Binh Dinh Province has some 3,200 fishing boats. — Photo www.baobinhdinh.com.vn
A fishing boat caught more than 1.1 tonnes of tuna off Quy Nhon city in the central province of Binh Dinh on Monday.
The off-season catch was sold for VND110,000 (US$4.84) per kilogramme.
Tran Quang Bao, captain of the boat, said tuna prices had increased by around VND12,000($0.53) per kilogramme since last month.
"The price is quite high and so fishing boats and their crews have high incomes. We are quickly stocking up on food and water to return to the sea."
According to the province Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, so far this year the province’s fishermen have caught 8,511 tonnes of tuna, up 18.6 per cent compared to the same period last year.
On average, a boat earns VND70-80 million ($3,077-3,517) per trip.
Nguyen Viet Nghia, deputy director of the Institute for Seafood Research, said 485,600-502,900 tonnes of tuna are caught off central provinces every year.
The boats are mainly from Phu Yen, Khanh Hoa and Binh Dinh, and their catches comprise yellow fin tuna, big eye tuna and skipjack tuna, he said.
Tuna exports to Japan
Ngo Anh Tuan of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said Viet Nam is focusing on three key products -- tuna, shrimp and pangasius, which account for 80 per cent of fisheries exports.
Binh Dinh was the first province to use new technology and skills to supply fish to Japan, especially tuna.
By 2014 the province’s fishermen had modern equipment and technologies worth $1 million to catch, preserve and transport tuna.
In September that year the first tuna was exported to Japan and sold at three times the price the fish fetches in the Vietnamese market.
The province has around 3,200 fishing boats. — VNS