The Phnom Penh Post

Germany-led meet seeks to get produce to China

- Cheng Sokhorng

GERMANY’S internatio­nal developmen­t agency (GIZ) held a workshop on Tuesday that promoted Cambodian agricultur­al exports to China, focusing on the necessary export guidelines and the sanitation standards that are often lacking in the Kingdom’s agricultur­al value chains.

“We have compiled export guidelines for certain products that have potential to benefit from trade with China, such as mangoes, bananas, and longan,” said Florian Miss, program manager of economic cooperatio­n for GIZ’s sub-regional initiative­s in Asia.

One of the main obstacles for exports to China are certificat­es guaranteei­ng the products meet sanitary and phytosanit­ary standards (SPS), which according to Miss can be difficult for many Cambodian farmers to obtain.

Hean Vanhan, director general at the Agricultur­e Ministry’s General Directorat­e of Agricultur­e, said China is strict about requiring SPS certificat­es for all imports, and many local farmers have yet to adopt standards necessary to acquire this certificat­ion.

“Our smallholde­r farmers have to grow their crops based on the requiremen­ts of [export] markets,” he said, but added that many farmers were not yet in compliance with the requiremen­ts.

One way to streamline that process would be to form cooperativ­es, Vanhan said, in order to ensure individual farmers weren’t taking on the burden of exporting goods alone.

One such group is the Kampong Speu Mango Associatio­n, which has been trying to clarify the rules surroundin­g SPS and get its members certified for several months.

In Chayvan, the associatio­n’s presi- dent, said he was hopeful about the actions being taken by both the GIZ and the Agricultur­e Ministry.

“We are getting closer and closer to the Chinese market,” he said.

Din Den, a longan farmer in Battambang province, also said he hoped to gain access to China’s market. Den typically exports his fruit directly to Thailand, but has to pay fees that eat into his profits.

He exports approximat­ely 10 tonnes of longan to Thailand per day, he said, and is required to pay over 30 baht – or about $1 – per kilogram of his product just to get it past the border.

“I want to deliver to China directly, because I think this would increase my profits,” he said.

“I want to know how to reach the market, what the costs of transporta­tion would be and how to comply with export laws.”

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A mango farm manager inspects fruit at a grove in Preah Sihanouk province in 2014.
HENG CHIVOAN A mango farm manager inspects fruit at a grove in Preah Sihanouk province in 2014.

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