Monday April 16, 2012
MALAYSIA will now have to change its marketing strategy to sell its agriculture products in China.
The Federal Agriculture Marketing Agency (Fama) needs to gauge the types of goods that are highly demanded by the Chinese market first before going back to Malaysia to produce the adequate volume of the products for the market, says Agriculture and Agro-Based Ministry secretary-general Datuk Mohd Hashim Abdullah.
In the past, our farmers grew fruits and other fresh produces and we would look for ways to sell them in the overseas market. We cannot do that anymore.
Done deal: Fama director-general Ahmad Ishak (right) and China Agricultural Wholesale Markets Association president Ma Zengjun posing for photos after the signing ceremony in Beijing.
Now we have to come here and see what the Chinese people want. If they say they want pisang berangan (a type of banana), we will inform the farmers to plant pisang berangan, he said in a recent interview in Xi’an in Shaanxi province.
Since frozen durian from Malaysia was first exported to China late last year, the fruit has been well received by the Chinese. The fruits have reached major cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.
Demand for the King of Fruits of Malaysia has been on the rise but the Malaysian authorities and farmers were facing the problem of supplying enough durian for the Chinese market, Mohd Hashim said.
Last month, an importer alone asked for 18 containers of frozen durian for one whole month. But, do we have so much durian? he said.
He said his ministry would have to re-look into the production of the fruits and encourage the farmers to incorporate the latest agricultural technology such as tree cloning to boost production.
He said ministry officials would visit the orchards and fruit processing factories to ensure the operators comply with the good agriculture practice and standards.
Currently, the ministry has a database of the total coverage of durian orchards in Malaysia. Remote villagers are encouraged to collect durians from their villages and send them to the collection and distribution centres established by the ministry.
Fama and wholesalers will then buy the fruits from the centres and distribute and export them.
“I will ask for a meeting with all the durian exporters and help them set up a consortium which will then decide whether to raise or decrease the price of the durian. They will band together to look for the supply of durian to fulfil the orders from China,” said Mohd Hashim.
He revealed that the Malaysian government was in talks with the Chinese General Administration of Quality, Inspection and Quarantine to export more Malaysian fruits such as pineapple and jackfruit to China.
He led a delegation of Malaysian exporters to participate in the International Trade Forum for Cooperation Between East and West held in Xi’an from April 5-April 9.
The ministry finalised details of its maiden food and cultural festival to be held from May 11 until 20 at the busy Muslim Street in downtown Xi’an.
Later during the ministry officials’ visit to Beijing, Fama and the China Agricultural Wholesale Markets Association inked a memorandum of understanding on the distribution of products from each other countries.
Now that Malaysian agriculture products have shown great potential in China, Malaysian Ambassador to China Datuk Iskandar Sarudin said Malaysian exporters should ensure the highest quality of their products.
All parties must work closely to maintain the standard set by our authorities and by the Chinese authorities. Nowadays China is very concerned about rules and procedures and the quality of imported goods because the health of its people are at stake.
Foreign products especially food must comply with China’s standards. We do not want to come to a situation anymore where our product faces problems of compliance and eventually our government will have to intervene and solve this problem, he said.
The Malaysian swiftlet industry has been hit badly following a ban by the Chinese authorities on the bird’s nest products from Malaysia which contained high nitrite levels in contravention of China’s health standards last August.
After the intervention of prime ministers from both countries, China finally agreed to lift its ban on the bird’s nest imports if the nitrite levels are below 30ppm (parts per million). The health ministries of China and Malaysia are now working out the protocol for the implementation of the new standard.
sources:
Monday, 16 April 2012
Thursday, 12 April 2012
Chua: Firms that meet requirements allowed to export bird’s nest to China
Wednesday April 11, 2012
KUALA LUMPUR: Deputy Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister Datuk Chua Tee Yong has refuted rumours that only one company will be given rights to export bird's nest to China.
“There is no such monopoly. Companies that fulfil the necessary conditions will be allowed to export to China,” he said yesterday after presenting a RM20,000 cheque to single mother of three boys Stephanie Lim at her home here.
Lim, who sells a variety of homemade sauces for a living, was a successful applicant for the 1MCA Micro Credit Loan Scheme for Youth.
Also present was MCA central committee member and Kojadi honorary secretary Loh Seng Kok.
Both Malaysia and China have agreed that several conditions must be met before the ban of the luxury item to China can be lifted.
These included requiring bird's nest exporters to have a Veterinary Health Mark (VHM) and a health certificate from the Veterinary Services Department and Health Ministry, respectively, as well as a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) from the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission.
