Phytosanitary Certificate Cambodia -

As exporter Sok Heng put it: “My fruit is good. The soil is good. But the paper must be perfect. That is the new reality of trade.”

The GDA advises all exporters to apply for certificates at least 10 working days before the container is sealed, to use only official provincial agriculture department inspectors, and to verify certificate authenticity via the IPPC’s ePhyto hub. For now, the country’s agricultural story continues to be written, one certified shipment at a time. phytosanitary certificate cambodia

– As Cambodia aggressively expands its agricultural exports to meet global demand, a crucial document no larger than a piece of paper has become the unexpected gatekeeper of economic progress: the phytosanitary certificate. As exporter Sok Heng put it: “My fruit is good

Issued by the Cambodia’s General Directorate of Agriculture (GDA), this certificate certifies that a shipment of plants, fruits, vegetables, or timber has been inspected and is free from quarantine pests and diseases. For exporters, it is the non-negotiable passport to markets in the European Union, China, the United States, and ASEAN. That is the new reality of trade

Beyond delays, a darker subplot has emerged. The GDA publicly warned in late 2023 that it had intercepted fraudulent phytosanitary certificates being sold to exporters by unlicensed brokers.

But as a new harvest season begins, a complex story of procedural bottlenecks, training gaps, and high-stakes compliance is unfolding.

“We have identified at least three separate networks producing fake certificates with forged official stamps,” a GDA official told Khmer Times in an off-record briefing. “These exporters believe they are saving time, but when the container arrives in Rotterdam or Yokohama, the discrepancy is immediately flagged in the IPPC’s international system. The result is a permanent black mark against the company and, more broadly, a warning for all Cambodian produce.”