View Full Version : Europe: major rice target


SeeMacau
January 25th, 2011, 09:22 AM
Tuesday, 25 January 2011 15:00
Chun Sophal

CAMBODIA is looking to Europe as its most important market for rice exports in 2011, with aims to quadruple global exports this year, according to Minister of Agriculture Chan Sarun.

“The European Union is to be the major market for Cambodian rice exports this year, as we hope the EU will continue providing tax exemptions for Cambodia,” he said.

The European bloc’s 27 member states have granted duty free imports to Least Developed Countries including Cambodia under its “Everything But Arms” initiative. Cambodia exported some 40,000 tonnes of the grain to Europe in 2010, he said.

Speaking to The Post at an agricultural show in Kandal province on Saturday, Chan Sarun said that Cambodia projects exporting 200,000 tonnes of rice to global buyers this year, up from 50,000 total tonnes of exports during 2010.

However, he did not specify how much of the targeted 200,000 tonnes of rice would be sold to Europe, and how much would be exported to other countries.

Earlier this month, Economics Institute of Cambodia director Sok Hach raised concerns that the EU’s exemptions would expire at the end of 2011, but Chan Sarun downplayed the concern on Saturday.

“We will request the EU to continue import tax exemptions on our rice, in order to motivate our price producers to increase productivity,” he said. Rafael Dochao Moreno, Chargé d’ Affaires of the EU Delegation to Cambodia, said earlier this month that there were no plans for exemptions to end this year, adding the program’s guidelines guarantee that no substantive changes would be made for the whole period of 2006 to 2015.

mrfusion
January 25th, 2011, 10:23 AM
There is a global shortage of food, most likely include rice, what hurt most is local middle man that has connections to the buyers are ripping off the farmers.

http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showpost.php?p=65669505&postcount=110

Hun Sen targeted increasing Cambodia’s exports of the grain to a million tonnes by 2015. Obviously there is huge export market, I think our rice export potential is going to look very promising regardless of the tariff.

bokator
January 25th, 2011, 10:57 PM
There is a global shortage of food, most likely include rice, what hurt most is local middle man that has connections to the buyers are ripping off the farmers.

http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showpost.php?p=65669505&postcount=110

Hun Sen targeted increasing Cambodia’s exports of the grain to a million tonnes by 2015. Obviously there is huge export market, I think our rice export potential is going to look very promising regardless of the tariff.

It's better to be ripped off by khmer middlemen than they had been ripped off by Thai or Viet middlemen. At least Khmer middlemen their money on khmer economy.

mrfusion
January 26th, 2011, 12:48 AM
It's better to be ripped off by khmer middlemen than they had been ripped off by Thai or Viet middlemen. At least Khmer middlemen their money on khmer economy.

but to boost Cambodia productions, we need to reward the farmers, not the middleman. Prehaps the price paid to the farmers need to be regulated by the khmer government as well.

The Thai and Viet middleman should not be able to buy directly from our farmer, they need to go through our middleman. And hopefully, we have enough middleman so the price paid to the farmer becomes competitive.

LuvKhm3r
January 27th, 2011, 06:16 PM
^^..Yea, great idea....:)...how can we cut those middleman?

mrfusion
January 29th, 2011, 01:53 AM
^^..Yea, great idea....:)...how can we cut those middleman?

You can not just cut these middlemen, you need at 1 layer to 2 to collect these volume of rice from individual farmers, unfortunately the rice farmers are either not informed the price they should get, or these first tiers middleman works together to push the price down. What is important is somehow regulated these price.

If the world is willing to pay top dollar for Cambodian rice, then Cambodian rice farmer should be able to get out of proverty.