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Silkworms help Yên Bái farmers escape poverty

Life in Trấn Yen District in the northern province of Yen Bai has greatly improved thanks to the development of silkworm farming in recent years.

Silkworms help Yên Bái farmers escape poverty
A farmer in Trấn Yen District picks mulberries to feed silkworms. — VNA/VNS Photo Đuc Tưởng

Trấn Yen District has nearly 800 hectares of land with nearly 2,000 households devoted to mulberries and silkworms, which have become their main source of income.

Mulberries are prepared as food for silkworms. — VNA/VNS Photo Đuc Tưởng

According to Trieu Thị Bích Lieu, Head of the Agriculture and Rural Development Department of the district, Yen Bai Province has supported and encouraged villagers to plant new varieties of mulberry and raise new kind of silkworms for higher yield and quality than old varieties to develop the craft sustainably.

Farmers prepare mulberries to feed silkworms. — VNA/VNS Photo Đuc Tưởng 

At the same time, silkworm raisers have also been helped to use better mulberry farming techniques, including raising silkworms on the ground to reduce investment costs.

Additionally, local farmers have been encouraged to convert unprofitable rice fields and crops along the Red River to mulberries and silkworms, she added.

Many households in Trấn Yen District have not only escaped poverty but even become well-off thanks to the stable income earned from the cultivation of mulberry and raising silkworms in recent years, like Nguyễn Đuc Mạnh's family.

The district now has nearly 800 hectares of land with nearly 2,000 households devoted to mulberries and silkworms, which have become their main source of income. — VNA/VNS Photo Đuc Tưởng

“My wife and I used to work as labourers and switched to mulberry and silkworms farming in 2020. With the current selling price of a cocoon at VNĐ110,000 (US$5) per kilo, each year, we earn about VNĐ80 million ($3,500) from the job only from the second to the 10th lunar months,” Mạnh said.

“So in total, we could earn from VNĐ100-120 million ($4,300-5,100) per year from cultivating mulberries and raising silkworms, much higher than working as a labourer”.

Last year, despite the COVID-19 pandemic, raising silkworms earned the villagers nearly $3.5 million.

Trấn Yen’s poverty rate has fallen to 4 per cent and per capita income grew to more than $1,700 last year, making the district the first new-style rural district in the northwestern region.

Silkworm raisers have been encouraged to apply advances in mulberry farming. — VNA/VNS Photo Đuc Tưởng

According to local authorities, the district will continue to expand the area dedicated to mulberry cultivation and silkworm raising, consolidate the co-operatives to act as a cocoon purchasing point for villagers and support farmers with better quality varieties of silkworms.

In particular, the district has focused on creating favourable conditions to attract enterprises investing in silk and heighten the value of local mulberry products. — VNS

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