By Agencies
Cambodia launched Tuesday the second phase of cassava development project under the support of China and the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).
Speaking
at the launching ceremony, Teng Lao, secretary of state of Cambodian
Ministry of Agriculture, said the second phase of the project, which
will last until September 2014, was made possible with the funding of
400,000 US dollars from China.
"It aims to help a core group of
cassava farmers, processors and exporters to meet the quality and
quantity requirements to be able to export more processed cassava to
China, thus generating more revenue and employment opportunities for
Cambodian smallholders in rural areas,"he said.
Cambodia and
China signed a Protocol on the Exports of Cambodian Cassava to Chinese
Market in December 2010, under which China allowed Cambodia to export
its standardized cassava chips to China.
Teng Lao said cassava is
the second agricultural crop in Cambodia and plays a very important
role in Cambodia's agriculture and economic development.
He said
last year, the country grew cassava crop on an area of 337,440 hectares,
producing about 8 million tons of fresh cassava.
"About 50
percent of fresh cassava, 40 percent of dry cassava and 10 percent of
cassava powder were sold to Vietnam and Thailand, "he said."And Vietnam
and Thailand re-sell those cassava products to international markets,
particularly China."
Agriculture official and project coordinator
Ratana Norng said the cassava sector might generate between 200-300
million US dollars worth of"informal"export revenues a year.
Lu
Zhouxiang, first secretary at the department of international trade and
economic affairs at China's Ministry of Commerce, said at the event that
in the first phase of the project, China had contributed 212,000 US
dollars to support 30 Cambodian officials to train in China's Hainan
province on the cassava cultivation techniques in late 2011 and early
2012.
"Based on the successful results of the first phase, the
second phase project will help move Cambodian producers, processors and
exporters of cassava up the value chain," she said."It is our hope that
this project will contribute to the Cambodia's efforts in capacity
building, economic diversification and poverty reduction. "
Setsuko
Yamazaki, country director of UNDP to Cambodia, said that currently,
Cambodian cassava farmers, processors and exporters are facing enormous
constraints such as price distortions in neighboring countries, lack of
information on price and quality criteria of importing markets and lack
of access to technology.
"Though cassava has become the second
largest agricultural crop in term of income, employment, hectares
cultivated and exports, there is very little technical assistance
support provided to the sector,"she said.
She added that under
the project, UNDP would give particular attention to environment
sustainability of cassava cultivation, improved standard quality to
promote raw and processed cassava exports to China and the ultimate
benefits and sustainability for the poor.
Setsuko said Cambodia
is now the seventh largest producer of cassava in Asia and projected
that the country would move to the fifth largest producer following
Thailand, Indonesia, India and China by 2018.
No comments:
Post a Comment