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Dragon fruit is an agriculture staple of Vietnam, with Binh Thuan home to more than 27,000 hectares of the fruit

Present at the event at the India International Centre were Vietnamese Ambassador to India Ton Sinh Thanh; Director of the Binh Thuan Department of Industry and Trade, or the organizer, Do Minh Kinh; President of Indian Importers Chambers of Commerce and Industries Atul Kumar; and Chairman of the Trade Promotion Council of India Mohit Singla, alongside representatives of local enterprises.

Addressing the event, Ambassador Thanh briefed attendees on Vietnam and the advantages of Binh Thuan in tourism and agriculture. He said he expects such promotional events will further trade relations between the two countries.

Through the event, the Binh Thuan Department of Industry and Trade hopes to introduce and promote dragon fruits, one of the province’s key currency earners in India, and provide a platform for businesses of both sides to meet, said director Kinh.

During the visit to India, officials from Binh Thuan are also scheduled to meet with the Trade Promotion Council of India and Reliance Retail Limited, a leading retailer in India. They will attend an international food and beverage trade show in Mumbai and hold another promotional event for dragon fruit at Sofitel Mumbai BKC hotel.

Dragon fruit is an agriculture staple of Vietnam, with Binh Thuan home to more than 27,000 hectares of the fruit.

Dragon fruit has dominated Vietnamese fruit exports in the first four months of 2018, with total exports reaching 427 million USD, a year-on-year increase of 9 percent.

According to the General Department of Vietnam Customs, dragon fruit accounted for 32 percent of total exports of Vietnamese vegetables and fruits. Revenue from dragon fruit exports was nearly four times higher than the two fruit exports ranked below it - longan, which had an export value of 121 million USD, and mangos, whose export value stood at 104 million USD.

Binh Thuan produces more than 600,000 tons of dragon fruit annually, making it the country’s largest trading hub of the fruit. Its dragon fruits have been shipped to more than 16 countries and territories.

As of late 2017, the province boasted more than 9,500 hectares of dragon fruit farms at Vietnamese Good Agricultural Practice (VietGAP) standards. It is striving to add 300 more hectares this year.

Source: VNA