Việt Nam, China firms partner to supply 1.6 million pigs to southern market


With an investment of VNĐ12 trillion (over US$454.3 million), a high-rise complex integrated with a livestock feed production plant is expected to generate VNĐ10 trillion in annual revenue. It received approval from Tây Ninh provincial authorities in June and the Government in August.

 

At the signing ceremony between BAF Việt Nam Agriculture Joint Stock Company and China’s Muyuan Foods Co. Ltd in Hồ Chí Minh City on September 28. — VNA/VNS Photo

HCM CITY — About 1.6 million pigs will be supplied annually to HCM City and southern provinces from 2027 under Việt Nam’s first high-rise livestock project, aiming to strengthen domestic production and reduce pork imports.

The plan was unveiled at a signing ceremony between the BAF Vietnam Agriculture Joint Stock Company and China’s Muyuan Foods Co Ltd in HCM on September 28.

The project, to be built in Tây Ninh province, is designed to house approximate 64,000 sows and produce 1.6 million market pigs annually, alongside a feed mill with an estimated capacity of 600,000 tonnes per year.

With an investment of VNĐ12 trillion (over US$454.3 million), the high-rise complex integrated with a livestock feed production plant is expected to generate VNĐ10 trillion in annual revenue. It received approval from Tây Ninh provincial authorities in June and the Government in August.

Despite having a developed livestock sector, Việt Nam still spends heavily on importing meat. According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, in the first seven months of 2025, the country imported 534,800 tonnes of meat and meat products worth over $1 billion, up 11 per cent year-on-year. This underlines the urgency of enhancing domestic capacity to ensure food security and reduce reliance on imports.

BAF Vietnam General Director Bùi Hương Giang said the biggest advantage of the high-rise model lies in superior disease control and biosecurity. Modern design and filtration systems will help prevent dangerous viruses, including African swine fever. The project will also apply circular economy principles, recycle wastewater and produce organic fertiliser from waste, thereby address environmental challenges.

A representative of Muyuan, China’s leading livestock group, said its expertise in technology-driven pig farming will optimise land use by five–eight times, cut labour demand by 20–30 per cent, and lower feed and logistics costs, contributing to affordable prices for consumers.

Under the plan, nearly 20,000 pigs from the project are expected to reach southern markets by late 2027, meeting surging year-end demand and stabilising prices.

In 2025 alone, despite disease pressures, BAF Vietnam has maintained stable supply of about 800,000 pigs, including 800-1,000 pigs per month for HCM City. — VNS

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