In 2013 the UK food and drink exports to China were up 82% with demand
for Pork and Salmon products particularly strong.
Much of the pork will be in the form of parts that are popular
in China but not with British diners, such as offal and trotters.
China is the most lucrative grocery market in the world and this
is just another signal of the growing emergence of China in the international
commodity markets.
That influence continues to grow as Chinese import demand tied to population growth and increased annual income broadens into corn, meat, nuts, and dairy and other food products.
China is the leading producer of many agricultural commodities, supplying more than half of the world’s pork; one-third of the world’s horticultural products, rice and cotton; and close to 20 percent of the world’s wheat, corn and poultry.
With about one-fifth of the world’s population, China is also the largest consumer of many agricultural products; its current share of global pork consumption is 50 percent, 40 percent for cotton, 30 percent for rice and more than 25 percent for soybeans and soybean oil.
A burgeoning middle class population and a shift in dietary
patterns will combine to produce widespread buying of agri products.
Consequently sales to this destination will become a rapidly
increasingly important price determinant in the coming years.
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