October 11, 2025 | 23:18 GMT +7
October 11, 2025 | 23:18 GMT +7
Hotline: 0913.378.918
This achievement is expected to pave the way for a substantial increase in volumes in the coming years, marking a significant shift in the global poultry trade dynamics, according to Russian officials.
Russia accounted for 10.5% of Chinese poultry imports last year, estimated to be close to 1.2 million tonnes, Agroexport, a Russian agency facilitating agricultural export reported, citing the data from the Chinese government.
China has emerged as a pivotal market for Russian poultry exporters in recent years. In 2023, a 56% of all deliveries to countries outside of the post-Soviet space were destined for China, according to the Russian Union of Poultry Farmers. This underscores the strategic importance of the Chinese market for the Russian poultry industry.
The rise of Russian poultry in the Chinese market was further fueled by a decline in the market share of US suppliers. Daria Podymova, head of the foreign trade department with the Russian Union of Poultry Farmers, noted that Russian companies managed to eat into the market share that once belonged to US suppliers. This shift was largely attributed to a 29.6% drop in US poultry sales to China in the wake of a series of highly pathogenic avian influenza outbreaks, as claimed by Podymova.
The looming economic difficulties have made China a challenging market for foreign suppliers.
“Significant factors in China include the sale by large transnational companies of their production facilities on its territory, including due to low consumer demand in 2023,” Podymova said, adding that the market also experiences a major transition towards ready-to-eat food, which shapes up the demand in all segments of the meat industry.
“The Chinese poultry industry is experiencing rather complex development dynamics with continued dependence on imports, which in turn opens up the opportunity for Russian exporters to increase supply volumes, including through the opening of new sales channels,” Podymova assumed.
China is mainly increasing imports of pork and poultry by-products, said Konstantin Korneev, executive director of Rincon Management, a Moscow-based think tank. For Russian firms, trade with China provides a unique opportunity to turn the poultry cuts considered waste into marketable products.
“These [the exported products] are mainly paws, wings, phalanges of bird wings, and the export of these parts to the [Chinese] republic will grow since there is a demand for them that is higher than the local supply,” Korneev said.
“But this is not about reorienting China towards supplies from Russia; the republic is increasing purchases from several countries,” Korneev pointed out.
However, Agroexport reported that during a recent round of negotiations between the Russian and Chinese trade delegations, several Chinese companies expressed interest in boosting imports from Russia. For example, the agency cited Beijing Xinshengbaili Trade, a prominent trader that promised to import 100-200 containers of meat products per year from Russia in the foreseeable future.
(PW)
(VAN) The people who are most vulnerable to the hard-to-breathe air that comes with climate change may inadvertently be adding to the problem, new research finds.
(VAN) Director-General QU Dongyu announces series of initiatives following global livestock conference.
(VAN) China’s freeze on U.S. soybean purchases hits a key GOP constituency in the run-up to 2026 midterm elections.
(VAN) President Xi Jinping's festive greetings ahead of the eighth Chinese Farmers' Harvest Festival, which fell on Tuesday this year, were a clear signal that China regards food security as a core strategic issue.
(VAN) BBNJ Agreement will enter into force in January.
(VAN) Demonstrations have been planned around the world this week ahead of the United Nations General Assembly and New York Climate Week.
(VAN) After years of intense deliberation, the European Commission has finally given its nod to the Mercosur and Mexico agreement.