The first “International Symposium on Superfruits: Myth or Truth?” was held in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on 1-3 July 2013, organized by Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), International Tropical Fruits Network (TFNet), and Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Vietnam (MARD). Ninety participants from 18 countries attended the symposium, including Australia, Nigeria, Sudan, Dominican Republic, Fiji, Thailand, Malaysia, Japan, Thailand, Netherlands, and USA. Participants represented international organizations, government agencies, academic and research institutions, and the private sector.
Generally, symposium participants agreed that the superfruit label is an innovative marketing strategy to sell fruit products, targeted for consumers who demand healthy food options that can prevent chronic diseases and ultimately increase longevity. Whether a fruit is super or not remains debatable because the precise effects of phytochemicals on humans are difficult to measure. However, superfruits have established their position in the market and are here to stay. Developing countries should capitalize on branding and marketing tropical fruits as the next superfruit. The potential of superfruits in enhancing food security and generating income to smallholders in developing countries is immense. The Symposium also discussed interventions to fully integrate smallholders in the value chain, including organization of farmer groups, infrastructure support, and appropriate policies.
The Proceedings is available for download in the FAO website under related links or here.
Powerpoint presentations
Sessions
Session 1. Defining Superfruits
Session 2. Getting Superfruits to Market
Session 3: Technical and Institutional Issues and Constraints
Session 4: Enhancing Food Security for Smallholder Producers
Parallel Session 1: Value Chains and Production Technology of Potential Superfruits
Parallel Session 2: Value Chains and Production Technology of Potential Superfruits.
Session 1.
Defining Superfruits
1. The impact of superfruit development on the socio-economic welfare of smallholder producers
Her Excellency Agnes Cishek
Vice Minister for Agriculture Sector Planning, Dominican Republic
Presented by:
His Excellency Mario Arvelo
Chairperson, Committee on Agriculture and Ambassador of the Dominican Republic to FAO
Mary Ann Lila
Director, Plants for Human Health Institute, North Carolina State University
3. Fruits are super vs superfruits
Barbara Burlingame
Deputy Director, Nutrition Division, FAO
Alison Hodder
Senior Officer, Plant Protection and Protection Division, FAO
5. Therapeutic values of superfruits beyond nutrition and their value addition for commercialization
DBT Wijeratne
Additional Secretary (Agricultural Technology), Ministry of Agriculture, Sri Lanka
6. Progress on bioactive compounds and pharmacological activities of several major tropical and subtropical fruits in China
Yi Ganjun
Vice President, Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Science, China
Session 2:
Getting Superfruits to Market
1. Supply and demand trends in the global superfruits market
Lu Ann Williams
Head of Research, Innova Market Insights, BV, Netherlands
Rhoedhy Poerwanto
Professor, Bogor Agriculture University, Indonesia
3. Demand trends, market, price developments and promotional requirements for dragon fruit
Luong Ngoc Trung Lap
Southern Fruits Research Institute (SOFRI), Vietnam
4. Market potential of miracle berry in West Africa : production, consumption and trade
Omolaja Adelaja
Deputy Director, Nigerian Institute of Horticulture, Nigeria
5. Challenges on production of tropical fruits in the Philippines
Edna Anit
Assistant Director, Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development (PCAARRD), Philippines
6. Production and expansion of the export market for papaya in Asia and the Pacific
Miliakere Nawaikula
Director of Research, Ministry of Primary Industries, Fiji
Session 3:
Technical and Institutional Issues and Constraints
1. Developing and adopting appropriate technology in superfruits production
Bob Williams
Director of Plant Industries, Northern Territory Government, Australia
2. Post-harvest requirements: farm to market and is there a case for certifying superfruits?
Errol Hewitt
Professor Emeritus, Massey University and Chairperson of ISHA Post Harvest Commission
3. Tackling technical and institutional constraints in the development of superfruits in Africa
Badreldin El Sheik Hassan
Director-General, Horticulture Sector Administration, Ministry of Agriculture, Sudan
Sisir Mitra
Chairperson, Tropical Fruits Committee, International Society for Horticultural Science
Session 4:
Enhancing Food Security for Smallholder Producers
Kaison Chang and Margarita Brattlof
Secretariat, Intergovernmental Group on Bananas and Tropical Fruits, FAO
Than Than Sein
Myanmar Fruit, Flower and Vegetable ProducerAnd Exporter Association, Myanmar
Yacob Ahmad
Chief Executive Officer, International Tropical Fruits Network
4. Policy advice to enhance smallholder food security
Mario Arvelo
Chairperson, Committee on Agriculture and Ambassador of the Dominican Republic to FAO
Parallel Session 1:
Value Chains and Production Technology of Potential Superfruits
1. Aiming on a direct delivery of mangosteen from hill to city
Juejan Tangtermthong
Agricultural and Food Marketing Association for Asia and the Pacific, Bangkok, Thailand
2. Malaysian carambola from a rising star to a global leader
Zabedah Mahmood
Director-General, Horticulture Horticulture Research Center, MARDI, Malaysia
Parallel Session 2:
Value Chains and Production Technology of Potential Superfruits
1. Experience in commercialising of Canarium odontophyllum Miq.: A potential superfruit of Sarawak
Pearlycia Brooke
Department of Agriculture Sarawak, Malaysia
2. Tree distance and replacement of citrus greening diseased trees of king mandarin for a superfruit
Katsuya Ichinose
Resident Officer, Kyushu Okinawa Agricultural Research Centre, Japan
Nguyen Thanh Hieu
Southern Horticultural Research Institute, Vietnam
Kazuyoshi Yuasa
Project Officer, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Japan
Parallel Session 3:
Selection, Postharvest, Pest and Disease Management and Processing of Potential Superfruits
1. Evaluation and selection of early lychee cultivars in Vietnam
Nguyen Van Dung
Fruit and Vegetable Research Institute, Vietnam
2. Survey on the postharvest quality and management of dragon fruits exported from Vietnam to Holland
Nguyen Van Phong
Southern Horticultural Research Institute, Vietnam
Nguyen Van Hoa
Southern Horticultural Research Institute, Vietnam
Le Quoc Dien
Southern Horticultural Research Institute, Vietnam
5. Total phenolic contents and antioxidant activity of Musa AAA Berangan after UV-C Radiation
Phebe Ding
Faculty of Agriculture, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia
Wan Izzuddin Sulaiman
Corporate and Technical Director, Team Biovision Sdn Bhd, Malaysia
Chek Zaini Hassan
Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia, Malaysia