link ae888

Experts urge organic fertiliser use

It is time to increase the production and use of organic fertilisers to foster organic farming, according to the Vietnam Fertiliser Association.
Experts urge organic fertiliser use ảnh 1A national conference on development strategies for the organic fertiliser industry and organic agriculture was held in HCM City. (Photo: VNA)

HCM City (VNS/VNA) - It is timeto increase the production and use of organic fertilisers to foster organicfarming, according to the Vietnam Fertiliser Association.

Speaking at a national conference ondevelopment strategies for the organic fertiliser industry and organicagriculture in Ho Chi Minh City on October 13, Nguyen Hac Thuy, generalsecretary of the association, said: "Consumers around the world payincreasing attention to food safety and farm produce quality, while importingcountries scrupulously check imported agricultural produce, especially forresidues of plant protection chemicals, antibiotics, and heavy metal content.

“Many countries have shifted to organicagriculture to ensure sustainable agriculture, food safety and people’shealth.”

Vietnam’s agriculture has made greatstrides in recent decades, with productivity shooting up to not only meetdomestic but also export demand.

But its challenges are increasing in theform of natural disasters, saltwater intrusion, droughts, flooding and soilexhaustion due to overuse of fertilisers.

Luong Quoc Doan, Vice Chairman of the VietnamFarmers Association’s executive committee, said: “It is time for Vietnam’sagriculture to have new directions to enable it to develop more sustainably andefficiently, and organic agriculture, through eliminating the use of chemicalfertilisers and enhancing the use of organic ones, is among the new directions.

“Organic fertilisers are among theimportant factors in pushing Vietnam’s agriculture towards organic farming.

“But domestic supply of organic fertilisersis still very modest compared to demand.”

Thuy said Vietnam produced more than 1.2 milliontonnes of organic fertilisers a year, accounting for a tenth of totalfertiliser demand.

“Statistics provided by the Ministry ofAgriculture and Rural Development reveal that the agricultural sector annuallyproduces around 40 million tonnes of straw, corn and sugarcane refuse and over25 million tonnes of animal and poultry waste, which are potentially rawmaterials for marking organic fertilizers, but for a long time we did not takeadvantage.”

"With such volumes of agriculturalby-products, we can produce 5-6 million tonnes of organic fertilisers," hesaid.

Using the agricultural by-products toproduce organic fertilisers would also help reduce pollution and improve soilfertility and farm produce quality, he added.

Doan said promoting the use of organicfertilisers remained difficult since to fertilise a similar area a largervolume of organic fertilisers is needed compared to chemical fertilisers,making transportation harder and costs higher.

Besides, their impact is not as quick asthat of chemical fertilisers, he said.

“Despite facing difficulties in developingthe organic fertiliser market, it is a vital trend and the Government shouldoffer support through appropriate policies and technologies,” Doan said.

Fertiliser management

At the conference, the Crop ProductionDepartment issued Decree No 108/2017/ND-CP on fertiliser management toencourage legitimate producers and eradicate fake products, a widespreadproblem.

Hoang Trung, head of the department, saidthe new decree was expected to address the shortcomings of the previous decree,in which many provisions have become outdated and not impracticable.

The new decree would improve oversight tocrack down on fraudulent companies, he said.

Under the former decree, both the Ministriesof Agriculture and Rural Development and Industry and Trade managedfertilisers, causing an overlap, he said.

"The new decree resolves this issuesince the agriculture ministry becomes the only agency in charge," hesaid.

The department also solicited contributionsfor a draft decree on dealing with violations in the fertiliser sector, whichenvisages increasing fines for certain violations.

The department would continue to seekfeedback from relevant agencies and businesses to complete the draft beforesending it to the Government for approval in December, Trung added.-VNA
VNA

See more

A motorbike production line of Honda Vietnam — a Japanese company located in Phu Tho province. (Photo: VNA)

🅰 Phu Tho emerges as FDI magnet following mergence

In the first seven months of the year, Phu Tho attracted an impressive 651.7 million USD in foreign direct investment, including 35 newly licensed projects totaling 119 million USD in registered capital and 45 existing projects with an additional capital of 533 million USD.
Infraction levels will correspond to fines of 1-80 million VND, depending on the nature and number of invoicing violations. (Photo: vietnamfinance.vn)

🎃 Maximum fine of 3,000 USD proposed for violating invoice regulations

Under a draft to amend and supplement the Government's Decree 125/2020/ND-CP on administrative sanctions for violations of tax and invoice regulations, the Ministry of Finance has proposed classifying the failure to issue invoices into five different levels. Infraction levels will correspond to fines of 1 million VND to 80 million VND, depending on the nature and number of invoicing violations.
At the strategic partnership signing ceremony between Sun PhuQuoc Airways and Amadeus. (Photo: Sun Group)

🌱 Sun PhuQuoc Airways enters strategic partnership with Amadeus to build a five-star aviation technology ecosystem

A new airline developed and invested by Sun Group — has officially announced a strategic partnership with Amadeus IT Group (Amadeus), one of the world’s leading travel technology companies. This agreement not only lays the foundation for a modern digital infrastructure but also marks a pivotal step in SPA’s global expansion strategy, enabling the airline to access international distribution networks and reach customers worldwide.
A local resident makes a bank transfer using the Momo app. (Photo: VNA)

﷽ Banks accelerate digitalisation, non-cash payments

Cashless payments are growing at an impressive rate, averaging 30–40% annually. Vietnam’s per capita cashless transaction volume now trails only China, with total value of 295.2 quadrillion VND (11.26 trillion USD), or 26 times of its GDP.
{dagathomo tructiep hôm nay}|{link ae888 city 165}|{dá gà thomo}|{trực tiếp đá gà thomo hom nay}|{sbobet asian handicap}|