Myanmar’s eel and crab exports to China via Muse border resume
July 20
MYANMAR’S exports of
eel and crab to China via the Muse border post have restarted since 20 June
following the closure of Sino-Myanmar border posts triggered by the COVID-19
impacts, according to the Ministry of Commerce.
Myanmar delivered
US$0.646 million worth of 129.249 tonnes of crab and $0.83 million worth of
20.8 tonnes of eel in the week ended 27 June.
Myanmar sent 8,211.759
tonnes of crab ($23.737 million) and 2,855 tonnes of eels ($9.675 million) in
the 2019-2020 financial year. The country exported 1,962.76 tonnes of crab
($5.43 million) and 6,984.35 tonnes of eel ($28.127 million) in the 2020-
2021FY. There is no export of crab and eel recorded in the 2021-2022
mini-budget period as per the news released by the Ministry of Commerce online.
If the crab export
volume exceeds 50 tonnes, the price tends to decline. The prices go up during
festivals and public holidays.
A crab fetches around 33.336
Yuan per kilogramme whereas the prices of eel move in the range of 36-40 Yuan
per kilogramme depending on the size and quality, according to the traders.
Myanmar conveyed
fishery and aquaculture products to China after disinfection and PCR testing.
The fisheries products
across the country – Ayeyawady, Bago, Yangon and Mandalay regions and Rakhine
and Shan states – are sent to the Muse land border and the traders export the
frozen fish and live fish, crab, eel, long-finned eel and other fisheries
products to China through the Muse border. During the last financial year
2019-2020, fishery exports through Muse were valued at $170.735 million for
128,067 tonnes.
The market primarily
depends on China. The trade suspension in China in the previous mini-budget
period battered both the traders and the breeders engaged in eel and shrimp
farming.
Processing and
packaging technologies for fresh seafood are required in order for Myanmar to
penetrate the European market beyond China.
As Myanmar has
marketable native eel species and has already carried out successful eel
farming on a trial run. Value chain development with systematic farming will
increase the State’s income.
The Myanmar Fisheries
Federation is endeavouring to provide breeding and hatchery technology to the
breeders.
As the cross-border
trade between Myanmar and China does not still return to normality amid the
strict policy on COVID-19 and travel restrictions, the value of trade via a
major trading hub Muse border plunged to $507 million as of 8 July 2022 in the
current FY2022-2023, indicating a tremendous drop of $307 million compared to
the value registered in the corresponding period last year, the Customs
Department’s statistics indicated. — KK/GNLM
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