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Bilateral strategic partnership

“Produce more from less”: Danish agricultural philosophy for Vietnam

August 18, 2022 by hanoitimes.vn Leave a Comment

Denmark, through strategic sector cooperation (SSC) with Vietnam, helps implement national action plan in agriculture while promoting the engagement of stakeholders in the value chain.

Among issues shared at an event held in Hanoi on August 17, Vietnamese officials, experts, and businesses were impressed with the philosophy of “producing more from less” in Denmark’s agri-food sector.

Denmark targets the climate-neutral food industry by 2050. Photo: Danish Agriculture and Food Council

Troels Jakobsen, Trade Counsellor of the Embassy of Denmark, said Denmark produces three times more food than the Danish population can consume, with some of the lowest greenhouse gas emissions in Europe.

The idea was shared at Seminar – Business Matchmaking held in Hanoi on August 17 to discuss Danish experiences and solutions in sustainable agri-food production.

Meanwhile, Jeppe Søndergaard Pedersen, International Chief Advisor, the Danish Agriculture and Food Council, said Denmark has applied technology in the value chain in the agriculture and food cluster in the fields of primary, processing, and agro with a close eye on the production to ensure food safety from farm to table.

He said the production base accounts for 2.62 million hectares or 61% of the total land area of Denmark. However, the yield is far more than expected. In 2020, the Nordic country earned 9,6 million tons of grain, 5.7 million tons of milk, nearly 2 million tons of pork, some 170,000 tons of poultry, and more than 130,000 tons of beef.

The Danish agri-food sector is impressed by the reduction in the use of pesticides which was 53% lower in 2019 than in 2010. At the same time, organic production has increased significantly. In 2020, more than 4,000 organic farms farmed on  310,000 hectares of land.

The thing that left an impression on participants at the event in Hanoi is “More with less” or “sustainable intensification.” It means that Sustainability is a prerequisite; a more circular and resource-efficient approach; ensures a smaller impact on the environment, climate and surroundings; yet remains competitive through higher yields and increased efficiency, more value-added, targeted efforts towards promising new markets, and new partnerships and alliances.

Sharing the same philosophy on sustainability, Director of the Center for International Cooperation, the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration (DVFA) Troels Vensild said the Government supports exporting from the green and sustainable food clusters in Denmark. DVFA is responsible for food, feed and veterinary legislation; food, feed, and veterinary control; animal diseases; animal welfare; nutritional information; and international cooperation.

Accordingly, the Danish food sector is well positioned abroad in terms of brand and sustainability for the following reasons: Danish companies are among the world’s most sustainable food producers; Denmark is seen as a sustainable “frontrunner” in many countries in organic production and milk production; the green transition is key for Danish and the country’s companies to export sustainable products, resource-efficient solutions, and technologies.

In pursuing its philosophy of “Larger production with less input and impact”, Denmark is heading toward a climate-neutral food industry by 2050 in partnership with other countries to spread the idea.

Carsten Baltzer Rode, Chargé d’affaires, the Embassy of Denmark in Hanoi, said at the Seminar – Business Matchmaking held in Hanoi on August 17. Photo: Embassy of Denmark in Hanoi

Fruitful partnership

In recent years, the cooperation between the two countries is based on the spirit of fairness for mutual benefits. As a result, many Danish businesses are working in Vietnam thanks to many comprehensive agreements, Carsten Baltzer Rode, Chargé d’affaires, the Embassy of Denmark in Hanoi, said at the event.

Addressing the event in Hanoi, Sanne Høj Andrén, Sector Counsellor for Agri-Food, the Embassy of Denmark in Vietnam, said the two countries have intensified agri-food partnership through the Strategic Sector Cooperation (SSC), which involves Danish knowledge, Danish public-private solutions and technological leadership in different areas, including agriculture and food.

The overall aim of SSC for Vietnam is promoting sustainable development goals (SDGs), contributing to stronger bilateral relations, and opening doors for Danish companies, Sanne Høj Andrén told The Hanoi Times . She pointed out that the ongoing business matchmaking in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City demonstrates the partnership with the Government of Vietnam over the years and promotes the sharing of advanced technologies and know-how in the agri-food sector.

She said Vietnam is one of the first countries to engage in SSC with cooperation since 2015. Among four areas, there’s one project on food safety in the pork value chain joined by the Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) and the Danish Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries of Denmark (MFVM).

