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Airfreight accounts for a surprising proportion of red meat exports

Jon Condon, 09/09/2014

Air-China-Cargo

 

HERE’s the first of two quick quiz questions: Can you guess, within the nearest 10,000 tonnes, how much Australian exported red meat has left these shores this year as airfreight, rather than sea-freight?

Collect your prize at the door if your said 50,000 tonnes, or thereabouts. According to DAFF data, the actual figure, for the calendar year to the end of August, is a surprising 53,035 tonnes.

That represents close to five percent of all meat and offal exports leaving Australia this year, and could easily surpass 75,000t for the full 12 months.

Why would anybody ship beef or lamb by airfreight, when the equivalent sea-freight voyage is not only considerably cheaper, but also provides all-important ‘ageing time’ en-route, I hear you ask? Keep in mind that chilled red meat is perhaps unique among perishable food items, in that its eating performance is in fact enhanced by the time spent in a typical 3-4 week sea voyage in a chilled container to a far-flung destination.

The answers are somewhat complex, and are linked to cultural traditions, in-country subsidies, trade access issues and other factors in certain parts of the world.

Here’s a couple more interesting airfreight trade statistics that might help you with your second quiz question.

Lamb is easily the dominant meat protein responsible for airfreight trade out of Australia.

Year-to-date, lamb has accounted for 31,000 tonnes of total meat protein airfreight exports, representing 59pc. Beef was next, at 11,500t (22pc), with smaller volumes of pork (12pc), offals (3.6pc) and mutton (3pc).

Here’s your second quiz question for the day: Can you name the regional destination that takes the greatest volume of airfreighted red meat out of Australia?

Abundant kudos to those of you who picked the Middle East.
For the calendar year to the end of August, the collective nations in the Middle East region have taken more than 31,000 tonnes of Australian red meat by air, or close to 59pc of the total, according to DAFF data.

The ‘other Asia’ category (de facto for China, with a little support from Indonesia) was next, at 15,000t, with other destinations much less significant – Western Europe being third at 1500t, and Korea fourth, at 1000t.

In the case of the Middle East airfreight trade, lamb is dominant, accounting for 27,000t, or 87pc of its total airfreight meat imports from Australia. Add mutton to that, and the figure rises to 92pc.

In practical terms, it means there are about 10,000 lamb and mutton carcases airfreighted into the region each day. And airfreight lamb/mutton shipments continue to rise, as a proportion of total trade to the region, as this graph shows.

Airfreight

Beef also significant

Focussing specifically on Australia’s beef airfreight export business, the Middle East has taken 2216 tonnes so far this year, but easily the biggest contributor to airfreight beef is ‘other Asia’, accounting for more than 6000t. Next largest was Korea and Western Europe.

Trade sources tell Beef Central that high-value items including Wagyu occupy a disproportionately large share of chilled beef airfreight exports around the world. That’s because it’s higher unit cost is better able to handle the freight cost sacrifice.

So why is our airfreight trade into the Middle East – particularly in sheepmeat, but also to a lesser extent in beef – so strong?

Our research has provided several reasons:

  • Governments in countries such as Bahrain and Qatar subsidise the cost of carcases for consumers, but not boneless cuts. Retail price paid by consumers for lamb in these countries is capped at approximately $4.50/kg. That reduces price sensitivity over the added freight cost in airfreight, which adds about $2/kg to freight cost, over sea-container shipment.
  • In many Middle Eastern markets, the retail market relates quality with ‘freshness’, and perceives greater Halal integrity in carcase meat over boneless. The air-freighted product from Australia generally arrives within 2-3 days of slaughter in Australia.
  • Bone-in lamb has a shorter shelf-life than bone-in beef. About 78pc of the airfreight lamb trade into the region is in carcase form, 15pc is forequarter cuts (full FQ and square-cut shoulders), then legs 8pc.
  • About 60pc of the airfreight lamb and mutton trade is in chilled form, mostly directed into the retail sector.

Melbourne and Perth are the two main Australian departure points for airfreight sheepmeat into the region, with most of the product destined for Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, Jordan and Saudi.

Meat & Livestock Australia Middle East regional manager Jamie Ferguson says the airfreight trade in lamb and beef has been growing year-on-year, as the number of wide-bodied aircraft increases from Australia to the Middle East region.

“There are now around 130 flights per week from Australia to the region, scheduled by the main freight carriers Emirates, Qantas, Etihad and Qatar airlines,” he said.

The carcase trade had also increased as the live sheep trade had reduced, he said.

“Australia has a great reputation in the region for consistent meat quality, Halal integrity and food safety standards,” Mr Ferguson said.

“The region is set up with markets and supermarkets with well-trained butchers, whose main task is to break down carcases for the local consumers’ cooking requirements.”

The local dish throughout the region is Biryani (slow-cooked lamb, mutton or goat with vegetables and rice all cooked together in one pot). Each country has its own subtle variations of the dish.

MLA had been working hard to train local consumers on alternative cooking methods to Biryani, such as roasting and grilling which Australian lamb products are ideal for, due to the higher fat content.

Among the region’s more sophisticated retailers, Australian chilled lamb and beef cuts also have a strong and growing market share, with the fast-growing, ethnically-diverse population and burgeoning food service trade.

Certainly, within Australia, there is talk of greater use of airfreight for specialised meat export markets. The ambitious new Wagner international airport being built near Toowoomba has already aroused interest as a potential convenient departure point for chilled and frozen beef exports by aircraft, predominantly to China.

 

 

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Comments

  1. eric stagno, 24/11/2014

    what is the shelf life of a carcass lamb
    how many days does it take from slaughter to clearing customs before the lamb can be further distrubited on the other side

  2. deborah newell, 24/09/2014

    The flavour of beef does not improve over 3-4 weeks. There may be an increase in fibrous breakdown but this comes with fluid loss and bacterial tainting. Sheep meat is definitely the worse in flavour qualities (and texture as it becomes mushy) for long chill cryovac storage

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