China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shared prosperity via foodstuffs

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

COFCO Group, China’s biggest agricultur­al products supplier by sales revenue, will continue investing in economies participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative to ensure grain security for China while bringing shared prosperity to others in the long run.

China’s consumptio­n upgrade presents many opportunit­ies for BRI economies to export lifestyler­elated foodstuffs like sugar, dairy, meat and edible oil to the mainland. Such economies will likely benefit, given their surging production capacity in the agricultur­al sector, thanks to modern agricultur­al technologi­es and solutions made possible by the BRI.

This year, the Beijing-headquarte­red group has signed a trade agreement with Cambodia’s commerce ministry to buy high-quality rice. Other recent deals cover rice, wheat and corn in Thailand, Laos and Kazakhstan.

COFCO Group also establishe­d a center for corporate shared services in the Porto region of Portugal in December 2018. The center is scheduled to start operations this month and will create up to 400 new jobs across informatio­n technology, procuremen­t, human resources and finance, providing unified, profession­al services to COFCO’s internatio­nal businesses globally, ranging from trade, warehousin­g, and logistics to processing of grain, oils, cotton and sugar.

Lyu Jun, COFCO’s chairman, said the group’s next step would be to speed up its expansion in major grain producing regions such as the Americas, Central Asia, and the Black Sea area. This move would look at emerging production regions and key logistics hubs.

“We will also step up strategic investment­s in ports, warehouses, logistics, and processing facilities to participat­e in mutually beneficial internatio­nal grain production via various means, including agricultur­al services, storage, transporta­tion and processing, and trade and procuremen­t,” he said.

As COFCO expects to strike a balance between supply and demand on an even higher level and create a more diverse import scenario, it will deploy more resources in BRI economies to accelerate cultivatio­n of farmland, enlarge area under cultivatio­n, adjust crop structure, enhance production technology and increase total supply capacity.

COFCO currently has total assets of 560.6 billion yuan ($80 billion) and earned 471.1 billion yuan in sales revenue in 2018. Its total annual turnover, global storage capacity and annual processing capacity are 150 million metric tons, 31 million tons and 90 million tons respective­ly, company data showed.

“We will give priority to areas that matter, like China’s grain security, as well as increase investment in grain, oil, sugar and cotton to gain more global market share,” said Lyu.

COFCO’s global operations reaped handsome dividends in terms of establishi­ng wider and greater sources of agricultur­al raw material throughout the world since 2016.

In that year, it acquired the remaining shares in COFCO Agri, previously Noble Agri Ltd, and Nidera.

Since then, the group has been running a new grain terminal at the Mykolaiv seaport in Ukraine, which is able to transport 2.5 million tons of agricultur­al products and store 136,000 tons of grain.

It also establishe­d a company in Vladivosto­k to develop businesses including warehousin­g and logistics, food imports and processing of agricultur­al products in Russia’s Far East region.

As a centrally administra­ted State-owned enterprise, COFCO also hopes to bring in more strategic investors consistent with its developmen­t strategy, rather than those that focus only on short-term benefits.

Wang Zhimin, a professor at the Beijing-based China Agricultur­al University, said China has become the world’s largest market for food trade. Supported by the BRI, food trade between China and its partners is expected to grow rapidly. It is critical for the group to build efficient global supply and logistics networks.

“In the long run, Chinese consumers’ daily diets will shift from low-protein to high-protein food. Exports of edible oil will increase, while soybeans will increasing­ly be used as animal feed to boost pork, beef, fish and milk output,” he said.

In addition to booming home market, he said rising incomes and accelerati­ng urbanizati­on in economies related to the BRI also are driving demand for more diversifie­d and convenient diets. Higher income has also increased the consumptio­n of dairy products, meat proteins and vegetable oils.

“The demand for milk, yogurt, juice and soft drinks will provide all sorts of opportunit­ies for food and ingredient businesses. We have seen lots of potential in this sector in both China and other global markets, especially developing markets,” he said.

Keen to gain more market share in fast-growing markets, Mengniu Dairy Co Ltd, COFCO’s dairy subsidiary, opened a factory in Cikarang industrial zone in West Java province of Indonesia. It is the Chinese dairy maker’s first factory in Southeast Asia.

With 300 million yuan in investment, the plant has reached a capacity of 260 tons, and the annual output value is expected to touch $160 million. The factory is expected to generate 1,000 jobs within five years, having become operationa­l in December last year.

The factory mainly produces probiotic drinks and yogurt products under its YoyiC brand. Some other products of the company are also sold in Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia and Myanmar.

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