Coffee sector is close to right blend
Interest in Vietnam’s lucrative coffee industry is brewing among foreign firms.
Thai Hoa Vietnam Group chairman and general director Nguyen Van An said a number of South Korean and Japan investors were eying up investment opportunities at the company’s $32.5 million coffee processing complex in the Central Highlands province of Lam Dong.
Thai Hoa, known as Vietnam’s leading private coffee firm, is currently aiming to mobilise more investment capital for the complex where a number of coffee processing facilities are already operational.
An said a group of South Korean investors were working with Thai Hoa on a project to plant 300 hectares of coffee trees.
Last week Swiss Nestlé trumpeted a plan to build a $270 million coffee processing plant in southern Dong Nai province’s Amata Industrial Park.
Development of the plant was licenced in late 2010 and work has just begun with the completion date set for 2013. The new plant will be able to process 46,000 tonnes of coffee beans for local consumption and export a year and employ 200 local workers, while generating employment for tens of thousands of coffee farmers.
Vietnam Coffee and Cacao Association’s (Vicofa) chairman Luong Van Tu said the examples of Thai Hoa and Nestlé were just two among foreign firms ready for investment in Vietnamese coffee industry.
Vietnam is now home to 24 foreign coffee firms engaging in trading, purchasing and processing coffee beans.
“Many of them are boosting their investments into Vietnam,” Tu said. Five of the 10 biggest coffee traders in the world had penetrated Vietnam’s coffee market in the form of joint ventures or wholly foreign-invested companies, according to Vicofa. These firms include Dak Man Coffee Processing Export Joint Venture Company, the Netherlands’ Nedcoffee and Olam.
In September last year, Indian-backed Ngon Coffee Company Limited, an affiliate of leading Indian coffee processor and exporter CCL Products Group, kicked off its $18 million project to build a large instant coffee processing plant in Central Highlands Dak Lak province.
Dak Lak is home to Vietnam’s largest coffee growing areas and Ngon’s plant is one of the first foreign instant coffee processing projects in the province.
Licenced in early 2009, the 24ha European-technology project will source all of its coffee materials in Vietnam. The plant will churn out 10,000 tonnes of high-quality coffee per year and is expected to come online at the end of this year. The plant’s revenue will be $27 million for the first year of operation and $40.5 million by 2014.
In a similar development, in April last year Singaporean-backed Olam International Group opened its $50 million instant coffee manufacturing plant in southern Long An province’s Nhut Chanh Industrial Park.
The 5.3ha plant has 500 local workers and can pump out 4,000 tonnes annually and the output will be doubled by 2012. Olam now operates six coffee and spice processing factories in Vietnam.
In January 2010 Japanese-backed Mizuho Bank inked a contract to provide capital for Tay Nguyen Coffee Investment Import and Export Company, Vietnam’s biggest coffee exporter. Under the terms of the contract, the Vietnamese company will export coffee to Japan through Marubeni, Japan’s biggest coffee importer. – VIR
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