Gia Lai province to expand macadamia cultivation

The Central Highlands province of Gia Lai will expand macadamia cultivation by growing the nut in coffee plantations and forests, according to its Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.
Gia Lai province to expand macadamia cultivation ảnh 1A macadamia farm in Gia Lai Province’s Dak Doa District. (Photo baogialai.com.vn)

Gia Lai (VNS/VNA) -The Central Highlands province of Gia Lai will expand macadamia cultivation bygrowing the nut in coffee plantations and forests, according to its Departmentof Agriculture and Rural Development.

It has more than 10,000ha offorest lands without forest trees, and macadamia trees could be planted there,it said.

Intercropping of macadamiatrees in coffee farms would be increased as the former can provide shade andshield coffee shrubs from winds besides providing an additional incomeequivalent to the income from coffee, it said.

The province has nearly100,000ha of coffee plantations where the macadamia could be intercropped, itadded.

Vu Ngoc An, deputy director ofthe department, said macadamia trees have been planted in the province since2010 mostly together with coffee.

Farmers normally intercrop 100– 150 macadamia trees per hectare of coffee field, he said.

The province has around 600haunder macadamia, including 580ha in Kbang District.

Ma Van Tinh, head of the KbangBureau of Agriculture and Rural Development, said farmers harvest of 1 – 1.5tonnes of nuts per hectare in case of monoculture and 500kg if intercropped.

They earn 50 – 150 million VND(2,150 – 6,450 USD) per hectare per year, he said.

Raw nuts are bought for 80,000– 120,000 VND (3.5 – 5.1 USD) per kilogramme.

In recent years the decline inthe prices of coffee, pepper and cashew, the province’s major crops, has causedmany farmers to intercrop macadamia with coffee and pepper or switch completelyto the nut to improve their incomes.

Macadamia offers higher incomesthan coffee while the production cost is lower, according to farmers.

Pham Van Vu planted 300macadamia trees in his 2ha coffee farm in Dak Doa District’s Hai Yang Communein 2013, and they began to yield nuts three years later.

“The harvest has beenincreasing steadily since 2017,” he said.  

He harvested one tonne lastyear and earned more than 100 million VND (4,300 USD) from it, he said.

He hopes to harvest 1.5 tonnesof nuts this year and earn 160 million VND (6,900 USD).

Traders rate the quality ofmacadamia in Hai Yang higher than in other places, and so farmers there do notneed to worry about being able to sell their produce, he added.

Diep Dai Quoc, director of the DakDoa District Agriculture Service Centre, said his centre plans to providefarmers with macadamia seedlings for intercropping on five hectares.  

Hai Yang would zone growingareas to develop macadamia into a specifically identified local product, hesaid.

The commune has 20ha under thenut, most of them interplanted in old coffee orchards.

It has an establishment thatbuys raw nuts and produces macadamia essential oil and other products, whichare sold to major cities like HCM City, Hanoi and Da Nang./.
VNA

See more

Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

Australia announces import conditions for Vietnamese pomelos

Australia’s formal publication provides an important legal basis, marking the completion of the review, assessment and agreement on technical requirements for fresh Vietnamese pomelos. This represents a significant step forward in market access, creating favourable conditions for relevant agencies, localities and businesses to prepare for export activities in the coming time.

Containers of fresh Vietnamese durian for export are subject to a full-chain traceability system. (Photo: VNA)

First “green lane” durian shipment exported to China

​Under the “green lane” process, quality control begins at the cultivation stage, including soil sampling and monitoring, and continues through harvesting and processing, with traceability labels attached to trees and applied to fruit at the time of picking. It also allows plant quarantine procedures and the issuance of certificates of origin (C/O) directly in the localities where the orchards are located.

Delegates at the Vietnam Expo 2026 (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam pushes for deeper auto supply chain ties with RoK

The RoK stood as Vietnam’s largest foreign investor with more than 95.2 billion USD in registered capital as of February 2026, or about 18% of all foreign cash flowing in, with thousands of active projects. In January-February alone, the RoK led the pack with nearly 2 billion USD in pledges, grabbing a whopping 32.7% of total registered capital and showing no signs of slowing down.

More than 600 tourism firms, 15 countries and territories, and 34 provinces and cities are promoting destinations and introducing tourism products at the fair (Photo: VNA)

Digital transformation key to elevating Vietnam’s tourism: official

Speaking at the opening of the Vietnam International Travel Mart (VITM) 2026 in Hanoi on April 10, Deputy Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Ho An Phong noted that despite challenges in 2025, Vietnam largely fulfilled its socio-economic development goals. Tourism remained a bright spot, recording 21.5 million foreign arrivals and 135.5 million domestic visitors, with total revenue exceeding 1 quadrillion VND (37.9 billion USD).

A drone sprays fertiliser over rice fields. (Photo: VNA)

Low-altitude economy emerges as new growth driver for Vietnam

The UAV technology is particularly effective in addressing challenges faced by ground infrastructure, especially in densely populated urban areas and remote regions. Smart aerial devices also enable real-time data collection, improving governance, decision-making and digital transformation across industries.

Passengers at Cat Bi Airport in Hai Phong city (Photo: VNA)

Aviation sector ensures fuel supply for April 30–May 1 peak

Aviation fuel suppliers are actively negotiating and diversifying supply sources both domestically and internationally, while strengthening coordination, storage and distribution capacity to meet immediate demand. These efforts aim to support airlines in optimising operations and maintaining stable flight schedules.

A session at the Vietnam–Australia Green Transition Forum 2026. (Photo: VNA)

Green transition offers opportunities for stronger Vietnam–Australia cooperation

Under the theme "Accelerating decarbonisation in agriculture and manufacturing – Unlocking trade and investment opportunities", the forum gathered nearly 200 researchers, experts and businesses involved in policy development, investment, research and innovation. Participants exchanged insights and explored ways to translate the cooperation potential between Vietnam and Australia into practical business opportunities.