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FTAs have brought more opportunities for imported foods to enter Vietnam's market. Photo doanhnghiepthuonghieu.vn

Countries with developed food processing industries such as Japan, the US and Australia and the EU have already promoted exports of their food products to Vietnam.

Last week in HCM City, 18 Canadian food companies met with potential partners.

Keith Colwell, Nova Scotia’s Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture, expressed his hope that the trip could provide opportunities for Canadian food companies to export their products to Vietnam thanks to tariff reductions under the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

The minister told Thời báo Kinh doanh (Business Times) newspaper that Canadian food businesses had shifted their focus to Vietnam after developments in the Chinese market.

These companies want to bring high-end Canadian products like seafood, agricultural products and beverages to new markets like Vietnam, Colwell said. Tariff reductions under the CPTPP had helped Canadian products become more competitive in Vietnam’s market.

Last year, Canada's agricultural and seafood exports to Vietnam reached a turnover of CA$ 312.7 million (about US$235 million).

In the first nine months of this year, Vietnam imported more than 14,824 tons of pork with a total value of $29.2 million, much higher than the imports of 14,295 tonnes in volume and $23.6 million in value last year.

According to Le Hong Minh, director of Vietrade’s Investment Promotion Centre for Industry and Trade, total FDI poured into Vietnam’s food processing sector was estimated at $11.2 billion with 717 projects, excluding foreign investors buying shares or conducting merger and acquisitions.

Foreign capital flows in the food industry were mainly from Asian countries such as Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea and China. These factories produced food for the domestic market and export.

Most of FDI projects in the food processing sector were concentrated in big cities and provinces like Hanoi, HCM City, Binh Duong, Dong Nai and Long An.

However, these FDI projects had little or no investment in developing raw materials, Minh said. Therefore, the industries supporting the food processing industry like cultivation and husbandry had not been developed according to modern standards.

He said domestic raw materials did not meet the production requirements of FDI enterprises in the food processing sector. For example, the domestic dairy industry could only meet the 25 per cent of the domestic market demand, while the nation had to import 90 per cent of its cooking oil.

According to experts, the State should encourage foreign invested projects in the food industry to transfer technology from developed countries in the fields of processing, packaging and preserving agricultural and aquatic products. – VNS

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