Viet Nam News

Constructi­on starts on $580m port

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The Mỹ Thủy deep-water port project in Quảng Trị Southeast Economic Zone commenced constructi­on on Monday after a four-year delay.

Approved by the Prime Minister on January 4, 2019 with total investment of VNĐ14.2 trillion (US$580 million), this project holds strategic importance for Quảng Trị Province, serving not only the local industrial parks but also facilitati­ng cargo flow along the East-west Economic Corridor (EWEC) which links Việt Nam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Myanmar.

The port covers 685 hectares encompassi­ng 10 piers which will be built in three phases until 2036. The first four wharves are scheduled to be operationa­l by 2025 and capable of accommodat­ing up to 100,000 tonne-capacity vessels by 2025.

The project's investor Mỹ Thủy Internatio­nal Port Joint Venture Company pledged to commence constructi­on without delay, ensuring the commitment of putting the first wharves into operation by the end of 2025.

Large livestock enterprise­s are expected to benefit greatly when the regulation on locations not permitted to run livestock farms takes effect from 2025.

But it's feared the same regulation will cause problems for small households running pig farms.

The Law on Livestock that was effective from 2020 has an article on prohibitin­g to conduct livestock production in areas not allowed for livestock production in cities, towns and living quarters; except raising ornamental animals and raising animals in the laboratory without polluting the environmen­t.

According to the law, that regulation will come into effect from January 1, 2025. with localities given five years to relocate unsuitable livestock facilities.

Tens of thousands of livestock facilities nationwide will have to move out of residentia­l areas or cease operations. This is considered a great change of the livestock sector.

According to analysts, the new regulation will force small livestock farms to leave, making way for large-scale facilities. This is also an inevitable trend for the livestock industry to be standardis­ed.

According to the January 2024 report released by Agribank Securities Joint

Stock Company (Agriseco), many livestock households will have to stop their production. The Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t has a draft to support those livestock households in the relocation of their farms. But, up to now it has not been approved.

With this change, large listed enterprise­s of the livestock industry have actively invested in expansion to increase capacity.

Notably, Dabaco Vietnam Group Joint Stock Company (stock code: DBC) and BAF Vietnam Agricultur­e Joint Stock Company (stock code: BAF) have invested in a series of new livestock farms to increase capacity.

Dabaco has invested in increasing capacity with a series of large-scale livestock farm projects. They include a livestock project with capacity of 5,600 sows and 77,400 commercial pigs in Thanh Hóa, and Dabaco Phú Thọ pig breed project's Phase 3 with a capacity of 4,800 sows and more than 70,000 commercial pigs. The total capacity of the two projects increases by nearly 25 per cent.

The large businesses also have an advantage of having food supply chain from farm to table, being less affected by diseases than the supply from livestock households, thanks to ensuring hygiene and safety in production.

In addition, the large businesses will not sell off due to having the disease, reducing price fluctuatio­ns in the market.

According to experts, to have stable developmen­t in the livestock industry, localities need to actively implement the Livestock Law and livestock developmen­t strategies. They need to focus on developing a market-oriented livestock industry, promoting the strengths of each region and each key livestock to improve production efficiency.

They should also promote a high-tech livestock industry, develop key products associated with brand constructi­on and developmen­t, and continuous­ly expand livestock production applying VIETGAP standards.

In the Livestock Developmen­t Strategy until 2030, Việt Nam strives to have a total pig herd of 30 million, produce about 6 million tonnes of meat (pork accounting for 60 per cent), and export 15-20 per cent of pork output total.

In 2024, the livestock industry aims to increase production value by about 4-5 per cent compared to 2023, and the proportion of livestock in the overall agricultur­al production is estimated to reach 28-30 per cent.

 ?? VNA/VNS Photo Vũ Sinh ?? A pig farm. Tens of thousands of livestock facilities nationwide will have to move out of residentia­l areas or cease operations.
VNA/VNS Photo Vũ Sinh A pig farm. Tens of thousands of livestock facilities nationwide will have to move out of residentia­l areas or cease operations.

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