Shrimp exports rose 5.6% to US$2.2 billion during the first nine months of this year and are expected to hit US$3.1 billion this year.
Major export markets saw a quite high growth (except for Japan down 4.2%) like China (up 30.3%), the US (up 15.2%), the EU (up 6.9%) and the Republic of Korea (up 12.3%). Meanwhile, exports to small markets dropped by 0.5-27.6%.
Through September, shrimp consumption was more favourable than previously thanks to high demands from the US and EU markets in the context of global supply decline.
Demands for shrimp, especially black tiger shrimp on the US and China markets are jumping high while black tiger shrimp outputs of major suppliers like India, Bangladesh and Indonesia may dip due to white spot disease on shrimp caused by climate change.
Many households in the Mekong Delta region shifted from raising black tiger shrimp to whiteleg shrimp as its requires as short breeding time, achieves high productivity and enjoys stable prices. In the first nine months of this year, whiteleg shrimp breeding areas reached 80,000ha (up 6.3%) and its output is estimated at 200,000 tons (up 4.2%) while black tiger shrimp was farmed on only 594,000 ha (up 0.5%) with an output of 160,000 tons (up 0.6%).
By Kim Thu