The partnership is aimed to improve feed and food safety in the Vietnamese pork value chain to improve food safety in Vietnam and contribute to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Global Climate Action Strategy.

Danish and Vietnamese experts in SSC on food safety in the pork value chain. Photo: Embassy of Denmark in Vietnam

Their cooperation focuses on assisting the Vietnamese competent authorities in traceability in the pork value chain; control and use of veterinary medicines (AMR prevention); food safety in meat processing; feed management and safety; capacity building in risk-based food safety management.

The SSC on food safety in the pork value chain includes three phases: the first taking place from February 2017 to December 2019, the second phase from April 2020 to December 2023, and the third phase between 2024 and 2026.

According to Sanne Høj Andrén, results from the first and second phases have been shown through the engagement of stakeholders and changes in the legal framework. In reality, they have helped issues regulations on feed management in the Animal Husbandry Law, issue a new Circular on the prescription of veterinary drugs with inputs from SSC experts, and issue a Circular on traceability and recall in 2021.

Affirming the role of SSC, Dinh Pham Hien, International Cooperation Department, MARD, said the assistance from Denmark matters a lot to the Partnership for Sustainable Agriculture in Vietnam (PSAV), which is an “initiative of a new vision for agriculture”. PSAV focuses on connecting players in the agricultural sector in order to share experience, and cooperate to develop the value chain of the Vietnamese key products under the public-private partnership (PPP), with the aim of increasing labor productivity, and creating more income for farmers, improving environmental sustainability in agricultural production.

Hien said PSAV has developed various environmentally friendly site models of sustainable farming and raised income for farmers. Certain PPP models have increased productivity by 17% and income by 17%, whereas they reduced CO2 by 43%, in comparison with several traditional models.

Data on organic farms and area in Denmark between 1990 and 2020. Photo: Danish Agriculture and Food Council

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King grants audience to Vice President of Turkiye

August 18, 2022 by www.theedgemarkets.com Leave a Comment

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah (fourth, left) granted an audience to Turkiye Vice President Fuad Oktay in conjunction with His Majesty’s state visit to Turkiye in Ankara, on Wednesday, Aug 17, 2022.(Bernamapix)

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah (fourth, left) granted an audience to Turkiye Vice President Fuad Oktay in conjunction with His Majesty’s state visit to Turkiye in Ankara, on Wednesday, Aug 17, 2022.(Bernamapix)

– A + A

ANKARA (Aug 18): Yang di-Pertuan Agong Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah on Wednesday (Aug 17) granted an audience to Turkiye Vice President Fuad Oktay at the JW Marriot Ankara Hotel here, in conjunction with His Majesty’s state visit to Turkiye.

Comptroller of the Royal Household for Istana Negara Datuk Seri Ahmad Fadil Shamsuddin in a statement said the unscheduled audience was held following His Majesty’s meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, after the state welcome ceremony on Tuesday.

In the hour-long audience, several issues were discussed, especially on bilateral relations.

Ahmad Fadil said the audience was in line with Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob’s visit to Turkiye last month, whereby the bilateral relationship between Malaysia and Turkiye was upgraded from “Framework for Strategic Cooperation” to “Comprehensive Strategic Partnership”.

The upgrading of ties is to strengthen cooperation between the two countries in existing fields, and also exploring new ones including on food security, education, commodities, financial services, defence, oil and gas, and renewable energy.

According to Ahmad Fadil, the issues raised during the audience also took into account matters discussed when the Turkish Foreign Minister visited Malaysia in early August.

Also present during the audience were Finance Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz; Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Datuk Seri Amran Mohamed Zin; Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, Fatih Donmez; Governor of Turkiye’s Central Bank, Sahap Kavcioglu; Chief Executive Officer of Turkish Petroleum, Melih Han Bilgin; and Turkiye’s Ambassador to Malaysia, Emir Salim Yuksel.

This year marks the 58th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Malaysia and Turkiye, which had been established since 1964.

Malaysia and Turkiye have signed 23 agreements and memoranda of understandings (MoUs) since 1977, and trade relations between the two countries have been growing since the signing of a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in 2014.

Turkiye is Malaysia’s third largest trading partner in the Middle East after Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), with total trade between the two countries recording RM16.96 billion last year. Exports amounted to RM14.12 billion, while total imports were worth RM2.84 billion.

Malaysia’s main imports from Turkey include iron and other metals, petroleum products, jewellery, textiles and clothing.

