The Phnom Penh Post

Japan cashew sales may resume Sept

- Hin Pisei

CAMBODIA’S sole exporter of cashew nuts to Japan is set to resume shipments in mid-September, after it sent its last consignmen­t in March, before Tokyo began requesting an additional certificat­e, a requiremen­t it had waived in light of Covid-19, according to the enterprise’s owner.

In collaborat­ion with Japanese company Top Planning Japan Co Ltd (TPJ), Chey Sambor Cashew Nut Processing Handicraft­s – based in southweste­rn Kampong Thom province’s Kampong Svay district – began exporting organic processed cashew nuts to the East Asian market last year and has since shipped more than 45 tonnes.

However, Japanese authoritie­s have started enforcing the requiremen­t for an additional certificat­e for the cashew nuts – to be issued by the Cambodian Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries – which declares that product quality and packaging are up to Japan’s latest standards, The Post understand­s.

Chey Sambor Cashew Nut Processing Handicraft­s owner In Lai Huot told The Post on August 1 that she expects the certificat­e to be ready “in six weeks”, following a “successful” recent series of inspection­s of the cultivatio­n sites as well as the processing and packaging facilities involved in the production of the enterprise’s merchandis­e, carried out in coordinati­on with the ministry and TPJ.

“Now we are just waiting for the certificat­ion, as everything is ready,” she said.

Meanwhile, Cashew nut Associatio­n of Cambodia (CAC) president Uon Silot said that heavy unseasonal

rains in early 2022 have brought down the yields and quality of cashew nuts, one of the Kingdom’s most cultivated and potentiall­y lucrative agricultur­al products, far below desired levels as well as compared to 2021.

He said that the Kingdom has traditiona­lly been self-sufficient in cashew nut production, and exported processed nuts to the US, Japan, and European countries, along with “several tonnes” of unprocesse­d nuts to Vietnam each year.

“Despite the high demand and large markets, investment in the cultivatio­n

and processing of cashew nuts does not seem to be as strong as that involving some other agricultur­al products,” Silot lamented.

He said Chey Sambor would be the third enterprise to receive quality certificat­ion that would allow formal cashew nut exports to the EU, after Ample Agro Product Co Ltd and Welwilling Agricultur­al Technology (Cambodia) Co Ltd. Silot expects this to happen “in six weeks” as well.

And as a preconditi­on for export to Japan, Chey Sambor was certified as meeting the Japanese Agricultur­al

Standards (JAS) for organic products by an Accredited Overseas Certifying Body, he noted.

Ministry figures show that Cambodia exported 937,974.26 tonnes of cashew nuts last year worth a total of $1.60487 billion, up by 328.34 per cent by tonnage and 233.32 per cent by value over 2020. This means that, on average, one tonne of cashew nuts exported in 2021 was worth $1,711, down 22.2 per cent year-on-year. Major markets included Vietnam, China, Thailand, India, Japan and South Korea, the ministry said.

 ?? COURTESY OF KHIM FINAN ?? Agricultur­e ministry figures indicate that, on average, one tonne of cashew nuts exported by Cambodia in 2021 – including both processed and unprocesse­d nuts – was worth $1,711, representi­ng a 22.2 per cent drop from 2020.
COURTESY OF KHIM FINAN Agricultur­e ministry figures indicate that, on average, one tonne of cashew nuts exported by Cambodia in 2021 – including both processed and unprocesse­d nuts – was worth $1,711, representi­ng a 22.2 per cent drop from 2020.

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