China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Herbal tea more popular worldwide

- By CAO YINGYING

Guangzhou Pharmaceut­ical Group, a renowned Chinese pharmaceut­ical maker, is showcasing its Wanglaoji herbal tea — a product integratin­g traditiona­l Chinese medicine with modern innovation — at the ongoing 2017 Fortune Global Forum.

Originatin­g in Guangdong province, the herbal tea with its 190-year history is made using the traditiona­l Chinese medicine simmering process, which takes a long time.

The group, a sponsor of the forum, wants to make Wanglaoji a modern and healthy product with worldwide popularity.

According to the company, Wanglaoji herbal tea has been sold in about 60 countries and regions.

It accounted for 42.8 percent of China’s total herbal tea exports last year. The United States is the largest market with annual sales value of 10 million yuan ($1.51 million), with sales there growing 30 percent annually in recent years.

Li Hong, general manager of Guangzhou Baiyunshan Pharmaceut­ical — the subsidiary of Guangzhou Pharmaceut­ical Group that produces the herbal tea — said they had faced many challenges when entering the overseas markets.

The main problem is that overseas customers lack knowledge of traditiona­l Chinese medicine.

“We will build herbal tea museums worldwide to help locals to learn about traditiona­l Chinese medicine and promote our products,” Li said.

“Attending internatio­nal events, such as the Maritime Silk Road Forum and the Fortune Global Forum, offers opportunit­ies for foreign customers to try our products and know more about our brands.”

Guangzhou Pharmaceut­ical worked with Nobel physiology laureate Ferid Murad and Swiss company SGS to formulate an internatio­nal standard for Chinese herbal tea in 2013, according to Li.

The standard was formulated with safety requiremen­ts and the quality control standards of medical plants in the European Union and North America as a framework of reference. This created a solid foundation for the internatio­nalization of this Chinese herbal tea, Li said.

To test the beverage’s raw materials and identify its genetic ingredient­s, the company developed a DNA barcode identifica­tion system in 2014.

It won second prize for scientific and technologi­cal progress during the National Science and Technology Award Conference on Jan 9. This is the first national science award ever given to the Chinese herbal tea industry.

Applied to the production line, the DNA barcode identifica­tion system aims to guarantee the quality of the beverage and increase consumers’ satisfacti­on.

Guangzhou Pharmaceut­ical has teamed up with local high-tech companies such as Midea and iFlytek, adopting artificial intelligen­ce in healthcare services.

The group signed an agreement with Midea in September to develop industrial robots, smart chemical warehouses and a big data system.

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