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India, Vietnam wrap up joint military exercise

August 18, 2022 by indianexpress.com Leave a Comment

A nearly three-week military exercise carried jointly by the armies of India and Vietnam concluded in Chandimandir Thursday.

The Indian Army said it was for the time that the Vietnam People’s Army (VPA) undertook a field training exercise with a foreign army. “The fact that Vietnam chose India for this honour, speaks volumes about the value the two countries place on their mutual relationship,” the Army said in a statement on the conclusion of VINBAX 2022.

The exercise had commenced on August 1 and was focused on deployment of Army Engineer and Medical teams in UN Peacekeeping operations. Over a period of three weeks, the soldiers of the two armies rubbed shoulders with each other learning from each other and sharing best practices.

Vietnam has deployed a contingent in UN peacekeeping operations for the first time in South Sudan while India has a long and rich tradition of contributing to UN peacekeeping missions.

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“The contingents from the two countries underwent theory classes followed by practical exercises to validate the learning. The final validation exercise nicknamed ‘Men in Blue’ was built around the setting up of a base in a remote African location faced with myriad challenges,” the Army said.

The next edition of VINBAX will be hosted in Vietnam in 2023. (Twitter/@adgpi)

Relations between India and Vietnam were elevated to the level of ‘strategic partnership’ during the visit of Vietnam’s then Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung to India in July 2007. In 2016, during Prime Minister Narendra Modi ’s visit to Vietnam, bilateral relations were further elevated to a ‘comprehensive strategic partnership’.

Vietnam, an important country of the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations), has territorial disputes with China in the South China Sea region.

India has oil exploration projects in the Vietnamese waters in the South China Sea. India and Vietnam are boosting their maritime security cooperation in the last few years to protect common interests.

The closing ceremony was attended by Pham Sanh Chau, the Ambassador of Vietnam to India, and a high-level observer delegation of VPA that had flown down especially for the purpose. On the Indian side Lt Gen Nav Kumar Khanduri, GOC-in-C, Western Command presided over the event which was hosted by Lt Gen Pratik Sharma, GOC 2 Corps.

The next edition of VINBAX will be hosted in Vietnam in 2023.

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Turkey’s Erdogan jostles to be Putin’s partner, Ukraine peacemaker

August 18, 2022 by www.newsweek.com Leave a Comment

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan heads to Ukraine Thursday as the most likely peacemaker in a war that has pitted NATO and the European Union firmly against Russia.

Erdogan and United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the western city of Lviv, with the nascent UN-Turkish-facilitated Black Sea grain export deal likely top of the agenda.

The Turkish president may also be carrying a message from Russian President Vladimir Putin , who he met in the Black Sea resort town of Sochi earlier this month. Erdogan—now needed by both Ukraine and Russia—may yet play a key role in any eventual ceasefire, though for now an end to the fighting looks unlikely.

In the meantime Erdogan—ambitious, opportunistic, and pragmatic—will deal with both sides, seeking to stabilize its region, its beleaguered economy, and grow its international influence.

“Turkey is trying to find a middle road,” said Fatih Ceylan, Turkey’s permanent representative to NATO from 2013 to 2018. “Trying to calm things down and trying to bring the two sides together is one of the priorities of Turkish foreign policy.”

“Whether it is a middle road or a tightrope is another issue,” Ceylan told Newsweek .

Economic Ties to Russia

Turkey has plenty of its own problems. Its monthly foreign trade deficit recently topped $8 billion, annual inflation hit 80 percent this year, and unemployment is above 10 percent. Still dependent on energy imports—particularly natural gas from Russia—Turkey is grappling with the same energy crises as its European neighbors.

“The region has been intoxicated,” Ceylan—now the president of the Ankara Policy Center think tank—said. “The balance of the economy was already shaken before the war, and now it’s shaken down to the ground.”

“So any opportunity—be it in a bilateral, trilateral, or multilateral context—Turkey will try to leverage. There’s no doubt about it.”

Turkey has declined to join the European Union, U.S. and other NATO allies in imposing tough sanctions on Russia. Ankara is now reaping the rewards. At the Sochi meeting, Turkey and Russia signed a new economic cooperation agreement which Erdogan said he hoped could be worth $100 billion.

Turkish exports to Russia have jumped from $417 million in July 2021 to $730 million in July 2022, Politico reported. Imports from Russia have increased from $2.5 billion in July 2021 to $4.4 billion in July 2022.

