ĐẮK LẮK — The Central Highlands province of Đắk Lắk plans to increase the proportion of processed coffee such as instant coffee and powdered coffee from less than 10 per cent to 15 per cent in total coffee output by 2020 and up to 30 per cent by 2030.
Phạm Ngọc Nghị, chairman of the province’s People’s
Committee, said the province’s policies were being adjusted to attract more
domestic and foreign enterprises to invest in coffee processing.
He said that most locally based processing companies were
private firms whose market access and product advertising capacity were modest.
Đắk Lắk, which has the largest coffee area and output in Việt
Nam, has more than 200,000ha and an annual coffee bean output of 450,000
tonnes.
However, the province only has 145 coffee processing
facilities with a total capacity of 32,100 tonnes, accounting for 5.55 per cent
of the province’s total coffee bean output.
To achieve the targets, the province has created a more
favourable investment environment for both domestic and foreign enterprises,
particularly those specialising in roasting and grinding.
The province has also helped coffee enterprises improve
their corporate governance, promoted the use of advanced post-harvest and
processing techniques and expanded market access for local companies.
Coffee farmers, producers and businesses are being
encouraged to produce beans that can be certified by the coffee global
certification programme (UTZ), the fair-trade labelling organisation (FLO),
Rainforest Alliance (RFA) and 4C (Common Code for the Coffee Community).
The province, which has helped organisations, enterprises
and co-operatives build brands, has offered assistance to companies to acquire rights
to the geographical indication for processed coffee products.
Last year, Đắk Lắk produced 28,000 tonnes of processed
coffee, including 23,000 tonnes of powdered coffee and 5,000 tonnes of instant
coffee.
It exported 4,520 tonnes of instant coffee worth nearly
US$27 million, accounting for 7.5 per cent of the province’s coffee export
revenue.
In the 2016-17 coffee season, Đắk Lắk estimates it will
export 230,000 tonnes of coffee to 75 countries and territories.
Export potential
Việt Nam’s processed coffee exports are predicted to
increase in the coming years due to more investment from domestic and foreign
enterprises, according to experts.
Many coffee companies, including Trung Nguyên, Mê Trang and
Vinacafe, for instance, are expanding the scale of their production.
In addition, Việt Nam’s free trade agreements with the EU,
Europe-Asian Economic Union and Korea will create opportunities to boost Việt
Nam’s processed coffee exports.
Under free trade agreements, exports of Việt Nam’s processed
coffee are taxed at only 0-5 per cent compared to 15-20 per cent in the past.
The country’s coffee industry is raising the value of coffee
beans by speeding up the processing of powdered and instant coffee and other
products.
Processed coffee products from Việt Nam are sold in many
international markets.
The G7 instant coffee of Trung Nguyên, for example, has
passed the requirements of Walmart Stores, Inc and is now sold at Walmart
stores in many countries such as Chile, Brazil, Mexico and China.
Lương Văn Tự, chairman of the Việt Nam Coffee and Cocoa
Association, said China is one of the most important markets for Việt Nam’s
processed coffee.
Coffee consumption in China is rising rapidly, particularly
among younger consumers exposed to Western coffee drinking habits, he
said.
Việt Nam targets producing about 50,000 tonnes of powdered
coffee and 255,000 tonnes of instant coffee by 2020, according to the Ministry
of Agriculture and Rural Development’s Department of Processing and Trade for
Agro-Forestry-Fisheries Production and Salt Production.
Last year, Việt Nam exported 1.79 million tonnes of coffee
products with total value of $3.36 billion, up 33.6 percent in volume and 25.6
per cent in value compared to 2015.
Of the total exports, processed coffee accounted for $350
million.