Durian export boom boosts Vietnamese growers
LAM DONG, Vietnam — Perched atop durian trees in Da Huoai Commune of Vietnam's central province of Lam Dong, harvester Ho Minh Nhat carefully cuts loose each spiky fruit, knowing that many of them will soon begin their journey to China.
Nhat, who travels between Vietnam's southeastern and southwestern regions during the harvest season, said the expansion of official durian exports to China since 2022 has made prices more stable than in the past, when growers depended mainly on the domestic market.
"Life used to be much harder before durians were officially exported to China. We can now afford more meat and other foods that used to be considered expensive," he said.
The improvement is also evident in the orchards where growers like Le Thi Ngoc Bich have seen their incomes rise alongside the expansion of durian exports to China.
Bich, who has cultivated her orchard for a decade, said the fruit has become her family's main income source, earning about 4 billion Vietnamese dong (about $158,700) last year alone.
Although she does not sell the fruit directly to Chinese buyers, Bich noticed that her returns have climbed steadily as more Vietnamese durian flows across the border.
"The quality of the fruit keeps improving and so does my family's quality of life," she said, adding the higher income has enabled her family to cover daily expenses more comfortably and lease another five hectares to expand cultivation.
China remains Vietnam's largest agro-forestry-fishery export market, and Vietnam made $5.5 billion through exports of fruits and vegetables to China last year, including $3.5 billion from durians.
From the orchards, truckloads of freshly harvested durians are transported to KK Premium Fruits' packaging facility, where hundreds of workers sort, inspect and prepare them for export.
Packaging team leader Pham Chi Linh said his team processes more than 30,000 durians a day, and working at the company has doubled his family's monthly income to about 40 million Vietnamese dong.
The company currently ships an average of five to seven containers of durians to China every day and expects to export between 500 and 700 containers this year.
Production Manager Nguyen Pham Dang said the company's durian output is expected to reach around 14,000-16,000 tons this year, or 5 percent of the province's output.
Strong connections
Building strong connections across the agricultural supply chain was also a highlight at the first Vietnam-China Agricultural Trade Connectivity Forum held in Ho Chi Minh City recently.
At the event, Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Nguyen Minh Vu called for stronger links among producers, processors, traders and distributors to build a more sustainable supply chain, describing agricultural cooperation as one of the most dynamic areas of cooperation between the two countries.
Chinese Ambassador to Vietnam He Wei said China-Vietnam agricultural cooperation has maintained strong momentum and delivered fruitful outcomes.
XINHUA



