Meanwhile, Turkey is now working on measures to facilitate business with sanctioned Russian banks and process payments on Russian credit cards, according to The New York Times . Russia is also hoping Turkey will help source weapons systems made unavailable by Western sanctions.

‘Frenemy’ Drone Provider to Ukraine

Ankara might appear a weak link in the unified Western response to Russia’s invasion, but Turkey is also still allowing the export of Bayraktar drones to Ukraine—the company, whose board members include Erdogan’s son-in-law, has even announced it will open a new factory in Ukraine—and its parliament looks set to approve the addition of Finland and Sweden to NATO after Erdogan dropped his opposition .

Oleg Ignatov, Crisis Group’s senior analyst for Russia, told Newsweek that the pre-war “frenemy” relationship between Ankara and Moscow has shifted in Turkey’s favor.

“They were competitive, there were a lot of misunderstandings,” Ignatov said, noting repeated clashes in Syria where the two countries back different factions in the devastating civil war, as they also do in war-torn Libya.

“Since the war, I see more benefits for Turkey than for Russia,” Ignatov said.

“Russia continues to cooperate with Turkey—and Turkey is one of Russia’s main trade partners—Russia continues to sell weapons, and Russia continues projects in Turkey, such as the nuclear plant they are building,” Ignatov said, referring to the $20 billion nuclear project underway in the Mediterranean city of Mersin.

“Turkey is de facto the only transit country for Russian gas,” Ignatov added, given the collapse of the Nord Stream 2 project, the constrained capacity of Nord Stream 1, and the problems for natural gas transiting Ukraine.

“Russia is now more dependent on Turkey than Turkey is on Russia,” Ignatov said.

“Russia is becoming more flexible. Turkey started this military operation in Syria; Russia didn’t react. Azerbaijan provokes Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh; Russia didn’t react. Turkey continues to support Ukraine; Russia doesn’t react. Russia participated in this grain deal, which is more beneficial for Ukraine than for Russia.”

“For Erdogan, this situation is ideal,” Ignatov said. “He is a mediator, he gets economic benefits, he improves Turkey’s role in the region and in the world, and he gets a lot from Russia.”

Turkey is aware of the shift. “Russia, under present circumstances, is in dire need of Turkey’s role,” Ceylan said. “This is also applicable to Ukraine, particularly in the case of exporting the grain from Odesa.”

Ankara and Kyiv have enjoyed a “strategic” level partnership since 2011, a level of cooperation Turkey has not extended to Moscow. Turkey’s recent intervention to open a Black Sea shipping lane was particularly important for Kyiv, whose economy has been smothered by the war and the Russian blockade of the sea.

“Turkey is officially regarded as our strategic partner,” explained Oleksandr Merezhko, a member of Ukraine’s parliament and the chair of the body’s foreign affairs committee.

“Turkey is associated with military aid to Ukraine, including Bayraktars,” Merezhko told Newsweek . “In principle, Erdogan is trusted and his role as a mediator between Ukraine and Russia is appreciated.”

“Turkey has always supported Ukraine’s territorial integrity and its position on Crimea has always been very clear,” Merezhko said.

“Besides, Turkey supports Crimean Tatars and their rights, which is also important for Ukraine. We believe that at heart, Turkey and its people are pro-Ukrainian, even though it still retains some economic ties with Russia.”

Ceasefire Hopes

The Black Sea grain deal will be top of the agenda in Lviv today. Erdogan may also be hoping to revive the Ukraine-Russia peace talks, stalled for months amid intense fighting and a cascade of suspected war crimes.

“Maybe the things he has heard from Putin, he will share them with Zelensky and try to find common ground to the extent possible,” Ceylan said. “A ceasefire deal, maybe he will push for that.”

But the gulf between the two leaders still appears too wide. “That’s possible, absolutely,” Ignatov said. “Yes, we have the grain deal. But Russia hasn’t changed its position on the war.”

“I think Erdogan can’t influence Putin’s opinion on this war,” Ignatov said. “They got along with each other because they understood each other’s interests…And they also understood the limits of their influence.”

“Erdogan is a very ambitious politician and he would like to be a peace-broker. But it’s not possible, at least for now.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized World, Ukraine, Russia, Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Black Sea, Vladimir Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, ..., erdogan trump putin, erdogan a putin, erdogan i putin, erdogan vs putin, erdogan y putin, 3. dr. koray erdogan (turkey europe)

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