China Daily

Ensuring food security via win- win trade

COFCO exploits import links with companies overseas, aids world’s economic recovery

- By ZHONG NAN in Shanghai zhongnan@ chinadaily. com. cn

COFCO Group, China’s largest foodstuff producer and grain trader by sales revenue, signed purchase deals worth over $ 10 billion with global partners during the third China Internatio­nal Import Expo held in Shanghai earlier this month.

The deals will allow COFCO to import farm produce such as grain, sugar, wine and edible oil.

As it has been meeting surging domestic demand for various foodstuffs, the centrally administer­ed State- owned enterprise has seen the value of its purchases surge by 20 percent on a yearly basis from the last CIIE.

The Beijing- headquarte­red group was formed by the amalgamati­on of various subsidiari­es that used to trade in oil, oilseeds, sugar, wine and spirits. Its shopping list includes common farm commoditie­s like wheat, corn, sugar, cotton, and wine.

A three- time participan­t of the CIIE, COFCO bought such commoditie­s as well as nuts, aquatic products and other non- staple foods, in large quantities over the past two expos.

The majority of these products will come from countries participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative.

The imports have been consolidat­ing COFCO’s business links with key grain and food producing regions, and will continue to stimulate more trade flows between China and other BRI economies, said Lyu Jun, COFCO’s chairman.

In terms of imports of traditiona­l agricultur­al products, COFCO has expanded its sources of oil products like rapeseed, sunflower and palm oil. It now imports from countries like Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Russia, Ukraine, Indonesia and Malaysia.

There has been a substantia­l increase in COFCO’s imports of corn, sorghum, barley, wheat and other traditiona­l grain from France, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine, Cambodia and Laos, Lyu said.

COFCO also purchases corn that is used as high- quality raw material to produce snacks like popcorn for sales at cinemas.

China’s main importer of sugar and cotton, COFCO relies on its deep knowledge of the world’s major production areas. It signed a contract to import more raw sugar from Brazil recently.

“Rising incomes and accelerati­ng urbanizati­on in China are driving demand for more diversifie­d and convenient diets. Higher incomes have also increased the consumptio­n of meat proteins and vegetable oils. COFCO sees Chinese consumers’ daily intake of calories, especially proteins, increasing in the future. Packaged food and beverage companies are likely to reap robust returns from China.”

Lyu said food consumptio­n is a reflection of economic success. Food consumptio­n is rising. The types of foods people eat are diversifyi­ng; foods are becoming more sophistica­ted and they need to be more convenient, so the whole business has dramatical­ly transforme­d in China, he said.

As China has been working with other countries to make economic globalizat­ion more inclusive and balanced to mitigate the impact of the COVID- 19 pandemic, the country’s promotion of the “dual circulatio­n” developmen­t pattern will prove timely, he said.

The new pattern is centered on the domestic economy and aims at better integratin­g the domestic economy with the global economy. It will not only benefit the Chinese economy but also create more growth opportunit­ies for countries across the world, he said.

Against this backdrop, COFCO will play a better role as China’s main channel for food imports, promote the diversific­ation of import sources and introduce high- quality and healthy grains, oils and food products, as well as make full use of the links between home and global market during the post- pandemic era.

COFCO will strive further to optimize and adjust China’s grain and foodstuff supply system in order to promote sustainabl­e growth and boost domestic consumptio­n in a healthy and safe way during the 14 th Five- Year Plan period ( 202125), he said.

To compete with the so- called ABCD companies, COFCO has continued to strengthen its global presence in recent years. It has spread its supply chain to more than 140 countries and regions around the world, with a total annual grain turnover of 160 million tons.

The term ABCD refers to four companies that dominate global grain trading, serving as middlemen between farmers and buyers. The groups are ADM Co, Bunge Ltd and Cargill Inc from the United States, and the Netherland­s- based Louis Dreyfus Co.

Supported by 13 listed companies on both home and global stock exchanges, COFCO has a global coverage of grain and oil producing areas, and owns a sophistica­ted global production and procuremen­t platform, as well as a well- developed trade network. After years of expanding its overseas presence, COFCO now earns more than 50 percent of its operating income from overseas business, Lyu said.

COFCO currently manages assets worth 598 billion yuan ($ 90.42 billion), has storage capacity of 31 million metric tons and an annual grain processing capacity of 90 million tons across the world.

The company has 2.3 million points of sale throughout China’s 952 large and medium- sized cities, and more than 10,000 counties and villages.

Apart from ensuring grain security and tackling environmen­tal issues in the area of agricultur­e, China has to feed a growing and increasing­ly wealthy population who demand better and more nutritious food, said Ding Lixin, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences in Beijing.

He said what is key is a combinatio­n of growth and demand that is linked to income and urbanizati­on. Those two factors created a humongous market in China. So, in recent years, it has attracted a lot of attention from global players in both food manufactur­ing and agricultur­al sectors.

He said processed foods like canned foods, especially those related with cooking and restaurant­s, have grown fast in China. The demand for juices, soft drinks, yogurt and milk will provide all sorts of opportunit­ies for the food and ingredient business. The sector has been showing excellent potential.

Agreed Zhang Yong jun, a researcher at the Beijing- based China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, who said he believes that adequate imports of agricultur­al commoditie­s and foreign direct investment in agribusine­ss can help China in easing the pressure on natural resources and ensuring the country has steady food supplies.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Employees sort grain bags at a storage facility of COFCO Eastocean Oil and Grain Industries ( Zhangjiaga­ng) Co Ltd, a COFCO unit, in September.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Employees sort grain bags at a storage facility of COFCO Eastocean Oil and Grain Industries ( Zhangjiaga­ng) Co Ltd, a COFCO unit, in September.

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