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NEWS HOME Australian beef gaining popularity in China's...

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    NEWS HOME

    Australian beef gaining popularity in China's fifth-largest city
    LANDLINE BY PHILIPPA COURTNEYUPDATED SAT MAR 11 11:24:24 EST 2017
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    PHOTO
    This is one of four butchers selling Australian beef in Chengdu.

    LANDLINE: PIP COURTNEY
    A young Chinese businessman who lived in Brisbane for three years is behind a string of Australian-style butcher shops popping up in Chengdu, China's fifth-largest city.

    "I did eat a lot of beef when I was at uni in Queensland!" Ming Yang said.

    "I didn't know beef was that good before I went to Australia, I love it."

    Three years ago Mr Yang started Sichuan Yutai after securing exclusive rights to sell Coles branded beef in Chengdu.

    He named the small butcher shops AFD, which stands for "more Australia happiness".

    From 25 tonnes a month, three years ago, Sichuan Yutai now imports 100 tonnes a month to supply its four shops and a large wholesaler.

    Mr Yang said 16 more shops would be opened in Chengdu by the end of 2018.

    "It's very exciting and very important," Coles meat general manager Alex Freudmann said.


    PHOTO Knee bones are not a popular cut in Australia but they are used in Chinese slow cooking.
    LANDLINE: PIP COURTNEY

    "We are committed to that whole animal model and that means we look to recover as much as we can from every inch of that animal, and there's quite a large proportion you can't market domestically because the demand for those cuts does not exist.

    "We are actually one of the largest exporters of Australian beef into China."

    While there is not much of a market for items such as patellas (kneecaps) and paddy-whack (the tendon which keeps a cow's head up) in Australia, the cuts are used in Chinese slow cooking.

    The China deal was brokered by David Foote, the managing director of Australian Country Choice (ACC), one of Australia's largest privately owned beef businesses.

    ACC runs 250,000 head of cattle across 2.4 million hectares in Queensland as well as three feedlots and an abattoir.


    PHOTO The China deal was brokered by Australian Country Choice — one of Australia's largest privately owned beef businesses.
    LANDLINE: PIP COURTNEY

    Mr Foote and Mr Yang met in Chengdu in 2014 during Australia week.

    "Mr Yang was there to pick me up from a dairy factory to take me back to the hotel, he loved beef and he asked me could I help him learn about and become part of the beef [industry]," he said.

    Despite being a wine importer with no experience in beef retailing Mr Foote was surprised by Mr Yang's Aussie butcher shop pitch.

    "I just loved the concept," Mr Foote said.

    "It was a great idea because it's all about presenting beef where the customers go which is the local markets.

    "That's where they're more comfortable to shop rather than driving an hour into the city, get a park and go into an upmarket western supermarket is really not where the bulk of the population chooses to shop."

    Mr Yang said business was continuing to grow.


    PHOTO At the busy Wan Nian market Mr Yang's competition looked very different.
    LANDLINE: PIP COURTNEY

    "One hundred to 150 people come to each shop every day and more than 80 per cent buy the product and the feedback's really good," he said.

    "The younger generation [have started] to eat more beef than pork so we believe in the future there'll be more and more customers for us."

    A series of shocking food safety scandals in China has left consumers mistrustful of locally grown and manufactured food.

    Those who can afford to prefer imported food from countries like Australia with a clean, green reputation and strong food safety standards.

    At the busy Wan Nian market Mr Yang's competition looked very different.

    Cuts hung unchilled in the open, one man wielding a cleaver had a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, and a dog at his feet and few staff wore gloves.

    Sechuan Yutai's butcher shops all have chilled meat cabinets and staff are gloved and hatted.


    PHOTO The appetite for Australian beef in growing in China.
    LANDLINE: PIP COURTNEY

    "When customers come to our shop they do ask questions like 'is this smuggled?' So they do care a lot about the certificate from the Chinese consulate," Mr Yang said.

    "Our customers say they trust this shop. They know it sells the real Aussie products and also they think Australian beef is very fresh, tender and natural without any other stuff."

    On the walls were framed official documents to prove the beef is Australian.

    "Their stores are clean, they're dependable, customers can get product which is consistent week to week," Mr Freudmann said.

    "They have taken this business from a few trial loads now they have four stores, a huge wholesale business, and we know they plan to open 16 more stores in the next two years ... beyond that the growth is limitless."

    Mr Foote said the success of the partnership was a lesson to Australians keen to export to China about not forgetting second tier or smaller cities.

    "I thought Chengdu didn't count it didn't matter but that was before I worked out there was over 10 million people here," he said.

    "The scale and the opportunity here is mind-blowing."
 
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