Agrinews Trà Vinh to grow high-value crops on low-yield rice fields

Trà Vinh to grow high-value crops on low-yield rice fields

Tác giả VNS, ngày đăng 06/01/2021

Trà Vinh to grow high-value crops on low-yield rice fields

TRÀ VINH — The Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta province of Trà Vinh plans to switch to high-value crops on more low-yield rice fields and use advanced farming techniques to improve farmers’ incomes in the next five years.

A gấc fruit (Momordica cochinchinensis) farming model adopted by the Việt Thành Agriculture Co-operative in Trà Vinh Province’s Cầu Kè District offers high incomes. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Hòa

Of 8,108ha on its radar, the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development said 4,258ha would see a complete switch to short-term crops, 2,487ha would be used for perennial trees and the remaining 1,363ha would have rice and aquatic species.

Phạm Minh Truyền, director of the department, said to ensure an efficient switch the department in co-operation with localities would step up advocacy for the programme and related incentives.

It encourages farmers to join co-operative groups and co-operatives to improve their efficiency and link up with companies to secure outlets, he said.

The province would focus on research and creating new varieties of crops with high yields and quality that can adapt to climate change and are resistant to diseases, he said.

It would implement the preferential policies of both central and local governments related to switching from rice to other crops and investment in agriculture, he said.

Since 2015 more than 18,300ha have been converted, he said.

Other crops offer 1.3-7.6 times the income rice does, according to the department.     

Farmers in the province now earn an average of VNĐ130 million (US$5,600) per hectare per year, VNĐ6.3 million higher than in 2015 while aquaculture yields VNĐ360 million ($15,600), an increase of VNĐ110 million.   

More fruit cultivation

The province has also encouraged farmers with a total of 9,000ha growing a mix of various other crops to switch to high-value fruits, coconut, vegetables, and timber.

On such lands, farmers should identify which of their crops is suitable for growing, especially drought-resistant, and stick to those, the department said.

Most of these lands are in Cầu Ngang, Trà Cú, Duyên Hải, and Châu Thành districts, have sandy soil, are one to four metres above sea level, and grow various kinds of plants including bamboo and timber, it said.

Truyền said most of these lands yield low incomes, and so their owners are encouraged to switch to mango, longan, milk apple, jackfruit, peanut, water melon, vegetables, and other crops.

To encourage the switch, the province provides subsidies to farmers, co-operatives, co-operative groups, and companies for buying seeds, fertilisers, and pesticides.

They receive VNĐ6-12 million ($260-520) per hectare in the first year and VNĐ 3-5 million ($130-216) in the second for up to 50ha of lands.

Advanced techniques

Authorities have taken measures to popularise advanced techniques to improve the yield and quality of agricultural products and thus farmers’ incomes.

The province’s Farmers Association has helped nearly 4,000 farmers adopt advanced techniques in recent years.

They include using hydroponics, net houses and poly greenhouse farming, cultivating crops to Vietnamese and global good agricultural practices (VietGAP and GlobalGAP) standards and breeding aquatic species using intensive farming and super-intensive farming methods.      

A model of growing honeydew melon in poly greenhouses in Châu Thành District, for instance, brings farmers an income of VNĐ1.2-1.8 billion ($51,860-77,800) per hectare per year.

Nguyễn Tường Linh, deputy head of the Châu Thành Bureau of Agriculture and Rural Development, said the model, with drip irrigation, helps save water, prevent pests, and reduce the use of pesticides.

“It is a sustainable agricultural production model and suitable for use amid climate change.”

The province has nearly 17,000ha of lands using advanced farming techniques, or 4.5 per cent of its total farmlands, according to the department.

It has created brand names for 26 agricultural products and developed agricultural co-operatives and value chains to improve farmers’ incomes.

The province’s rural per capita income area has risen 1.2 times since 2015 to VNĐ32 million ($1,380).


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