China Daily (Hong Kong)

Brazil coffee seeks splash at Shanghai import expo

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CHINA INTERNATIO­NAL IMPORT EXPO

SAO PAULO — Brazil’s coffee sector is looking to capture a greater share of the Chinese market by making a splash at China’s upcoming import expo.

At least 12 Brazilian coffee producers are preparing to feature their gourmet lines at the first-ever China Internatio­nal Import Expo to be held Nov 5-10 in Shanghai.

As the expo’s guest of honor, Brazil believes it has a unique opportunit­y to transform that exposure into higher sales.

The expo “is a great platform for supporting and promoting the entry of Brazilian brands into the Chinese market, considerin­g the strength Brazilian coffee has in the world”, said Igor Brandao, director of agribusine­ss at the national Foreign Trade Promotion Agency.

Brazil’s comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p with China, both BRICS members of emerging economies, along with Russia, India and South Africa, helped it garner guest country status.

The trade show also lets Brazilian government and private-sector representa­tives get a first-hand look at the “new (consumer) habits of the Chinese”, Brandao said.

Data compiled from coffee shop sales in the Asian giant “shows consumptio­n of specialize­d coffee has tripled in China”, he said.

Promoting Brazil’s coffee industry and high-end beans is the task of the Brazilian Associatio­n of Specialty Coffee, which is behind such media campaigns as “Brazil, The Coffee Nation”.

“We are the world’s largest producer and exporter of coffee, yet Brazilian coffee is put into a blend of the best known global brands. People around the world drink different brands of coffee without realizing it’s Brazilian,” Brandao complained.

The campaign aims change that.

Brazilian coffee exports to China currently account for just 0.2 percent of its total global sales, according to Brandao. Germany, the United States and Italy are its biggest buyers.

“We have a lot of room to grow in the Chinese market for specialty coffee,” Brandao said.

China is Brazil’s main trading partner and the South American country is looking to diversify that trade exchange. to

In addition, attending the expo is a strategic move given that China ranks as the world’s second-largest importer.

Several coffee brands are developing their own advertisin­g campaigns to directly target Chinese consumers.

Cafe Floresta, a company establishe­d in 1940 in the southern Brazilian city of Santos, Latin America’s leading port and headquarte­rs of the old Coffee Exchange, said that it is looking for Chinese business partners.

“Our interest lies in placing our ground and roasted coffee on the Chinese market, but we also want to introduce our innovation­s, like coffees flavored with chocolate, truffle, vanilla, walnuts and almonds,” said Aderlanio Prado, the company’s internatio­nal trade representa­tive.

Jose Francisco Pereira, general director of the 101-yearold Monte Alegre Coffees, said participat­ing in the expo “aims to expand the brand’s market in Asia”, where it already sells in Japan and South Korea.

“What sets us apart is specialty coffee and China is an emerging market in specialty coffee,” Pereira said.

While his company doesn’t expect great demand from Chinese supermarke­ts, it sees opportunit­ies in selling to restaurant­s and coffee shops. “We believe in the potential of Chinese consumers of specialty coffee,” he said.

Our interest lies in placing our ground and roasted coffee on the Chinese market ...”

Aderlanio Prado,

 ?? XINHUA ?? A worker sieves out stray leaves from coffee beans at a plantation in southern Brazil.
XINHUA A worker sieves out stray leaves from coffee beans at a plantation in southern Brazil.

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