In the first four months of this year, Vietnam earned nearly 2.5 billion USD from seafood export to 139 markets, up 14 percent year-on-year. The top four markets are the US, Japan each accounting for 15 percent, and Europe and China each with 14 percent.
Notably, China could become the largest importer of Vietnamese aquatic products from the second quarter this year considering the growth of 37 percent in the first four months. Last year, China was the fourth largest importer of Vietnam’s seafood with a turnover of 1.28 billion USD, accounting for 15 percent of the total.
VASEP General Secretary Truong Dinh Hoe said Vietnamese seafood exporters will continue facing difficulties such as anti-dumping tax, technical barriers, the EU’s yellow card warning.
Aquatic products export is estimated at 10 billion USD this year, up 20 percent annually.
Speaking at the event, Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Tran Thanh Nam lauded VASEP and the seafood industry for pushing seafood export from 1 billion USD in 2000 to over 8.3 billion USD last year.
He said the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has directed the Directorate of Fisheries, the Agro Processing and Market Development Authority and the Vietnam Trade Promotion Agency to review projects on building national trademarks for Vietnamese tra fish and shrimp.
The VASEP General Secretary said the association and the business community have taken measures to promote the country’s two key aquatic products.
After a Spanish television channel with distorted information about tra fish farming on Mekong River in 2017, VASEP and the domestic business community immediately built a scheme to popularise the image of Vietnamese tra fish in the EU.
VASEP also signed a contract with an EU media outlet to market tra fish in the bloc from March-December 2017. As a result, the website youreverydayfish.com was born, becoming a multilingual portal introducing Vietnamese tra fish sector and rapidly responding to distorted and negative information in English, German, Italian, Spanish and Dutch languages.
Hoe said VASEP will accelerate trade promotion, market expansion and popularise the image of Vietnam’s fishery products. The association will also work to restore the market development fund to cope with arising problems regarding prestige and trademarks in export markets.
VNA
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) Vietnam’s pangasius exports have shown encouraging signs of recovery in 2026. In the first four months of the year, total export turnover reached USD 720 million, up 17% compared to the same period last year. This result reflects improving demand across many markets, as well as the efforts of Vietnamese pangasius enterprises to maintain production, secure orders, and adapt to changing market conditions.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) In the first four months of 2026, Vietnam’s tilapia exports reached USD 49 million, up 151% compared to the same period in 2025. This impressive growth reflects positive momentum in the tilapia sector, with Brazil emerging as a key driver of growth, while frozen tilapia fillets continued to be the industry's leading export product.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) Vietnam’s tuna exports to the UK have shown positive signs in the first months of 2026. While the UK’s overall tuna imports from the world declined, imports from Vietnam increased strongly, indicating that there is still room for Vietnam to expand its market share. However, behind this growth, competitive pressure remains intense, especially as the UK continues to be a major market for established suppliers such as Ecuador, Mauritius, and Ghana.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) Biofloc technology is being piloted in several rice–shrimp farming models in Ca Mau Province, showing initial positive results in controlling pond environments, improving shrimp seed quality, and supporting sustainable aquaculture development.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) In the first four months of 2026, Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia together contributed USD 108 million to Vietnam’s pangasius exports, accounting for around 15% of the industry’s total export turnover. Amid tightening global whitefish supply and slowing demand in several traditional markets, Latin America is increasingly becoming an important expansion destination for the sector.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) Alongside the development of high-tech shrimp farming, Ha Tinh Province is accelerating the cultivation of high-value freshwater aquatic species, with red tilapia emerging as an effective and sustainable farming model.
(vasep.com.vn) Vietnam’s tuna exports reached USD 81 million in April 2026, down 6% compared to the same period in 2025. In the first four months of the year, export turnover totaled USD 289 million, down 4.8%. Although the overall export picture has yet to brighten significantly, market trends are becoming increasingly diversified rather than moving in a single direction.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) Vietnam’s pangasius industry is undergoing strong restructuring starting from the broodstock and fingerling segment in order to improve productivity, quality, and export competitiveness. This is considered a critical foundation for the sustainable development of the industry amid rising production costs and increasingly stringent market requirements.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) According to Vietnam Customs data, pangasius exports in April 2026 reached USD 206 million, up 18% compared to the same period in 2025 — marking another consecutive month of double-digit growth since the beginning of the year. Cumulative pangasius export turnover in the first four months of 2026 reached USD 720 million, up 17% year-on-year, reflecting the positive growth momentum of this key export product.
(seafood.vasep.com.vn) Vietnam’s shrimp exports in the first four months of 2026 maintained positive growth momentum, reaching approximately USD 1.5 billion, up 15% compared to the same period last year. However, behind this result lies diverging trends across markets, as the global shrimp industry continues to face pressure from inflation, high inventories, price competition, and increasing trade risks.
VASEP - HIỆP HỘI CHẾ BIẾN VÀ XUẤT KHẨU THỦY SẢN VIỆT NAM
Chịu trách nhiệm: Ông Nguyễn Hoài Nam - Phó Tổng thư ký Hiệp hội
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