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To boost fruit exports, COA focuses on 10 varieties

2005-12-15

2005-12-15 / Taiwan News, Supplements Writer / by Leo R. Maliksi

Taiwan's sub-tropical climate gives it the right conditions to grow tropical fruits. This natural endowment is made even more fruitful with modern agricultural methods and hard-working farmers. This island produces high-quality and safe tropical fruit varieties.
The Council of Agriculture (COA) has decided to focus on its export guidance and assistance efforts in order to boost the competitiveness of Taiwan fruits. Those efforts will be directed primarily at the production of 10 kinds of fruit: mango, banana, litchi, oranges and tangerines, papaya, pineapple, grapes, pomelos, starfruit and wax apple. The COA has asked agricultural experts from the Bureau of Animal and Plant Health Inspection and Quarantine, the Agricultural Chemicals and Toxic Substances Research Institute, Agricultural Research Institute and Agricultural Research and Extension Stations to form a technical and consultative task force to design a model for a high-quality production farm for those fruits and to publish a guidance handbook for farmers.

COA Minister Lee Ching-lung
COA Minister Lee Ching-lung says
the govenment does not see much
potential in the Mainland Chinese
Market./File photo


These measures are all part of the COA plans “Increasing Global Sales of Agriculture Products” that also seeks to encourage market diversification.

“We do this by supporting marketing and promotion activities done in overseas markets, working to eliminate tariff and non-tariff barriers, helping build supply chains for fruit exports, providing export information and training manpower for agriculture product exports,” says COA Minister Lee Ching-lung.

“We would like to promote the export of high-quality and high-value agriculture products to markets whose consumers have high purchasing powers and not simply to export agriculture surplus.”

After the implementation of the plan, Taiwan’s exports reached US$3.55 billion in 2004, a 10% increase over 2003. Bananas are the most important fruit export for Taiwan. In 2004, its export value reached US$10.3 million, 30% of the total fresh fruit exports of US$33.82 million. Mangoes made up 14% (US$4.82 million), litchis 13% (US$4.52 million) and all kinds of oranges 12% (US$4.17 million).

Japan, the United States and Southeast Asia are the main export destinations due to quarantine measures and limitations on the means of transporting fresh fruits. In 2004, Taiwan exported US$14.2 million worth of fresh fruits to Japan, 42% of the total. Exports to the U.S.A. were worth US$7.6 million (23%) and merely US$340,000 were exported to Mainland China, 1% of the total.

“We don’t reject exportation to Mainland China,” says Mr. Lee “but some people have misrepresented and twisted our original policy. We are doing what we can to support farmers who would like to develop their Mainland Chinese market.”

The whole world looks highly at the Mainland Chinese market. But according to the COA minister, we have to look at a foreign market’s export entry threshold. “This reflects its demand for quality and consequently the prices that market is willing to pay for the product quality,” he says. “The Mainland Chinese market threshold is very low while that of Japan’s is very high.”

While the Taiwan government has never opposed exportation to China, it does not consider that market as having much potential. Moreover, China is world famous for infringing on intellectual property rights. They could declare that some of their agricultural products are made in Taiwan and mislead consumers.

“This is why we still think Japan, the U.S.A. and Europe are more stable markets; their demand for quality is high and therefore they pay higher prices,” says Mr. Lee