Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - On June 5, the ‘Green and low-emission Vietnamese rice’ trademark will officially enter the export market. The first shipment, bound for Japan, is seen as a significant breakthrough for the rice industry.
This also marks the initial success of the ‘Sustainable development of one million hectares of high-quality, low-emission rice associated with green growth in the Mekong Delta by 2030’ project (referred to as the one-million-hectare rice project).
Chairman of the Vietnam Rice Industry Association (VIETRISA) Bui Ba Bong said that this would be a strategic milestone in building the Vietnamese rice brand, targeting high-end markets with strict carbon emission standards.
The trademark would be not just a commercial label, but a commitment to environmental and social responsibility.
Permanent Vice Chairman and General Secretary of VIETRISA Le Thanh Tung said that the association would issue the certification ‘Green and low-emission Vietnamese rice’ to ensure transparency and credibility.
In the absence of a national certification system for low-carbon rice, enterprises may self-declare their green rice branding and will be held accountable for their claims.
VIETRISA, in collaboration with the TRVC Project, granted certificates of the right to use the ‘Green and low-emission Vietnamese rice’ trademark to seven enterprises, accounting for 19,200 tonnes of rice.
The Trung An Company, in partnership with Japan’s MURASE Group, will become the first enterprise to export rice under this trademark to the Japanese market.
Over the past two years, the one-million-hectare project has delivered positive impacts to two key beneficiaries: the rice grain and the farmers. Its goals include ensuring national food security, meeting the population’s nutritional needs, increasing farmers' incomes, protecting the environment, reducing emissions and maintaining export capabilities.
With encouragement from the Ministry of Agriculture and the Environment, and to promptly support the one-million-hectare project, VIETRISA developed the ‘Green and low-emission Vietnamese rice’ trademark.
To qualify for this certification, enterprises and cooperatives must ensure traceability, including the origin of rice production, rice variety and crop season. The production also must comply with technical protocols set by the Department of Crop Production and Plant Protection.
“We are piloting a measurement, reporting and verification system, but this roadmap will not complete the mechanisms for payment, measurement and valuation until 2028,” Tung added.
However, building the ‘Green and low-emission Vietnamese rice’ trademark can begin immediately./.
See more
Vietnam, US work to step up agricultural cooperation
Vietnam has strengths in tropical farm produce, seafood and wooden products, while the US is a major supplier of key inputs such as soybeans, corn, wheat and dairy products. This trade structure creates a balanced supply chain with little direct competition, delivering tangible benefits to businesses and consumers in both countries.
Vietbuild Hanoi 2026 International Exhibition opens
The five-day event, themed “Construction – Building Materials – Real Estate – Green Transport”, brings together more than 2,500 booths from domestic and international enterprises, reflecting the development momentum of Vietnam’s construction sector and the broader economy.
Vietnam reinforces role as key regional electronics manufacturing hub
Korean technology corporations are intensifying investment in Southeast Asia to diversify supply chains and leverage cost advantages, with Vietnam remaining a focal destination thanks to its strategic location and abundant labour force.
Global Coffee Alliance launched to drive sustainable, inclusive growth
The Global Coffee Alliance is envisioned as a public–private partnership that bridges diplomatic efforts with business operations. Looking ahead to 2040, it aims to develop a global coffee ecosystem that is inclusive, technology-driven, and aligned with net-zero emissions goals.
Vietnam races to restart idle ethanol plants to meet surging demand
Do Van Tuan, Chairman of the Vietnam Biofuels Association, said that monthly ethanol demand for the E10 blend is projected at 92,000–100,000 cu.m. The country’s six ethanol plants have a combined design capacity of roughly 41,000 cu. m per month, but only three are now running, churning out about 25,000 cu.m, or just 25–27% of demand. Even if every plant hits full tilt, local supply would cover only around 41% of national needs.
Sun PhuQuoc Airways partners with Korean GSA, set to launch two new routes in 2026
During the seminar, Sun PhuQuoc Airways announced the opening of ticket sales for its direct Seoul (ICN) – Phu Quoc (PQC) route, scheduled to commence on April 17, with an initial frequency of one flight per day, increasing to two daily flights in the next phase.
