Vietnamese co-operatives export dragon fruit, pomelo to Canada
Ho Chi Minh City — Thanh Bình Co-operative’s dragon fruit and Bến Tre Green Pomelo Cooperative’s pink lady pomelo have hit shelves at supermarkets and fruit shops and a juice company in Canada.
Bến Tre Green Pomelo Cooperative’s pink lady pomelos on display at a store in Canada. — Photo courtesy of SOCODEVI
It is the first pomelo brand registered by a Vietnamese co-perative to be exported to Canada.
The Bến Tre Green Pomelo Cooperative has also obtained GlobalGAP certification for the fruit.
For Thanh Bình, this was the third shipment to Canada but the first time it fully carried out a dragon fruit order in its own name, from cultivating to transportation and all stages in between.
It set up a new packing unit in August.
Getting rid of intermediaries is expected to bring its members greater benefits.
Both co-operatives have fully complied with requisite safety standards.
Thomas Lam at Arc-En-Ciel store, said: “This is the third time we have received shipments from Thanh Bình Coop in Việt Nam. The reason we keep buying dragon fruit from this coop is because of its very good quality and taste. Everything meets customers’ expectations here.
“This was our first purchase of pink lady pomelo from Bến Tre Coop, and the pomelos are so beautiful.
“We used to import pomelos from the US and China and their pomelos are a lot cheaper, but these Vietnamese pomelos are outstanding.
“We have received very good feedback from customers who want us to keep supplying these Vietnamese fruits. So in future we will surely keep buying from these co-ops. And if you can keep this high level of quality, you can compete very well in the Canadian market”
Patricia Masbourian, owner of Fruiterie Chez Nino at Atwater Market in Montreal, said, “The pomelos we have just received from Việt Nam are of a very high quality, very juicy and very fragrant.
“We are used to getting this fruit from everywhere, including China, Brazil and Israel. But these pomelos are at another level with their exceptional texture and level of juice. It is the same for the dragon fruit. The quality is impressive with the fruit being firm and the skin being nice. And, it is very juicy.”
The two co-operatives are among five new ones established under the framework of the Vietnam Cooperative Enterprise Development Project in Sóc Trăng, Bình Thuận, Ninh Thuận, Lâm Đồng, and Bến Tre provinces since 2015.
Funded by Canada and jointly implemented by SOCODEVI and the School of Management for Agriculture and Rural Development II, the project has helped improve cooperatives’ competitiveness through a variety of activities such as training for farmers, strengthening of governance, upgrades to equipment, marketing, branding, and others.
Related news
Vietnamese coffee is exported to over 80 countries and territories, with the EU being the second biggest importer, buying 38 per cent of the country’s total
24 rice exporters with headquarters in 12 provinces and cities have not exported rice for 18 consecutive months.
A model that rotates rice cultivation with shrimp breeding in the same field has become very popular in the Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta since it helps