BIZCHINA / Industry Overview

China told to cut into cheese industry
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-07-17 14:30

Chinese dairy companies have been urged to take advantage of abundant domestic resources of buffalo and sheep milk to grab a share of the country's burgeoning cheese market.

The market was expanding rapidly with rising living standards, a growing dairy industry and the influence of Western eating habits, said Wang Dingmian, Guangdong Provincial Diary Association deputy director.

The traditional Chinese diet was changing and the market for cheese was ripe with opportunities, Wang told the third Chinese Congress of Dairy Science and Technology, which opened in Beijing on Saturday.

The government was encouraging the development of the domestic dairy industry with supportive policies, but few companies had a cheese production capacity and the market was still dominated by overseas products and brands.

Wang suggested domestic companies should use abundant local milk resources like buffalo and sheep to gain a share of the growing market.

Domestic companies also needed to increase investment on technology so as to break the monopoly of overseas companies on the Chinese market.

Every year about 18,000 tons of cheese are sold in China, a per capita average of 1.3 grams, but this was minuscule compared with Greece where each person ate an average of 28.7 kilograms in 2004, and France at 25.3 kilograms.

Japanese eat an average 2 kilograms a year and people in South Korea 1 kilogram a year.


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