GreenFeed Vietnam invests in a new swine breeding farm in Binh Dinh
26/04/2017

 

On 10th April 2017, the Provincial People's Committee issued an approval for GreenFeed Vietnam Joint Stock Company to invest in Binh Dinh new swine breeding farm in the mountainous area of Go Quy, An Duc village, Cat Trinh commune, Phu Cat district.

 

                  Grandparent swine farm in Hung Yen province - 600 sows of GreenFeed Vietnam JS Company                                  (Source: Website of GreenFeed Co. Ltd.) 


Binh Dinh swine farm will cover an area of approximately 62 hectares. It has a total capital of VND 477 billion with objectives of employing potentials of material resource and local land resource, creating high quality provide breeding stocks for the needs of livestock development inside and outside the province, also it will make use of farm waste to grow several crops such as gac (Momordica cochinchinensis) ginger, turmeric, lemongrass, basil, active charcoal and to produce fertilizer.

The project consists of two phases, in each phase 2,500 grandparent pigs and 100 boars will be produced; in the 2nd phase, the project will manufacture 1,000 tons of active charcoal/year from bamboo, cajuput; 300 tons of pure oil/year (from gac, ginger ...).


According to the rankings, GreenFeed Vietnam is one of the leading feed producer in Vietnam, ranked 30th in the Top 500 Vietnamese Prosperous Companies in 2017. The company has 6 animal, poultry and aqua feed mill systems. The main plant is located in Long An province and five branch plants in Dong Nai, Binh Dinh, Hung Yen, Ha Nam and Vinh Long provinces with a total capacity of 1.8 million tons/year. Cam My breeding pig branch and three member companies, namely GreenFeed Cambodia, GreenFarm Asia, GreenFeed Hung Yen are employing over 600 boars, providing nearly one million semen/year and three nuclear, great grandparents and grandparent pigs with 6,200 pigs are providing almost 40,000 pigs/ parent pigs/year.


This project is the 7th swine breeding farm in Binh Dinh and it is expected to enhance the growth of swine farming in the area.