The Trade Office of the Vietnamese Embassy in Singapore, in collaboration with the Singapore Fruits and Vegetables Importers and Exporters Association (SFVIEA), organised the Việt Nam Fruit and Vegetable Festival 2025 on Friday, aiming to support Vietnamese enterprises in boosting...
Passion fruit, banana, pineapple, and coconut are emerging as Việt Nam’s next billion-dollar export items, offering strong potential to diversify the country’s fruit and vegetable sector, experts affirmed at a forum held on July 18.
Data from the General Department of Customs showed that Việt Nam’s fruit and vegetable exports to the EU totalled US$132 million from January to April, up 33 per cent year-on-year.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment (MAE), Việt Nam’s agricultural product exports are inevitably affected by disruptions in global supply chains and the imposition of unilateral, stringent tariff policies by major economies.
In the first quarter of 2025, bilateral trade between Việt Nam and China reached US$51.2 billion, up 17.5 per cent year-on-year, with expectations for continued growth throughout the year.
Việt Nam''s One Commune One Product items have gained a good reputation inside and outside the country. Businesses have exported their products to many markets in the world thanks to Free Trade Agreements. Let''s listen to some OCOP exporters talking...
Localities, ministries, branches and businesses will soon be pushing trade promotions for fruits such as lychee, rambutan, longan, durian, and avocado.
Đặng Phúc Nguyên, General Secretary of Việt Nam Vegetable and Fruit Association, forecast that the export revenue would surpass US$6 billion and even reach $7 billion in 2024, providing a significant momentum for Việt Nam to become a global food...
The Plant Protection Department has been alerted by the General Administration of Customs of China (GACC) about the contamination in certain batches of fruits from Việt Nam.
Việt Nam’s dragon fruit exports to the UK remain normal although some supermarkets in the country suspended the sale of the fruit amid concerns that the imported fruit may contain pesticide residues.
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Le Minh Hoan said China is no longer an easy market due to increasingly stricter regulations to protect consumers'' health.
Viet Nam’s fruit and vegetable exports in the first two months of this year reached US$592 million, an increased of nearly 18 per cent compared with the same period last year.