Management over the fertiliser market must be enhanced to prevent fake and low-quality products which caused an estimated losses of about US$2.5 billion each year.
Management over the fertiliser market must be enhanced to tackle fake, low-quality products which cause estimated losses of about US$2.5 billion each year for a country with more than 70 per cent of its population working in the farming sector, experts said at an online conference on Wednesday.
Nguyen Hac Thuy, Deputy President of the Viet Nam Fertiliser Association, said at the conference held by the Dien Dan Doanh Nghiep (Business Forum) online newspaper that fake and low-quality fertilisers were commonly found and were harming Viet Nam’s agricultural production.
Violations were found to have increased from 4,000 in 2015 to 5,000 cases in 2016 while many cases remained unhandled, Thuy said, adding that stronger deterrents must be used instead of just administrative punishments.
Nghiem Quang Tuan from the Department of Plant Protection under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said that fake fertilisers would decrease productivity of plants, impoverish land and cause unhealthy competition.
“Producers and farmers both hope that fake fertilisers will be wiped out soon,” Vu Xuan Hong, deputy director Lam Thao Fertilisers and Chemicals Joint Stock Company said.
Hong said that it was urgent to devise standards for fertiliser quality to verify which products were fake or poor quality, adding that many producers sold products without the contents listed on the packaging.
Hong also proposed market watch to be enhanced together with strong punishment measures.
Nguyen Hong Phong, general director of Tien Nong Agriculture Industry Joint Stock Company, said that it was difficult for buyers to differentiate between fake and genuine products because counterfeiting was very sophisticated and farmers prefer cheaper products.
Phong proposed the Ministry of Planning and Investment boost prerequisites for producing fertilisers, adding that fertiliser producers should have minimum charter capital of VND10 billion (US$438,500).
Experts said that State management agencies must work with producers to tackle fake and poor-quality products, while measures should be taken to help farmers differentiate between genuine and fake products and support them to use fertilisers in a safe way. — VNS