[PHNOM PENH POST]
Mega Green Company plans to export up to 50,000 tonnes of rice in 2011,
largely due to increased demand from the European Union, according to
Director General Outh Renne.
The firm claims to have already shipped 10,000 tonnes to Europe in 2011 to date.
Mega Green’s processed rice sold for prices beginning at US$385 a tonne, with prices rising for higher quality product, he said.
The
European Union has removed tariffs and quotas on the majority of
imports, including rice, from Least Developed Countries such as Cambodia
under its Everything But Arms initiative.
Rice exports ought to
continue to rise, said Outh Renne, with demand also increasing from the
Philippines, as well as interest from buyers in China and the Middle
East.
“The Philippines is a big market, demanding more rice,” he
said, adding his company hoped to export 5,000 tonnes to the country
this year.
Prime Minister Hun Sen has set a goal of one million
tonnes of milled rice exports by 2015, which Outh Renne said the Kingdom
could achieve. However, he added the process would not be without
difficulties.
He highlighted the need to increase loans by
commercial banks to local rice millers to purchase paddy for processing,
the requirement to develop domestic infrastructure, and that strong
links had to be established with exporters and buyers.
Meanwhile,
the Food and Agricultural Organisation’s April rice market monitor
report released yesterday bumped up its estimate for the Kingdom’s 2010
crop to 8.3 million tonnes, from 8 million tonnes previously.
“A
considerable surplus from a record 2010 crop is anticipated to enable
Cambodia to step up 2011 exports by 8 percent to 1.4 million tonnes, the
bulk of which is expected to flow unrecorded, mainly to Vietnam and
Thailand,” it said.
It said Cambodia’s 2011 rice crop could hit 8.5 million tonnes, though it noted the main crop was planted in June.
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