Advertisement
China trade
EconomyChina Economy

Laos cleared to export fresh durians to China as Malaysia, Thailand face new rival

Laos could present a real challenge to other players in China’s vast durian market due to its low costs and logistical advantages

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
2
A customer checks out the durians at a wet market in Hong Kong. Photo: Eugene Lee
Ralph Jennings

Laos has received approval to begin exporting fresh durians to China, becoming the latest Southeast Asian nation to vie for a slice of the vast Chinese market for the tropical fruit.

China’s General Administration of Customs said on its website that Laos was given clearance to begin exports from this past Friday as long as its shipments met phytosanitary standards.

Laos could emerge as a challenger in China’s increasingly crowded durian market, as it benefits from cheap labour, logistical advantages and strong political ties with Beijing, analysts said.

Advertisement
Companies in Laos should be able to keep prices of the normally expensive fruit low thanks to the country’s cheap land and labour, as well as a recently opened railway connecting the Laotian capital, Vientiane, with Kunming in southwestern China.

“The most important thing is the logistics, and then the labour,” said Lim Chin Khee, an adviser to the Durian Academy, a Malaysian institution that trains growers.

Advertisement

The flavour of durians from Laos will vary little from those grown in neighbouring countries like Thailand and Vietnam – which currently lead the way in the Chinese market – as rainfall patterns in the countries are similar, Lim added.

More than 90 per cent of all durian exports end up in China, where the spiky, odiferous fruit is so highly prized that it is often gifted at formal events such as weddings. A single durian weighing 6kg (13lbs) fetches as much as 200 yuan (US$28) in the country.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x