The Asian Age

Starbucks and Alibaba join forces as coffee war brews

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Shanghai: Starbucks coffees will be delivered to Chinese consumers with the help of e- commerce giant Alibaba, the companies said Thursday, as two of the world’s biggest names in retail join forces in a China coffee war that is rapidly heating up.

The partnershi­p comes with Starbucks facing an aggressive challenge from Chinese upstart Luckin Coffee, which has grown rapidly on a business model of delivering beverages ordered via mobile apps.

“We truly believe that this enduring partnershi­p will elevate the coffee culture in China,” Starbucks president and CEO Kevin Johnson said at a Shanghai news conference.

Starbucks products ordered by mobile apps will be brought to customers by Ele. Me, Alibaba’s food- delivery unit. Johnson called the tie- up “rocket fuel” for the US company’s emerging digital strategy.

But Luckin, which has spiced the brewing rivalry by accusing Seattlebas­ed Starbucks of “monopolist­ic” practices in China, tartly dismissed the Alibaba alliance.

In a statement, co- founder and senior vice president Guo Jinyi labelled Starbucks a “latecomer” that was “imitating others and losing its own individual­ity.”

Traditiona­lly tea- drinking China is seeing an explosion in coffee consumptio­n, becoming Starbucks’ key market after the United States and its main source of new growth.

Seattle- based Starbucks has more than 3,400 cafes in more than 140 Chinese cities and plans to double its stores by 2022. It has said a new Starbucks opens every 15 hours in China.

Starbucks officials stressed that its existing growth thrust would continue, but that the Alibaba tie- up would add “Starbucks delivery kitchens” to supermarke­ts run by Alibaba.

Deliveries begin in September from 150 Starbucks in Beijing and Shanghai, expanding to more than 2,000 outlets nationwide by year- end.

China’s meal- delivery sector has skyrockete­d, fuelled by eager adoption of digital commerce and the rise of startups that employ millions of low- wage, scooter- mounted couriers and promise to whisk edibles to their buyers in under 30 minutes.

Until now, Starbucks lacked a comprehens­ive delivery strategy. But Luckin appears to have changed that.

Launching about a year ago, Beijingbas­ed Luckin has grown rapidly by offering cheap delivery and steep drink discounts. It has hundreds of outlets now and plans to grow to more than 2,000 by year- end.

Starbucks is banking on China for revenue growth amid market saturation in the US, and last year opened its largest outlet in the world in Shanghai, a two- story “roastery” spanning nearly half the area of a soccer field.

 ?? — AFP ?? A customer walks out of a Starbucks coffee shop in Beijing.
— AFP A customer walks out of a Starbucks coffee shop in Beijing.

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