Cooperatives urged to focus on branding to expand exports of organic tea

Cooperatives have been advised to focus on branding and improving product quality to expand tea exports to highly-demanding markets, especially organic tea products.

Farmers harvest tea on a farm in Lạng Sơn Province. Organic tea growing area remains modest in Việt Nam, estimated at around 8,000 ha. (Photo: VNA)
Farmers harvest tea on a farm in Lạng Sơn Province. Organic tea growing area remains modest in Việt Nam, estimated at around 8,000 ha. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - Cooperatives have been advised to focus on branding and improving product quality to expand tea exports to highly-demanding markets, especially organic tea products.

A report by the Centre for Digital Transformation and Agricultural Statistics showed that the organic tea cultivation areas remain modest in Vietnam, estimated at around 8,000ha or 6% of the country’s total tea growing area.

In Thai Nguyen province which is home to the country’s largest tea growing area of nearly 23,000ha, there are only 100ha certified organic.

Tea growing area certified organic by the EU is only at 2,500ha.

To expand exports to demanding markets with strict requirements of food hygiene and safety, getting organic certifications is critical.

Tran Thi Binh, Director of Thanh Dat Organic Agricultural Cooperative in Thai Nguyen province, said that they want support to improve product quality and expand exports.

Dao Thanh Van, Vice President of the Vietnam Organic Agriculture Association, said Vietnam has around 100,000ha of tea growing area but the tea export price at 1.6 USD per kg is very low.

Pham Van Tien from Cao Son Tea Cooperative said that the market remains the biggest difficulty to cooperatives producing organic teas. Another problem is the weak linkage between farmers and enterprises in establishing tea value chains, he said.

Meanwhile, climate change is significantly affecting tea cultivation.

Currently, Vietnam ranks fifth in the world in terms of tea export but it is mainly exported in raw forms with a lack of originality, making it difficult to compete in the global market so the added value for tea growers and cooperatives remains modest.

According to David Lyons, Director at Australian Tea Cultural Society, the focus should be on building brands for Vietnamese tea products to expand exports to strict markets like Australia.

Impressive brands are important to develop loyalty customers, he said, adding that attention should also be paid to packaging.

Than Dy Ngu from Hiep Thanh Limited Company said that cooperatives and farmers should connect with each other to increase output and ensure quality for domestic production and exports.

Statistics showed that Vietnam exported 28,000 tonnes of tea in the first three months of this year, worth 45 million, an increase of 30% and 27.2%, respectively, over the same period last year.

In 2023, tea export was estimated at 121,000 tonnes, worth 211 million USD, dropping by 16.9% in volume and 10.9% in value over 2022, on falling consumption demand in the global market./.

VNA

See more

The forest database will be completed by the end of this year, adapting to the EU Deforestation Regulation (Photo: VNA)

Forest databases for EUDR implementation to be completed in 2026

Localities nationwide are required to complete the development and publication of provincial-level forest boundary databases and maps as of December 31, 2020, by the end of this year, as part of Vietnam’s efforts to adapt to the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR).

PM Pham Minh Chinh announces the establishment of the Vietnam International Financial Centre in Ho Chi Minh City. (Photo: VNA)

PM announces launch of Vietnam Int'l Financial Centre in Ho Chi Minh City

The Vietnam International Financial Center in Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang will gradually assert Vietnam's position on the global financial map and make a substantial contribution to achieving the 2-digit growth target set by the 14th National Party Congress in the coming years, towards realising the 100-year strategic goals, said PM Pham Minh Chinh.

Duong Thi Lap's garden has 200 kumquat trees ready for Tet (Photo: VNA)

Tet bloom markets: rising demand, stable prices

Across Vietnam, key farming hubs for flowers and ornamental plants are buzzing with activity as the Lunar New Year (Tet) approaches, with farmers robust plant health, eye-catching designs, surging consumer demand, and broadly stable pricing.

Retail sales of goods in January estimated at 487.4 trillion VND (Photo: VNA)

Total retail sales of goods, service revenue up 9.3% in January

Retail sales of goods in January was estimated at 487.4 trillion VND, accounting for the largest share and increasing 9.3% year-on-year. Growth was driven by many categories, including household appliances and equipment, which rose 9.4% thanks to early-year shopping demand and promotional programmes by retailers.

Fishing vessel monitoring system (VMS). (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Quang Tri backs VMS subscription fees for fishing vessels

Under a recently approved provincial resolution, the support will be disbursed once a year. Total funding for the three-year programme is estimated at more than 12.2 billion VND from the provincial budget, benefiting around 1,360 vessels across the province.

Delegates at the meeting in Hanoi on February 9, 2026. (Photo baotintuc.vn)

Vietnam to release 2026 economic census data seven months earlier

Nguyen Thi Huong, head of the Standing Group of the Steering Committee of the 2026 Economic Census and Director of the National Statistics Office (NSO), said the first phase of data collection was underway nationwide and was scheduled to conclude on March 10.

At Xa Mat international border gate (Photo: VNA)

📝OP-ED: Decree 46 - Not proof of distorted “systemic failure”

Temporary suspensions, adjustments, or revisions of newly enacted policies are never ideal and should be minimised. Yet such course corrections occur worldwide, irrespective of a country's development stage or market-economy maturity. What counts is rapid remediation to contain losses, extraction of lessons to prevent recurrence, and firm resistance to the dissemination of misleading or hostile allegations, which will help both enforcers and those subject to compliance maintain clarity and composure.

Delegates at the signing ceremony of the MoU between the Brazil–Vietnam Chamber of Commerce (BVC) and the Espirito Santo Chapter of the Brazil–Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCBV-ES). (Photo courtesy of the Vietnamese Embassy in Brazil)

Vietnam, Brazil step up trade promotion cooperation

The Brazil–Vietnam Chamber of Commerce (BVC) and the Espirito Santo Chapter of the Brazil–Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCBV-ES) recently inked the MoU to enhance cooperation and expand business opportunities for enterprises from the two countries, with support from the Vietnamese Embassy in Brazil.