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A farmer harvests oranges in the southern province of Dong Thap. Many farmers in the Cuu Long Delta have switched to growing the fruit. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Vu |
Nguyen Van Hong, a farmer in Vinh Long Province's
Tra On District, said he earned a profit of VND200 million (US$9,500)
from his one-ha orchard which yielded 18 tonnes of thick-skinned oranges
in the last crop.
Because of the high profits from the fruit, he is now planting more than 4,000 new trees.
Le Van Mot, a neighbour, is turning his paddy field into an orchard.
He said: "I grew rice for dozens of years but
could not become wealthy. My brothers switched to growing thick-skinned
oranges a few years ago and have all become prosperous."
Farmers in Tra On have turned nearly 100ha of
paddy fields into orchards, according to the district Agriculture and
Rural Development Bureau.
Phan Nhut Ai, director of the Vinh Long
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, said the area under the
fruit has increased rapidly in Thuan Thoi commune.
But he assured that his department was carefully monitoring it and would put a stop if the total area exceeded zoning plans.
It has also warned that farmers should not indiscriminately expand cultivation because of the risk of oversupply, he said.
While the prices of most fruits and other
agricultural produce have fallen this year, thick-skinned oranges have
been among the exceptions. In Hau Giang, Vinh Long, and Dong Thap
provinces, traders buy it at VND23,000-25,000 per kilo-gramme.
In Hau Giang's Chau Thanh District, many orchards yield 30-40 tonnes per ha, bringing a profit of VND500-600 million to owners.
Nguyen Van Dong, director of the Hau Giang
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, said the province, wary
of oversupply, does not encourage expansion of the area under the
orange.
Hau Giang, one of the delta's main thick-skinned orange growing areas, now has 7,000ha under the fruit.
It has encouraged enterprises and farmers to
ensure stability, invest in improving productivity and quality, and
create brand names for thick-skinned oranges, Dong said.
Nguyen Minh Chau, head of the Southern Fruit
Research Institute, said demand was assured if farmers ensured their
trees bear fruits in time.
"The thick-skinned orange is delicious and used to make juice, so there is constant demand for it," he said.
The main market is in the country's north.
Chau said delta provinces need to co-operate to ensure the fruit fetches their farmers high returns.
"Each province has to harvest at a designated
time that does not overlap with each other to ensure supply is steady
and prices do not collapse because of a glut," he said.
In the southern region, thick-skinned oranges grow throughout the year.
"If authorities do not co-ordinate and guide
farmers and leave them to their own designs, they are most likely to
harvest the fruit at the same time, causing an oversupply," he warned. —
VNS
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