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Vietnam to cut annual rice exports by 44 per cent to four million tonnes by 2030

HANOI (CNA) – Vietnam aims to cut its rice exports to four million tonnes a year by 2030 from 7.1 million tonnes last year, the government said in a document detailing its rice export strategy.

Vietnam is the world’s third-largest rice exporter, after India and Thailand. The move is aimed at “boosting the exports of high-quality rice, ensuring domestic food security, protecting the environment and adapting to climate change,” according to the government document dated Friday and reviewed by Reuters.

Rice export revenue will fall to USD2.62 billion a year by 2030, down from USD3.45 billion in 2022, the document said.

“Although Vietnam’s rice farming area is shrinking due to climate change and some farmers are switching to growing other crops and raising shrimp, the strategy appears to be too aggressive,” a rice trader based in Ho Chi Minh City said.

The trader said some rice farmers in the Mekong Delta are turning parts of their fields into fruit farms, growing mangoes, grapefruit, jackfruit and durian, but the vast majority remain dependent on rice.

A woman pours grains at a rice processing factory in the Vietnamese city of Can Tho. PHOTO: CNA

The trend toward cultivating shrimp has been taking place in the area for years as rising seawater triggered by climate change brings significantly increased salination in the Mekong Delta region.

Vietnam will diversify its rice export markets to reduce its reliance on any single country, the document said. The Philippines has long been Vietnam’s biggest rice buyer, accounting for 45 per cent of its shipments last year.

Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh told Philippines’ President Ferdinand Marcos Jr at a regional meeting in Indonesia this month that Vietnam was willing to supply rice to the Philippines for the long term at reasonable prices.

By 2025, 60 per cent of Vietnamese rice exports will be shipped to Asian markets, 22 per cent to Africa, seven per cent to America, four per cent to the Middle East and three per cent to Europe, the document said.

The Vietnam Food Association, which represents rice processors and exporters, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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