“Currently, eight processing centres have obtained the VHM which ensures quality and cleanliness,” said Chua who encouraged swiftlet breeders to register with the Veterinary Services Department.
Minister Datuk Seri Noh Omar said on Sunday that Malaysia would soon sign the draft protocol on bird's nest entry into China.
On the 1MCA Micro Credit Loan Scheme, Chua, who is also MCA's Young Professionals Bureau chairman, said some RM1.4mil worth of loans had been allocated to 83 people.
“We hope to create more entrepreneurs and assist those who are already in business to improve their income and production.
“We hope the money can help Lim buy materials in bulk as well as more equipment to improve her business,” he said, adding that her application was approved within two weeks.
source:
KUALA LUMPUR: Deputy Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister Datuk Chua Tee Yong has refuted rumours that only one company will be given rights to export bird's nest to China.
“There is no such monopoly. Companies that fulfil the necessary conditions will be allowed to export to China,” he said yesterday after presenting a RM20,000 cheque to single mother of three boys Stephanie Lim at her home here.
Lim, who sells a variety of homemade sauces for a living, was a successful applicant for the 1MCA Micro Credit Loan Scheme for Youth.
Also present was MCA central committee member and Kojadi honorary secretary Loh Seng Kok.
Both Malaysia and China have agreed that several conditions must be met before the ban of the luxury item to China can be lifted.
These included requiring bird's nest exporters to have a Veterinary Health Mark (VHM) and a health certificate from the Veterinary Services Department and Health Ministry, respectively, as well as a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) from the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission.
“Currently, eight processing centres have obtained the VHM which ensures quality and cleanliness,” said Chua who encouraged swiftlet breeders to register with the Veterinary Services Department.
Minister Datuk Seri Noh Omar said on Sunday that Malaysia would soon sign the draft protocol on bird's nest entry into China.
On the 1MCA Micro Credit Loan Scheme, Chua, who is also MCA's Young Professionals Bureau chairman, said some RM1.4mil worth of loans had been allocated to 83 people.
“We hope to create more entrepreneurs and assist those who are already in business to improve their income and production.
“We hope the money can help Lim buy materials in bulk as well as more equipment to improve her business,” he said, adding that her application was approved within two weeks.
source:
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
Malaysia to sign bird's nest deal with China
Updated: 2012-04-09 15:10
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia will sign a draft protocol with China to resume bird's nest export to China which was halted last year over a safety concern.
Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister Noh Omar was quoted by state news agency Bernama as saying on Sunday that both countries will sign the protocol as they have agreed on three key conditions in the latest negotiation.
Malaysian bird's nest exporters are required to get certifications from the Health Ministry and the Veterinary Department and an identification from the Multimedia Commission that traces the origin of the bird's nests through radio frequency to ensure that the edible bird's nests are authentic and safe for consumption.
The ministry could not confirm when the draft protocol would be signed.
Edible bird's nests, made of the secretion from the salivary glands of swiftlets, has been used traditionally in Chinese cooking for centuries.
China banned bird's nests imports from Malaysia one of the world's largest bird's nests producers, after it found last July excessive nitrite in counterfeit blood nests, a rare kind of bird' s nests.
Noh said the ban caused Malaysia's bird's nest market price to plunge sharply.
Many traders also had difficulties servicing their bank loans, he added.
Source:
Sunday, 8 April 2012
China Sets Nitrite Limits for Edible Bird's Nests
2012-04-05 21:46:54 Xinhua Web Editor: Zhangjin
China on Thursday announced the tolerable maximum of nitrite in edible bird's nests, after some products with Malaysian origins sparked safety concerns for containing too much of the chemical, which if consumed excessively may lead to death.
The provisional standard issued by the Ministry of Health (MOH) stipulated that each kilogram of edible nests should contain no more than 30 mg of nitrite, a level equivalent to that allowable in China's pork products.
According to a joint study by Chinese and Malaysian food authorities and experts, the health risk of edible bird's nests with the set level of nitrite is extremely low.
Meanwhile, the MOH stressed that nitrite is banned from being artificially added during processing and production of edible bird's nests, a crime that carries severe punishment.
According to health experts, edible bird's nests naturally contain nitrite but cleansing with water may effectively reduce the levels of chemicals in the products.
Widely considered a health product for skin and beauty treatments, edible bird's nests are popular among Asian people, especially the Chinese. Malaysia is one of the world's biggest exporters of bird's nests, with 95 percent of its bird's nest products being sold to China.
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