Vietnam’s livestock sector recovered in 2025, with disease control and modern farming practices laying the groundwork for sustainable growth.

In 2025, Vietnam’s livestock and veterinary sector faced dual pressures from animal disease outbreaks and global market fluctuations, particularly the impact of US tariff policies. Despite these challenges, the sector recorded notable progress.
Production activities were gradually restored, with livestock populations and output increasing across regions.
Disease prevention and control measures were implemented in a coordinated manner, enabling timely containment of African swine fever, avian influenza, and foot-and-mouth disease. These efforts minimized losses for farmers and stabilized production.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Environment emphasized biosecure farming, organic-oriented production, and high-tech adoption. This transition accelerated professionalization across both large enterprises and smallholder farms, laying the foundation for sustainable growth.
The livestock sector has been rapidly shifting from small-scale household production to concentrated farm-based and large-scale, professional livestock operations.
These entities play a core role in improving productivity and product quality, strengthening disease control, ensuring food safety, and promoting sustainable development. They also contribute significantly to national agricultural growth targets in 2025.
Livestock production in 2025: Recovery and stability
Between 2021 and 2025, the Ministry coordinated with local authorities to implement comprehensive development solutions. As a result, the structure of livestock products aligned with sector restructuring goals and the Livestock Development Strategy for the 2021-2030 period, with a vision to 2045.
Value-chain linkage models emerged, connecting production with markets and positioning enterprises at the center. Provinces in the Central Highlands and Southeast, including Dak Nong, Gia Lai, Binh Phuoc, and Tay Ninh, recorded strong growth driven by enterprise expansion and new projects.
Partnerships among enterprises, farms, cooperatives, and households reduced costs, improved efficiency, and increased added value. These linkages promoted sustainable livestock production based on organic practices and biosecurity, reinforcing resilience across the sector.
Development orientation for 2026
Looking ahead, the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment outlined priorities for 2026. The focus will be on consolidating and strengthening livestock and veterinary systems, particularly at district and commune levels.
Communication campaigns will raise public awareness of sustainable production, economic efficiency, and proactive disease prevention.
Key tasks and solutions include:
Science, technology, and digital transformation will remain central pillars, with the following goals:
Strengthening disease control and local responsibilities
Disease prevention and control efforts will continue to be strengthened. Focus will be placed on:
Local authorities are encouraged to:
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