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Vietnam’s coffee heartland embraces green standards for global reach

To sustain growth and secure international trust, producers must now turn sustainability into a core business strategy rather than a branding slogan.

This urgency was clearly felt in late September, when two Green Export Vietnam (GEVA) training programmes took place in Daklak and Gia Lai, gathering nearly 70 businesses, cooperatives, and farmers active in the coffee and nut value chains. The sessions, operated by KisStartup, helped decode the complexity of Voluntary Sustainability Standards (VSS) and offered practical guidance on aligning local production with international market demands.

Global importers such as the EU, the United States, and Japan deploy strict regulations on environmental protection, traceability, and corporate responsibility. For Vietnam – one of the world's leading coffee exporters – meeting these evolving standards is not optional.

The Central Highlands, which produces over 90 per cent of Vietnam's coffee, remains a strategic economic zone and cultural symbol of the country's agricultural prowess. Yet, most of its coffee exports are still unprocessed, resulting in limited added value. The transition towards green and traceable production has become essential for the region's long-term competitiveness.

Many participants expressed both concern and determination: how to grow coffee cleanly, manage costs, and still maintain profitability under the new sustainability demands. Green practices are not just about global market access, but about resilience, reputation, and long-term benefit for both the community and environment.

A pathway for future export champions

At the conclusion of the workshops, numerous participants signed up for GEVA's upcoming incubation and acceleration drive, which will provide deeper mentoring, one-on-one advisory, and international market connections.

Through these efforts, GEVA aims to equip Vietnamese enterprises with the capabilities to apply VSS, elevate export quality, and position themselves as credible players in the increasingly demanding global marketplace.

Vietnam's journey towards green exports reflects a broader national transformation, one that aligns economic ambition with environmental stewardship. For the Central Highlands, where every coffee bean carries both cultural heritage and livelihoods, this shift marks the beginning of a new era, an era where sustainability is not just a trend, but the defining ingredient for lasting success.

Source: VIR