India is considering easing restrictions and allowing the export of white rice with a fixed tax rate. In addition, the authorities can also abolish the 20% tax on parboiled rice exports and apply a fixed tax rate for this product.

India's 5% broken parboiled rice was offered at US$539-545 per tonne last week.

The ministry said that if India abolishes and relaxes its rice export policies, rice prices will fall.

However, the demand for rice in countries around the world is still high, so Vietnam still has many opportunities to promote rice exports in the remaining months of 2024.

Vietnam's 5% broken rice was offered for sale at US$565-570 per tonne on July 12, the lowest level in more than half a year.

While rice export prices from Vietnam fell to their lowest level in a year, Thai rice prices also fell due to weak demand and the market is waiting for the possibility of that decision from India.

Specifically, Thailand's 5% broken rice dropped to US$570-575 per tonne, the lowest level since early April, down from US$585 last week.

However, Vietnam's export rice price still increased by nearly 10% over the same period. According to the MoIT’s Agency of Foreign Trade, after a long period of export prices rising, the fall in Vietnamese rice price was simply down to the trend of the global rice price.

If the relaxation of India's rice export policy is approved, the global rice supply is expected to increase. So, the rice prices in Asia are likely to cool down, because India is still a large rice exporter in the world with over 20 million tonnes each year.

Vietnam’s rice exports in the first six months of 2024 was still a bright spot, with volume of 4.68 million tonnes and turnover of US$2.98 billion, up 10.4% in volume and 32% in value over the same period last year.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) expects Vietnam to export about 8 million tonnes of rice this year, earning more than US$5 billion.

In the last months of the year, the main export markets of Vietnamese rice were still the Philippines, Indonesia, China, Ghana, Malaysia, and Singapore.

The success of the rice sector is the fruit of a concerted effort spanning research, production and trade, with high-quality seeds delivered to farmers' hands, former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Cao Duc Phat said.

Phat, who is Chairman of the Board of Directors of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), said the market now needs resilient, low-emission and quality rice varieties that adapt to climate change, adding that related research should help farmers achieve higher selling prices.

Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Phung Duc Tien affirmed that the ministry now places top priorities on high-quality seed production, major export products and the formation of quality varieties with high yields, which are disease-resistant and can adapt to different climates.

Director of the Vietnam Academy of Agricultural Sciences Nguyen Hong Son, meanwhile, attributed the country’s remarkable development in the rice industry to three major achievements. These include the diversification in plant genetic research disciplines, a research workforce that matches regional standards and the robust growth of the domestic seed industry.

Son suggested businesses commission research from institutes because each firm has different foundations in terms of rice varieties, working capabilities and investment goals. Investing in research from the outset allows new products to best meet business objectives.

However, public-private partnerships (PPP) between the sides face challenges due to Government Decree No. 70/2018/ND-CP, on planning the management and use of state property formed through implementing scientific and technological tasks using state funds. As per the decree, companies do not have ownership rights over rice varieties even if they contribute to the research process.

According to Tran Kim Lien, Chairwoman of the Vietnam Seed Group (Vinaseed), the regulation against transferring exclusive varieties makes it difficult to advance public-private partnerships. Delays in the adoption of a new variety and difficult resources mobilisation occur when all businesses involved await transfer approval after the recognition of the variety.

Lien has proposed MARD promptly issue a list for transferring plant variety rights to businesses. Simultaneously, transparent technology transfer should take into account business participation based on conditions and needs. The ministry also needs to provide early guidelines on public-private partnerships to mobilise social resources for rice breeding research.

Acknowledging the challenges, Nguyen Thi Thanh Thuy, Director of the MARD’s Department of Science, Technology and Environment, noted that the decree poses significant obstacles to research institutes in their plant variety transfers to businesses. However, the intellectual property law has eased such bottlenecks by granting plant variety ownership upon registration.

VNA