China gorges on American grain-fed beef amid shrinking supplies from
Down Under
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[October 01, 2021]
By Dominique Patton and Tom Polansek
BEIJING/CHICAGO (Reuters) - As Australian
beef exports to China wither amid diplomatic tensions, demand there for
U.S. grain-fed beef has soared, fuelled by the appetites of a growing
Chinese middle class.
Hotpot restaurants, Japanese barbecue chains and steakhouses, all
expanding in the world's No. 2 economy, are swapping out Australian beef
for U.S. meat. Several Australian suppliers were banned last year and
shipments from others take too long to clear customs.
Beef imports from the U.S. have grown to 83,000 tonnes in the first
eight months of 2021, nine times the amount in the same period a year
ago, according to Chinese customs data, and are set to be worth more
than $1 billion this year. Australia also fell behind the United States
this year as the top exporter of grain-fed beef to China.
"They don't have a lot of other options when it comes to the
well-marbled, grain-fed product," said Joe Schuele, spokesman at the
U.S. Meat Export Federation (USMEF). "That's the product that really
stands out in China."
Deteriorating relations between Beijing and Canberra have hurt supplies
from Australia. Five of its largest factories were suspended by Beijing
last year for reasons such as poor labelling and contamination with a
banned substance.
Though other plants are still allowed to ship to China, importers say
they face long delays.
Beef imports from Australia in the first eight months fell to 96,000
tonnes, half of what they were in the same period last year, China
customs data shows.
"We've been told it will take at least 85 days to clear," said a
Beijing-based importer who has six containers of frozen Australian beef
stuck in Shanghai port and has begun offering Tyson beef to his
restaurant clients.
That compares with about one week for meat from other origins. China's
General Administration of Customs did not respond to a request for
comment.
Sino-Australian ties have been strained since 2018 and worsened last
year when Australia called for an independent investigation into the
origins of the novel coronavirus, prompting trade reprisals from China.
GRAIN-FED DEMAND
Grass-fed beef, a premium product in other markets, typically goes to
cheaper channels in China, such as mass-market restaurants and
supermarkets.
Last year imports accounted for 40% of China's beef consumption, or
about 2 million tonnes. Though supplies are dominated by low-cost
grass-fed producers Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay, demand from
mass-market consumers is slowing amid a weaker economy.
China's mid- to high-end market - where grain-fed rules - continues to
grow, however, as consumers "trade up, eat better", said Pan Chenjun,
senior analyst at Rabobank.
China's middle class spent $7.3 trillion in 2020, more than any other
country's, according to a report by U.S. research group Brookings, and
is still growing, with young people accounting for more spending than in
other countries.
New York chain Wolfgang's Steakhouse, which has two restaurants in
Beijing, opened another in the southern city of Shenzhen this year and
has plans for a fourth in Hangzhou.
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A chef cooks beef steaks at the kitchen of Wolfgang's Steakhouse
restaurant which specialises in high quality U.S. beef, in Beijing,
China September 8, 2021. Picture taken September 8, 2021.
REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
The restaurant flies in chilled U.S. beef before
ageing it. Its 800g rib-eyes cost $150 apiece.
"Young people like meat, especially 20- and
30-year-olds who come here on dates," said Glen Feng, manager of the
Beijing outlets.
TRADE TIES
Even as China's beef demand has surged in recent years, driven by a
growing middle class, politics have reshuffled the country's top
importers.
Domestic production costs, meanwhile, make local supplies of
grain-fed beef erratic, said Zhong Dingming, the manager of Jingli
hotpot restaurant in Beijing. He said imported beef like the Tyson
short ribs he buys offers better quality for a slightly higher
price.
In last year's Phase 1 trade deal between Beijing and Washington,
China agreed that U.S.-approved processing plants could access its
market without Chinese inspections.
The number of facilities allowed to ship to China has jumped to more
than 500.
TREX Corp, a U.S. meat exporter owned by Greater Omaha Packing Co,
is buying meat from other packers to ship to China as demand climbs,
said Henry Davis, chief executive of Greater Omaha.
In China, USMEF has doubled the number of training events teaching
local chefs how best to cut and slice, said Joel Haggard, senior
vice president for the Asia Pacific.
Shanghai-based retailer Swiss Butchery said it had stocked up on
American beef as Australian supplies became less reliable. The store
now sells American wagyu for 1,430 yuan ($221.87)per kilogramme, on
occasion selling 10 kilogrammes at a time, said general manager Jaap
Zuidervliet.
U.S. beef that meets China's import standards is in tight supply and
the European Union is competing to buy the same meat, said Omaha's
Davis.
And though Australia's beef exporters have turned to Japan and South
Korea, a well-established reputation means customers in China could
quickly return if things change.
"Australian beef still has a reputation for top quality and being
natural. Long-term we're still really bullish on China," said Andrew
Cox, general manager of international markets at trade body Meat and
Livestock Australia.
($1 = 6.4452 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Dominique Patton in Beijing and Tom Polansek in
Chicago. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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