Việt Nam is the eighth largest tea exporter in the world, earning US$135 million from tea exports in the first seven months of this year, up 34.8 per cent over the same period last year.
Currently, Việt Nam is the 23rd largest tea supplier to the UK market. However, Vietnamese tea exports to the market decreased sharply both in value and volume over the first half of 2023.
Viet Nam shipped six tonnes of tea worth US$74,000 to Australia in the first half of 2021, showing year-on-year surges of 62.1 per cent in volume and 85 per cent in value, according to the Agency of Foreign Trade at...
Viet Nam exported 120,000 tonnes of tea in 2018, earning revenue of US$219 million, a year-on-year decrease of 8.4 per cent in volume and 3.4 per cent in value, respectively.
The Vietnamese tea sector should work harder to improve the quality of its exports in order to better tap the global market, including Russia, experts have said.
Tea exports in the past 11 months reached 118,000 tonnes, earning US$197 million, increasing 7.1 per cent in volume and 4.3 per cent in value compared to the same period last year.
Vietnamese tea exports fell but its average market price rose in the
first eight months of 2014, based on figures from the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
Pakistan imported 33,000 tonnes of Vietnamese tea, valued at US$51
million, in the first four months of 2014, according to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development.
Viet Nam has shipped more than 115,000 tonnes of tea within the first
10 months of 2013, earning US$186.6 million, according to the Ministry
of Industry and Trade.
The tea industry must become more sustainable through building
concentrated tea areas and improving productivity, quality and safety,
experts said at the fifth Viet Nam Tea Outlook 2013 held yesterday in Ha
Noi.
Viet Nam exported 77,000 tonnes of tea during the past seven months,
earning a turnover of US$120 million, according to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development.