Khmer Times/Sum Manet
Monday, 08 February 2016
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Farmers package dried cassava after harvesting the crop in Stung Treng province late last year. KT/ Mai Vireak |
Cambodian
trade officials are urging their Chinese counterparts to boost imports
of Cambodian rubber, cassava, sugar and pepper to narrow the trade
imbalance between the two countries, officials said after a meeting last
week.
The
request was made during the three-day Inter-Governmental Coordinating
Committee, which ended on Friday with an agreement by Chinese officials
that the country would increase its imports of agricultural produce from
Cambodia as long as Chinese hygiene and quality standards are met and
there was demand for the produce, according to a statement released
after the meeting.
The
statement was made as data showed rice exports rising more than 20
percent last month compared to the same month last year.
Cambodia
exported 44,033 tons of rice – including white and fragrant – in
January, up 22 percent from the 35, 921 tons in the same month last
year, according to a report from the Secretariat of One Window Service
for Rice Export Formality. China imported 6,999 tons of rice from
Cambodia last month, according to official figures.
China
welcomes the import of Cambodia agricultural products, but they need to
meet Chinese standards as well as demand, the statement released on
Friday said.
Hean
Vanhan, deputy director of the general department of agriculture at the
Ministry of Agriculture, told Khmer Times that exports to China were a
major factor in the rise in rice exports.
He
said officials had been working hard to identify new markets and that
the close relationship between the Cambodian and Chinese governments
helped open the door to China’s market. Cambodia’s rice farmers are also
becoming more productive, Mr. Vanhan has said.
Mr.
Vanhan added that because China is tightening quality and hygiene
standards on imported rice, millers and exporters need to ensure they
complied with these standards. “We need to transform some policies in
order to increase exports,” he said.
Khann
Samban, director of the department of industrial crops at the
Agriculture Ministry, previously told Khmer Times that his department is
trying to expand export markets for cassava farmers.
The
ministry has signed memoranda of understanding with China and South
Korea to boost the demand for Cambodian cassava, Mr. Samban said.
Nguon
Lay, president of the Kampot Pepper Promotion Association, told Khmer
Times that only a small amount of pepper is exported to China. Most goes
to Europe and Japan, he added.
“We
haven’t known whether the Chinese market has potential or not, and due
to the limited supply of pepper, we export a very small amount of pepper
to China,” Mr. Lay said. “We are expanding to 114 hectares of pepper
production this year [from 110 hectares] to increase pepper exports,” he
added.
Trade
between Cambodia and China reached about $3.7 billion in 2014. Trade
between the two countries is estimated at $4.2 billion last year and is
expected to rise to $4.3 billion this year, according to a report from
the Commerce Ministry late last year.
The
report showed that Cambodian exports to China reached about $500
million last year, compared to $483 million in 2014 and $364 million in
2013.
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