HO CHI MINH CITY—The high price of pepper, combined with a drop in coffee prices, has caused many farmers to switch to cultivating pepper vines.
Experts have warned, however, that unzoned pepper development could hurt farmers in the long term.
In Dak Lak Province, considered the country’s coffee capital, many farmers are now growing pepper.
Hoang Minh Hung cut down 1 hectare of coffee trees to grow pepper in Dak Lak’s Krong Nang District in March.
“Many families here have switched to pepper,” he said.
Dak Lak has the largest pepper cultivating area in the Central Highlands region, according to the provincial People’s Committee.
As of May, Dak Lak had nearly 22,000 hectares of pepper, exceeding 15,000 hectares compared to the province’s zoned pepper cultivation area for 2015.
Similarly, the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai plans to have 6,000 hectares of pepper in 2020, but the province’s current pepper area is more than 12,000 hectares.
Do Ha Nam, chairman of the Vietnam Pepper Association, said the country’s pepper area had reached about 100,000 hectares as of the end of March, double the country’s pepper area zoned to 2020 by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.
The pepper areas in Southeast and Tay Nguyen (Central Highlands) provinces would continue to increase by 10 percent to 20 percent in the coming time, he said.
“If agencies do not have measures to limit unzoned pepper development, the pepper sector’s sustainable development will be affected,” he said.
Currently, pepper farmers grow the plant on many kinds of soil, including in areas not suitable for pepper cultivation.
Many farmers have also intercropped pepper in rubber orchards, which can cause rubber trees
infected with phytopthora, a kind of fungi, to die, according to experts.
A number of farmers overuse fertilizer and pesticides to increase yield, causing a decline of pepper quality.
Tran Vinh, deputy head of the Central Highlands Agriculture and Forestry Science Institute, said pepper seedlings without clear origin were being used due to the lack of information about disease-prevention techniques, as well as farmers chasing after profits.
This could lead to the mass death of pepper plants caused by disease outbreaks or pepper bearing no fruit, he said. Farmers could suffer severe losses, he added.
To grow 1 hectare of pepper, farmers have to invest more than 500 million Vietnamese Dong ($22,000).
Pepper companies are now buying pepper from farmers at a price of VND170,000 to VND180,000 ($7.7 to $8.1) a kilo.
The price of pepper has been high for nearly 10 years, providing stable profits for farmers.
Vietnam is the world’s top pepper exporter. The country exported about 70,000 tons of pepper worth 2 million in the first four months of the year, up nearly 24 percent in volume and 10 percent in value against the same period last year, according to the Vietnam Pepper Association.
Drought damage
Drought has affected more than 120,000 hectares of coffee and pepper in the Central Highlands region, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development’s Plant Cultivation Department said at a forum held in Gia Lai Province on Thursday.
Of the figure, 496 hectares of pepper and 6,500 hectares of coffee have been destroyed.
Most of the destroyed areas were in unzoned areas, the Plant Cultivation Department said. Of the region’s affected provinces, Dak Lak has been the hardest-hit province with more than 60,000 hectares of affected
coffee and pepper.
In areas which not suited for growing coffee and pepper, farmers should switch to other suitable trees and crops, experts at the forum said.
They also instructed farmers in methods to recover coffee and pepper orchards after drought.
Farmers were urged to use advanced farming techniques, including drip irrigation and spray irrigation techniques.
Coffee and pepper are the two major farm crops in the Central Highlands region.
Image credits: Bloomberg