities will have a solution and dragon fruit is the main crop in the province, said Vo Thanh Long, Chairman of the People’s Committee of Vinh Cong Commune in Long An Province’s Chau Thanh District.
Today, Ms. Dinh Thi Phuong Khanh, Deputy Director of the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development of Long An Province, said that dragon fruit prices are falling sharply because they cannot be exported to China. Because of the low selling price which is not enough to cover production costs, many households have cut down and switched to growing yellow apricots and other fruit trees…
As noted, dragon fruit growers in Long An and Tien Giang provinces have currently cut down the area of dragon fruit to switch to fruit trees and some other trees.
Mr. Truong Quoc Phuong in hamlet 7, Vinh Cong Commune in Chau Thanh District has nearly 10 years of growing dragon fruit with an area of more than 10 hectares. The family spent much on fertilizer and medicine for treating diseases on dragon fruit plants, not to mention the cost of hiring workers from VND35,000 an hour to VND 40,000 an hour.
Therefore, he last year destroyed a little area of dragon fruit to grow papaya, the family has so far earned money from selling papaya enough for the family’s meals. This year, he continued destroying nearly one ha of dragon fruit and is expected to grow coconuts. The family still kept the remaining area of dragon fruit with the expectation that the border gates will clear customs soon.