By Luc Cohen
(Reuters) - Starbucks Corp has this year bought coffee beans from China at its highest volume ever, shipping data show, reflecting the country's burgeoning role as bean supplier amid supply concerns among traditional exporters.
The world's biggest coffee chain imported
nearly 14,000 bags of arabica beans from China into
the United States in the first nine months of 2014, more than five times last
year's total, according to data from shipping intelligence firm PIERS, which
aggregates cargo manifest details from customs data.
![]() |
Customers
walk out of a Starbucks coffee store in Shanghai July 28, 2014.
Courtesy of
Reuters (CREDIT: REUTERS/ CARLOS BARRIA)
|
The jump this year from less than 2,600 60-kg
bags in 2013 partly reflects growth in Starbucks' nascent retail business in China, where a growing
urban population is drinking more coffee.
Some of the beans are roasted in the United
States and then shipped back to China for sale in the fledging consumer market,
a spokeswoman said in an email. The rest are included in blends available
globally, she said.
Starbucks two years ago launched its first
operation in Yunnan, China's main coffee-growing province, but does not have a
roasting facility in Asia, she said. Nestle SA has been active in the region
for decades.
News last month that Volcafe, the coffee arm
of London-based commodities trader
ED&F Man, will set up shop in Yunnan was the strongest sign yet that merchants
are taking China seriously as a supplier of high-quality arabica beans on the
global market.
SPECIALTY APPEAL
Yunnan's catimor beans, a hybrid of arabica
and lower-quality robusta, have in the United States and Europe mainly been
mixed into commercial-grade blends, importers said.
Another big buyer has been Miami-based
family-owned trader Coex, which the data show has purchased between 2,000 and
7,000 bags each year since 2011. CEO Ernesto Alvarez said China is not a
reliable high-volume supplier, but that its beans are an option when they are
available.
Yunnan is unlikely to catch up with output in
top grower Brazil's Minas Gerais state anytime soon, but the inflow comes as
some roasters look for alternative supplies as drought and disease threaten
output in Brazil and
Central America.
China's coffees have also begun to catch the
eye of the U.S. specialty market.
"Given what's going on in Central
America with leaf rust and the drought in Brazil, you want to look at other options,"
said Craig Holt, owner of Seattle-based Atlas Coffee Importers, which caters
toward specialty U.S. roasters.
Holt has never purchased Chinese coffee
before, but plans to travel to the country's Yunnan province in December after
sampling a coffee that he described as clean, bright and free of defects.
In 2014, the United States is on track to
import almost 75,000 60-kg bags from China, more than 2013 and up from an
average of 5,700 bags a decade ago, according to U.S. International Trade
Commission data.
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(Additional
reporting by Marcy Nicholson, editing
by G Crosse)
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