According to Kieu Van Cang, Head of the Department of Crop Production and Plant Protection of Binh Dinh, the province has the 5th largest coconut area in the country (after Ben Tre, Tra Vinh, Tien Giang, Vinh Long) and the largest in the Central region.
As of 2023, the coconut area in Binh Dinh is 9,353 hectares; of which, the area of Siamese coconut (drinking coconut) accounts for 24.5%, equivalent to about 2,292 hectares; the average yield is 119.3 quintals/ha, the output is 111,358 tons per year.
According to the plan, by 2025, Binh Dinh will increase the coconut area to 10,000 hectares, of which 9,700 hectares are for commercial coconut, with an output of 116,400 tons per year (mainly coconut for drinking water), mainly concentrated in Hoai Nhon town, Phu My district, Hoai An district, and Phu Cat district.
Hoai Nhon is a favorable land for coconut trees to grow, the average age of coconuts here is 20-25 years, many coconut gardens are pretty old, nearly 40 years old, with an average yield of 25-30 fruits/tree/year. Hoai Nhon has a coconut growing area of about 3,000 hectares, scattered in 17 communes and towns, of which some coconut gardens have high yields in Tam Quan Nam, Hoai Hao, Hoai Thanh Tay, and Hoai Xuan. Hoai Nhon Coconut has the advantage of long-standing coconut gardens, large fruits, and high oil content, and is a district with a large coconut area in Binh Dinh (the whole province is about 10,500 hectares).
"Fresh coconuts officially exported to China are an opportunity for farmers who own nearly 3,000 hectares of Siamese coconuts in Binh Dinh. For a long time, coconuts have been consumed mainly in the domestic market, and a small amount has been sold in other provinces. The price varies greatly depending on the season, ranging from VND 8,000 - 12,000 per fruit in the dry season, and only 5,000 - VND 6,000 per fruit in the rainy season. Now that coconuts are officially exported to China, the price of drinking coconuts will certainly be more stable, and farmers will gain better incomes," Cang expected.
Binh Dinh is even happier when the provincial authorities have just completed the procedures to apply for a growing area code for more than 70 hectares of drinking coconuts in Phu Cat and Hoai An districts. Because the growing area code is a prerequisite for exporting fresh coconuts to the Chinese market.
Speed up the issuance of production unit code