UK has become a net exporter of lamb, according to new figures published by EBLEX and reported by Meat Trade News Daily. The figures show that in 2011 sheep meat exports from the UK saw an 11% increase on the year, totalling 98.500 tonnes product weight.
During the same period, UK sheep meat imports fell 13% to 88.000 tonnes product weight. Product weight imports have exceeded exports for the vast majority of the last 50 years.
The rise in exports last year was mainly driven by very strong demand on the continent with a number of EU member states increasingly looking to the UK. Exports to France accounted for 60% with an increase of 3.1% volume. Shipments to Germany and Ireland both increased by around two thirds year-on-year.
Significantly, exports to non-EU markets for the period were up 41% year-on-year at 5.800 tonnes to destinations such as Switzerland, Norway, various African states including South Africa and Congo, Hong Kong and other Far East markets. Further growth in non-EU markets is also expected to drive an overall increase in sheep meat exports in 2012.
Peter Hardwick, head of trade development at EBLEX, said: “Figures for 2011 show that the UK has become a net exporter of lamb. The UK is a major sheep meat producer, the largest in the EU and third in terms of global trade behind only Australia and New Zealand.
“While becoming a net exporter of lamb is a significant milestone for the industry in the UK, exports remain largely limited to trade within the EU with non-EU exports for the period representing 5% to 6% of the total.
“The key challenge in terms of lamb exports remains access to target markets such as China, North Africa, South Africa, Russia, the USA and several Middle East markets. Population growth and growing affluence is presenting new opportunities for exports in developing markets in particular but these simply cannot be exploited without market access.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesFalklands lamb is the new Kobe (Wagyu) Beef, apparently.
Mar 01st, 2012 - 08:31 am 0I can quite believe it.
Mar 01st, 2012 - 12:58 pm 0I spotted some St Helena coffee in a local shop as well, organic and unpolluted to the highest degree. Cost a fortune for something that hasn't been through the digestive system of a palm civet.
I normally drink my tea after it's been digested and the tea-bag picked out of the excrement of a lesser-spotted aardvark.
Mar 01st, 2012 - 05:55 pm 0Why don't they get Protected Geographical Status for their Lamb? They could sell it at 10 times the price, and with no pollutants for 400 miles (Argies) it should keep them in cream cakes for generations.
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