ADB funds development of flower farming

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) on December 1 signed loan agreements worth 20 million USD with Agripacific Holdings (APH) and Kunming Hasfarm Flowers (KHF) to develop high-value horticulture in Vietnam, China and Indonesia.
A corner of Dalat Hasfarm shop in HCM City. (dalathasfarm.com.vn)
A corner of Dalat Hasfarm shop in HCM City. (dalathasfarm.com.vn)

ADB will lend the equivalent of 15 million USD in US dollars and Japanese yen to APH -- a major grower of cut flowers in Asia -- and equivalent of 5 million USD in Chinese yuan, to KHF, APH’s main subsidiary for operations in China.

Martin Lemoine, Agribusiness Investment Unit head at ADB’s Private Sector Operations Department, said agricultural development was the key to eradicating poverty and creating conditions for sustainable and equitable growth in developing Asia.

ADB’s financing will help APH scale up and transfer its successful business model built through the introduction of climate-controlled greenhouse technology and a vertically-integrated business geared towards domestic and export markets. This will help expand the flower business in the three countries. The model will also be replicated for sustainable vegetable production in Vietnam.

Under the terms of ADB’s financing, APH has committed to implement a gender action plan that will increase the proportion of women employees to 65 percent and the proportion of women in management and supervisory positions to 63 percent by 2020.

APH is a major grower of cut flowers in Asia, with some 350ha of farms and around 3,000 employees. Since its creation in 1992, APH has developed highly efficient greenhouse operations in Vietnam’s Da Lat, a retail distribution network throughout Vietnam under the brand name "Dalat Hasfarm", a wholesale distribution business in Japan (Greenwings Japan), and since 2014, has operated in China. Expansion to Indonesia began in 2016.

Other news