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Dairy cows are milked on a rotating carousel. A Chinese businessman, who owns Australia’s largest dairy operation, plans to import fresh milk from Tasmania from next year. Photo: AFP

China is going the extra distance for fresh milk ... from Tasmania

Ningbo businessman owns Australia’s largest dairy operation, from where he will fly in fresh products

China’s path to food security is taking a big swing to the south. In fact, 8,500km south to Tasmania, the dairy-hungry nation’s newest source of fresh milk.

Businessman Lu Xianfeng plans to begin flying fresh milk to his home city of Ningbo, Zhejiang province, early next year from the island state where he owns Australia’s largest dairy operation. Lu’s Moon Lake Investments bought the 191-year-old Van Diemen’s Land Co for A$280 million (HK$1.66 billion) in March, giving him access to 25 dairy farms and enough milk to fill an Olympic-size swimming pool every nine days.

Chinese consumers see imported milk as safer than local products. Photo: AFP

A share of that will be flown to Ningbo every week, Sean Shwe, Moon Lake’s managing director, told reporters on Wednesday in Hobart, from where the China-bound bulk deliveries will depart. While countries as far away as the Czech Republic and Chile sell milk to China, Moon Lake is counting on gaining an edge with milk from Tasmania’s far northwest coast, which, it said, boasts “the cleanest air in the world”.

The volume of milk shipments to the world’s most populous nation has jumped an average of 126 per cent a year since 2010, creating a US$333 million market dominated by the European Union, according to Chinese customs data.

Chinese consumers, ruffled by past food scandals, see imported milk as a safer alternative to domestic supplies, the US Department of Agriculture said in May. Moon Lake has already pre-sold more than 15 million yuan (HK$17 million) of milk from its Van Diemen’s Land dairies, which it calls VDL Farms.

“This is an exciting venture for our company, VDL Farms and potentially for all Tasmanian producers of fresh, perishable produce such as seafood, fruit and vegetables,” Shwe said in a statement.

About 10 million litres of milk a year from VDL dairies will be trucked to Hobart for processing by Lion Dairy and packaged under the VAN Milk brand, a nod to the dairy operation’s ties to Van Diemen’s Land Co, according to the statement.

Moon Lake is in advanced talks with airlines and airports to begin weekly round trips from Hobart to Ningbo starting in the first quarter of 2017, with a view to increasing the frequency to two-to-three times a week within a year, and adding Beijing as a destination, the company said.

Moon Lake is aiming for the premium end of China’s dairy market. Photo: AFP

The new air freight route will mark the return of international departures from Hobart International Airport after a regular passenger service to Christchurch, New Zealand, was cancelled in the 1980s. Initially, fresh milk will be sold in 1-litre and 600ml cartons, with plans to add yogurt and other dairy products, Moon Lake said.

“It is great for VDL and the Northwest Coast community as it moves the farms from ones that previously just produced milk and watched it leave through the farm gate, to ones that now produce a high quality, value-added export product, giving them more security and certainty about prices,” Shwe said.

The milk exports will be a boost for Tasmania, Australia’s smallest and least-populated state, where an unemployment rate of 6.5 per cent lags the national rate of 5.6 per cent, and residents are more dependent on welfare than in any other state.

“Tasmania is now a destination that investors want to be a part of,” the state’s Premier Will Hodgman told reporters on Wednesday. “We have some of the best and finest produce in the world that growing, massive markets like China want to get more of.”

Moon Lake is aiming for the premium end of the market, with the milk to sell for between A$10 and A$15 a litre.

VAN Milk will represent the first sale to China of Tasmanian milk by a wholly-owned Chinese company. Having direct stakes in food-producing companies gives Chinese firms an advantage over Australian competitors when it comes to selling into China, according to Michael Harvey, a senior dairy analyst with Rabobank International in Melbourne.

“The advantage is being able to navigate some of the complexities in the market,” he said. Milk from Australia and New Zealand “is held in high regard, so there is a strategic priority in China to source the product from Australia”.

After Germany, Australia is China’s biggest supplier of liquid milk, including UHT products, shipping 61,184 tonnes of the product, worth A$62 million, last year, Chinese customs data show.

China’s dairy farms are located mostly in the country’s central and northern areas, where the climate is more suitable for raising cattle, the USDA said in a report in May. Weak cold chain logistics have made it difficult to ensure the milk’s freshness when it reaches major markets in northeastern and southern China, it said.

On top of that, the discovery of contaminants from melamine to mercury have made Chinese consumers wary of the local product. That’s slowed the increase in milk consumption in China, which averages about 33kg per person a year – less than a third of the global average, according to the USDA, which said in May that “milk consumption has plenty of growth potential”.

Moon Lake said it plans to increase milk production at its VDL Farms by 80 per cent within five years. VDL currently produces 7.66 million kg of milk solids a year from about 30,000 cows, which graze on 7,000 hectares. Once VAN Milk is established in Ningbo and Beijing, Moon Lake wants to take it to Shanghai, Hangzhou and other Chinese cities. Moon Lake’s owner Lu, 46, is also executive chairman and the largest shareholder of Ningbo Xianfeng New Material, a builder of sunscreen fabrics and shades.

“We’ve chosen Beijing and Ningbo for the initial marketing push because Ningbo is Mr Lu’s home town and he has established networks to sell the product,” Shwe said. “Also, the city has among China’s highest average incomes and is less saturated with Western products than, say, Shanghai.”

Still, selling milk to China isn’t without risks. Earlier this year, Chinese regulators told Australia Dairy Farmers Group that it needed to revalidate its product shelf life and supply-chain processes, effectively freezing sales there for at least two months, Chairman Michael Hackett said.

“Investors think somehow you find a pot of gold in dealing with China,” he said. “They’re not bad margins, but there’s a lot of extra work involved to get them.”

Hackett’s advice is to get as close to the consumer as possible, “so you’re not dealing with an importer, who then has a distributor, who then has a retail group”, he said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Going the extra mile for milk – from Tasmania
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