China flags greater appetite for Australian goods, including bottled water

Bank of China executive vice-president Gao Yingxin told a conference in Sydney this morning that Australia remains well positioned to feed China given its history of “riding on the sheep’s back”.

“Australia is endowed with a mild climate, vast farmlands and fertile pastures providing unlimited potential for agricultural development,” Mr Yingxin said.

Mr Yingxin said China’s appetite for Australian dairy products was a major focus in catering for the appetite of its rising middle class.

“Between 2005 and 2013, the children’s milk market in China grew at an average of 28 per cent. Recently the adoption of a two-child policy will create even more business opportunities,” he said.

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More than 600 delegates have travelled from China for the China-Australia Agribusiness Trade and Investment conference, hosted by the Bank of China and the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI).

Around 240 businesses – 120 from China – and another 500 assorted attendees have joined Chinese media in Sydney.

The carefully choreographed event is designed to bring small to medium businesses from Australia and China together to develop trade opportunities.

Expected ‘six-fold increase’ in Asian middle-class by 2030

Trade between Australia and China is estimated to be worth $150 billion a year.

The Federal Minister for Trade and Investment, Steve Ciobo, said Australia has to adjust to the changing commodity price landscape to exploit even greater trade opportunities with China.

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“We know that in Asia there will be a six-fold increase in the number of middle-class people to the year 2030,” Minister Ciobo said.

“An increase to more than three billion people and, with that larger consumer base, with the more fine tastes that grow from that consumer base, including of course a strong emphasis that there is out of the Chinese market on clean and green agricultural produce, we know that Australia can meet that demand.”

The focus on dairy exports comes as Australian dairy producers are hit by oversupply and falling prices.

However, ACCI chief executive James Pearson said, while local farmers are suffering, the demand from China represents an opportunity for change.

“For those that are able to do it, and have the confidence and capacity to do so, export does represent another opportunity, particularly for firms who are struggling at the moment,” Mr Pearson said.

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Extracted from http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-05-23/china-flags-greater-appetite-for-australian-dairy-products/7437832

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