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China’s food-security push to slash soy imports by two-thirds in a decade: Goldman Sachs

Beijing is lowering feed content and making related advancements that analysts say could reduce China’s foreign-soybean dependence dramatically within a decade

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Soybeans are loaded into a truck in August so they can be hauled to an elevator in the US state of Illinois. Photo: TNS
Mandy Zuoin Shanghai
China is on track to slash its reliance on imported soybeans to less than 30 per cent within a decade, from the current 90 per cent, research from Goldman Sachs suggests, as Beijing accelerates efforts to shore up self-sufficiency – including inoculating its food supply against trade shocks.

Demand-management strategies for the crop – a vital source of cooking oil and animal feed, as well as a key commodity at the centre of Beijing’s trade relations with Washington – reduced annual consumption by 15 million tonnes between 2021 and 2024, the investment bank’s analysts, led by Trina Chen, said in a note on Tuesday.

The push, initiated during the first US-China trade war, “has been paramount in mitigating barriers and uncertainties” in trade with the US and South America, the analysts said.

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On Thursday, Beijing amplified vows to bolster China’s economy, primarily on the back of domestic demand, and build a robust domestic market to counter external challenges. The commitments came after a high-level annual meeting that set the tone for 2026’s economic policy.

China, the world’s top food consumer, could deepen import cuts, the analysts said. Those could come after recent pledges to Washington.

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According to a White House fact sheet, Beijing agreed to purchase a stable, large volume of US soybeans over the next three years, following a presidential meeting in late October.

To curb demand, China has lowered soybean content in animal feed, improved feed-conversion efficiency, and optimised protein mixes.

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