The International Cotton Association has urged Vietnam’s government and
contract parties to obey international cotton trading rules.
The UK-based association’s (ICA)
president Antonio Vidal Esteve, managing director Kai Hughes and Richard
Pollard, chairman of the ICA Rules Committee, last week met with leaders of key
ministries and cotton industry players in Vietnam to discuss solutions to the
large numbers of arbitration cases that have arisen recently, due to Vietnamese
cotton importers’ failure to abide by the ICA’s globally recognised bylaws and
rules.
The ICA mission also held talks
with leaders of the Delegation of the European Union to Vietnam and the British
embassy to explore means to raise awareness and encourage compliance with the
ICA bylaws and rule Vietnam.
Pollard, chairman of the ICA
Rules Committee, told VIR that about 44 arbitrations had been initiated over
the past 18 months against Vietnamese cotton importers and the number of
arbitrations might continue to rise in the coming months.
“Between August 2010 and March
2011, there was a violent spike in global cotton prices rising to a high of
$2.20 per pound from an average price of 70 cents before falling sharply again
to the usual rates. This placed Vietnamese cotton spinners, who had contracted
to buy cotton at high prices, into grave difficulties in the falling market.
Instead of talking with the suppliers to find a solution many Vietnamese firms
simply broke their contracts with foreign cotton exporters,” Pollard said.
Pollard declined to name the Vietnamese
spinning mills concerned citing confidentiality between the parties, but
stressed that: “Those Vietnamese spinning mills which defaulted on contracts
and refused to comply with ICA arbitration awards will be listed on the ICA
list of defaulters together with associated companies. ICA members are not
permitted to trade with companies on the default list putting Vietnamese cotton
spinners at a significant disadvantage in the market.”
The Vietnam Cotton and Spinning
Association reported that Vietnam annually imported around 400,000 tonnes of
assorted cotton, accounting for 5 per cent of the world’s total cotton output.
Locally-sourced cotton could currently meet only 1 per cent of local production
demand. The country was also a big garment and textile exporter which last year
earned nearly $16 billion from exporting garment and textile products and has
enjoyed 20 per cent annual growth for the past five years.
Vietnam’s textile and garment
industry employed more than 2.5 million people and made up some 15 per cent of
the country’s export revenue. Textile and garment revenues for 2012’s first
half stood at $7.5 billion.
“We are increasingly concerned
about the high proportion of Vietnamese partners who are defaulting on their
contracts. The recent fluctuations in cotton price was a global problem but in
other countries buyers negotiated with sellers to reach a compromise solution.
Thus we have to come to Vietnam to discuss the solutions and understand the
country’s rules in settling international trade disputes and enforcing the
awards of foreign arbitral institutions,” Pollard said.
One of the ICA’s primary
functions is its arbitration service. If cotton is traded under ICA bylaws and
rules, parties have the right to apply for ICA arbitration in the event of a
contract dispute. The service is impartial and internationally recognised.
Thanh Dat | vir.com.vn
Business & Investment Opportunities
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Strategy, Investment and Management, focusing Healthcare and Life Science with expertise in ASEAN. We also propose Higher Education, as a bridge between educational structures and industries, by supporting international programmes. Many thanks for visiting www.yourvietnamexpert.com and/or contacting us at contact@yourvietnamexpert.com
No comments:
Post a Comment