Việt Nam's agricultural exports face quality control obstacles
HÀ NỘI - Việt Nam holds significant potential for investment in agricultural production, processing and exports. However, numerous obstacles are hindering the country’s agricultural exports, particularly in quality control, said industry experts and insiders.
According to the Vietnam Fruit and Vegetable Association (VINAFRUIT), fruit and vegetable exports in March 2025 are estimated at US$421 million, down 10.5 per cent year-on-year. This marks the third consecutive month of declining export revenue, in stark contrast to 2024, when the industry saw robust growth throughout the year. Thus far in the first quarter of 2025, total fruit and vegetable exports have reached $1.1 billion, a 13.2 per cent decrease compared to the same period in 2024.
Frozen durian exports highlight the difficulties faced by the sector. Việt Nam gained access to the Chinese market for frozen durian in August 2024. However, no shipments have been exported to date, and hopes for a surge in export revenue remain unfulfilled.
Bùi
Phú Tôn, director of Nghiệp Xuân Import-Export Trading Co., Ltd. in Gia Nghĩa,
Đắk Nông Province, one of the pioneers in exporting fresh durian to China, said
that his company had yet to export frozen durian to this market due to
certification delays. The main challenge lay in maintaining the required core
temperature of -18°C or lower throughout storage and transportation.
Temperature fluctuations when transferring goods from Vietnamese to Chinese
containers led to quality issues, preventing exports.
VINAFRUIT
warns that if this downward trend continues, Việt Nam may fall short of its
2025 export target. China’s stringent inspection regime applies to both fresh
and frozen durian. Vietnamese exporters test their products based on sample
batches, but Chinese authorities conduct additional tests at border checkpoints.
If shipments fail to meet requirements, they are rejected, discouraging
businesses from entering the market.
Aside
from durian, other agricultural sectors face similar struggles in market
access, branding and quality control. Strict regulations in key export
destinations require businesses to meet international standards, while the
country's reliance on raw material exports limits value-added opportunities.
Lê
Thị Hồng Ngân, director of Thiên Thành Tea Co., Ltd., highlighted that despite
her company’s long-standing expertise in tea production since 1993, their
exported products were mostly sold under foreign brands.
Thiên
Thành operates a 1.1 hectare factory in Lâm Đồng’s Lộc Sơn Industrial Park, and
produces tea for its own brand, OEM clients and export markets. However,
exports primarily consist of raw materials such as black, green and oolong tea,
rather than finished products under Vietnamese branding.
This
challenge is not unique to the tea sector. Many Vietnamese agricultural
exports, from coffee to pepper, are sold as raw commodities rather than
high-value branded products, limiting profitability and market competitiveness.
According
to Lê Thanh Hòa, deputy director of the Department of Quality, Processing and
Market Development under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the
country's agricultural sector remains fragmented. Small-scale production, high
costs, inadequate post-harvest processing and a lack of standardised quality
assessments hinder growth. Many quality checks still rely on experience rather
than advanced technology, making it difficult for businesses to meet strict
import regulations.
Hòa
suggests that businesses leverage Việt Nam’s free trade agreements to benefit
from tariff reductions and enhance competitiveness. Meanwhile, the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development is tightening quality control to meet the
phytosanitary requirements of importing countries. Authorities are also
enhancing monitoring, issuing warnings and enforcing strict penalties to
protect Việt Nam's agricultural reputation.
From Vietnamnews.vn