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Seafood firms struggle in local market

Seafood firms struggle in local market
Author: VNS
Publish date: Monday. January 14th, 2019

Ho Chi Minh City — Vietnamese firms export seafood even to tough markets such as the EU, the US and Japan but are unable to sell their products at home.

A seafood processing facility in the central Bình Định Province. Vietnamese seafood exporters find selling their products at home a much harder proposition. – VNA/VNS Photo Vũ Sinh

Shark catfish for instance is exported to around 140 countries, including the US and the EU, and shipments this year are expected to be worth over US$2 billion, but is not popular in Việt Nam.

Speaking at a panel discussion on developing the domestic market for shark catfish last month Dr Lý Thị Thanh Loan, member of the executive committee of the Việt Nam Pangasius Association, said distribution and market segmentation have not been done well.

Nguyễn Văn Đạo, general director of Gò Đàng Seafood Company, said shark catfish companies mostly focus on export rather than selling to Vietnamese consumers.

The Việt Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers has been pushing to ease restrictions on traces of prohibited chemicals and antibiotics in seafood before Tết (Lunar New Year) holidays, which comes around early next year.

This year some supermarkets have been refusing to accept seafood containing cloramphenicol, an antibiotic that is prohibited in seafood, though its content was under 0.3 ppb (parts per billion), low enough for acceptance in the EU.

The companies selling the seafood said Vietnamese regulation are too stringent, claiming traces of the chemical would not harm consumers.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said this is a relatively new problem which requires authorities to investigate further.

Its Agro Processing and Market Development Authority also said some seafood firms are struggling to sell domestically due to cumbersome procedures.

Last year 31 kilogrammes of seafood were consumed per person in Việt Nam, which could grow to 33-35kg by 2020, Nguyễn Quốc Toản, deputy head of the authority, added.


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