According to the Viet Nam Tea Association, the COVID-19 pandemic had greatly impacted many key export markets of Vietnamese tea.
Viet Nam suffered a reduction of tea exports in the first quarter of this year due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.
Its tea exports in the first quarter declined by 2.5 per cent in volume to 26,000 tonnes and by 19 per cent in value to US$37 million compared to the same period last year. Of which, exports reached 9,000 tonnes of tea in March, earning $12 million.
According to the Viet Nam Tea Association, the COVID-19 pandemic had greatly impacted many key export markets of Vietnamese tea. Especially, the tea exports to Taiwan, mainland China and Russia mostly stopped.
Meanwhile, partners in other markets asked to reduce prices or delay deadlines to receive tea exports and even cancel contracts. Local enterprises have been not able to sign new export contracts.
The ministry said in the first two months of this year, Pakistan, Russia, Taiwan, Indonesia and the US were the five major export markets of Viet Nam’s tea products, accounting for 74.5 per cent of total national tea export value.
Average export tea price in the first two months reached $1,481 per tonne, down 13.5 per cent compared to the same period in 2019.
The tea exports to China, one of the largest export markets for Vietnamese tea last year, dropped sharply in the first two months due to restrictions in customs clearance during the COVID-19 pandemic and long Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday.
Tea exports from Viet Nam to China in the two months fell by 54.1 per cent in volume to 364 tonnes and by 87.4 per cent in value to $427,000 year on year.
The reduction made China drop to 10th place in Viet Nam’s top 10 largest tea export markets from third place in the same period of last year.
The ministry also said in the domestic market, in March, the tea price in Thai Nguyen Province, one of the largest tea producers in Viet Nam, dropped by VND5,000-10,000 per kilo to VND130,000-220,000.
That price was stable at VND9,500 per kilo in Lam Dong Province, another large tea producer. — VNS