Ho Chi Minh City to pilot pork trading on Mercantile Exchange of Vietnam
Nguyen Nguyen Phuong, Deputy Director of the municipal Department of Industry and Trade, said listing pork on the MXV will finally give consumers and firms more stable prices, while slapping on stricter food safety rules and making it easier to track where the meat actually comes from. Farmers, meanwhile, stand to gain from more predictable margins and dodge fewer of the supply-demand imbalances that routinely distort prices.
Squid, octopus exports pick up early in 2026
In terms of product structure, squid has emerged as the main growth driver. Export turnover of squid exceeded 64 million USD, rising nearly 30%, while octopus exports brought in more than 47 million USD, up over 16%. The development indicates that demand for squid products is recovering faster in the short term.
An Giang steps up tourism development ahead of APEC 2027
Tourism in the province has recorded strong growth, affirming its position as one of the region’s leading destinations. Phu Quoc Island continues to attract the majority of international travellers, receiving more than 817,660 visitors, accounting for over 98.5% of total foreign arrivals to the province.
Reducing risks, removing logistics bottlenecks amid Middle East volatility
According to Truong Xuan Trung, Trade Counsellor of Vietnam in the UAE, the Middle East serves not only as a consumption market but also as a key global transhipment hub, meaning instability in the region creates ripple effects across intercontinental transport networks. Shipping route adjustments and airspace restrictions have lengthened transit times, increased costs and disrupted delivery schedules, with some Vietnamese shipments forced to reroute or seek alternative markets.
Senior housing emerges as high-potential segment in Vietnam
Major developers such as Vingroup, Sun Group and Tran Anh Group have already announced plans to enter the segment, signalling increasing investor interest in what is widely seen as an underdeveloped but promising market.
Businesses seek “survival momentum” amid global geopolitical turbulence
This is an urgent move as the challenges of 2026 differ markedly from previous ones, shaped by overlapping external shocks ranging from geopolitical tensions disrupting supply chains to surging logistics and raw material costs, exchange-rate pressures, and increasingly complex tariff barriers in global markets.
Reference exchange rate drops slightly on March 26
The State Bank of Vietnam set the daily reference exchange rate at 25,102 VND/USD on March 26, down 2 VND from the previous session.
Financial infrastructure - a critical enabler of sustainable cross-border e-commerce
Vietnam’s fast-growing e-commerce sector is increasingly viewed as a potential contributor to export growth. As the ecosystem matures, the focus is shifting from simply selling across borders to building the operational capacity required to run global businesses at scale.
Ho Chi Minh City gives boost to supporting industry firms
Supporting industry firms in Ho Chi Minh City are scrambling to embed themselves more deeply into both global and domestic supply chains, backed by a suite of local incentives that are speeding up their tech upgrades and market access.
Italian food firms eye opportunities in Vietnam
Italy’s exports of food and beverages to Vietnam reached 105.1 million EUR in 2025, up 4% year-on-year, positioning the country among the leading EU suppliers to the Vietnamese market.
German firms expand workforce cooperation with Vietnam’s labour market
BGWind GmbH, a member of the network of the German Association of Small and Medium-Sized Businesses (BVMW), intends to organise recruitment trips to Vietnam roughly once a month, with the next visit expected in late April 2026.
Quang Ninh promotes all-round cooperation with Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
Quang Ninh encourages Guangxi enterprises to invest in high-tech marine aquaculture and expand aquatic product exports in China. At the same time, the province aims to develop livestock farming in line with international standards and attract investment in deep-processing plants for agricultural products such as cinnamon, star anise and tea, linked with traceability systems at border gates.
Vietnam becomes fastest growing market for Norwegian salmon in Southeast Asia
The Norwegian Seafood Council (NSC) reported at the “Norwegian seafood industry in Vietnam market 2026” event held in Ho Chi Minh City on March 25 that fresh Norwegian salmon exports to Vietnam jumped 16% in volume in the first two months of 2026 compared with a year earlier, while frozen salmon shipments surged about 37%.
Positioning Vietnam International Financial Centre on global capital “radar”
While building a fully-fledged international financial centre will take time, the VIFC is gradually moving from positioning to building credibility, thereby opening up new opportunities to attract global capital in the years ahead.