Business World

In Dubai, Chinese firms look to tap halal market

-

DUBAI — Standing behind her stall at a Dubai exhibition centre, Dai Dong He offered passersby what looked like carefully wrapped biscuits or chocolates.

“This is dry beef, beef snacks,” said Dai, general manager of Anhui Central Asia FoodCo., one of eight Chinese firms from Anhui Province displaying products at Halal Expo Dubai 2017.

Dubai is hosting the show for the ninth year running, with the Gulf emirate positionin­g itself as a major hub for the halal industry, a booming $3-trillion market for goods and services that are permissibl­e under Islamic law.

In recent years Chinese firms have increasing­ly looked to tap the market, with organizers of the two-day show, which was set to close on Tuesday, saying the Chinese halal sector is forecast to hit $1.9 trillion by 2021, an average growth rate of nine percent from its 2015 level.

Exhibitors from China said one of the keys to gaining a foothold in the market was winning the trust of consumers.

“We make sure our food is halal,” Dai told AFP, noting that the company buys meat from Chinese Muslims to ensure slaughteri­ng is done according to Islamic tradition.

Nicholas Hsiu, a manager with ARA Halal Developmen­t Service Center, said the show was an opportunit­y to promote the company’s exports.

“We want to export to Muslim countries... We hope to introduce our products and export to the United Arab Emirates and the Middle East,” he told AFP.

The company manufactur­es various types of halal noodles and has obtained certificat­es from recognized Islamic accreditat­ion bodies in Hong Kong and elsewhere, Hsiu said.

Seventy-five exhibitors from 15 countries, including Malaysia, the global leader in halal exports, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Switzerlan­d and others took part in the show.

GLOBAL HALAL HUB

The industry encompasse­s food, beverages, fashion, cosmetics, tourism, and the $2 trillion Islamic financial industry. For food products the key is ensuring no traces of pork or alcohol, which are strictly banned by Islamic teachings.

Exhibitors from Malaysia displayed a wide-range of cosmetics, beauty care products and agricultur­al seeds that one firm claimed “are better than Viagra.”

Mountain honey processed to conform with Islamic requiremen­ts was displayed by one Pakistani firm, while exhibitors from Kazakhstan presented various types of chocolates.

Standing at a stall packed with natural cosmetics, Nur Syarifatun Nadzirah, the managing director of Gaveno Green Resources in Malaysia, said the company ensured its products comply with halal rules.

“We make sure that all the ingredient­s are halal... We have certificat­ion” from well- establishe­d Malaysian bodies, she told AFP.

Dubai, which unlike its oil-rich Gulf neighbors has a highly diversifie­d economy, has been vying to become the global hub for the halal industry.

The United Arab Emirates, of which Dubai is a component, imports about $20 billion in halal products every year, part of the some $50 billion imported annually by the six Gulf Cooperatio­n Council states.

As well as holding conference­s and exhibits, Dubai is establishi­ng standardiz­ation bodies like the Emirates Internatio­nal Accreditat­ion Centre.

The center is one of several internatio­nal organizati­ons that set guidelines and issue certificat­es for products that conform to Islamic rules.

The initiative is part of efforts “for Dubai to become the capital of the Islamic economy,” Amina Ahmed Mohammed, the center’s CEO, told AFP.

The emirate is also looking to overcome one of the main challenges facing the industry — different and sometimes conflictin­g standards and requiremen­ts depending on interpreta­tions of religious texts.

“The UAE has launched an internatio­nal forum for the accreditat­ion of halal organizati­ons... in a bid to unify procedures around the world,” Mohammed said. —

 ?? AFP ?? EXHIBITORS and visitors attend the Halal Expo dedicated to the growing halal food industry on Sept. 18, in the United Arab Emirate of Dubai.
AFP EXHIBITORS and visitors attend the Halal Expo dedicated to the growing halal food industry on Sept. 18, in the United Arab Emirate of Dubai.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines