Chinese dairy companies are boosting their investments in Europe to gain access to high quality sources of raw milk in hopes of winning back market share and restoring consumer confidence in the country's scandal-plagued industry.
The most recent move came from Synutra International, China's third-largest infant formula producer, which signed an investment deal worth 100 million euros ($130 million) with French dairy cooperative Sodiaal, the fourth-largest dairy group in Europe.
The deal involves building two milk-drying plants in the Brittany region of France. The facilities, which are expected to be operational by early 2015, will have a production capacity of up to 100,000 tons of whey and milk powder per year.
The production will be entirely dedicated to supplying Synutra, according to Sodiaal.
Synutra's venture was the first successful case of a Chinese company investing in the European Union's dairy industry since Shanghai-based Bright Food lost its bid for a 50 percent stake of Yoplait, a sub brand of Sodiaal, to American company General Mills last year.
"This opportunity allows Synutra to secure its long-term supply of high quality raw materials and fuel Synutra's future growth while maintaining the highest quality standards for our products," says Zhang Liang, chairman and CEO of Synutra, in a statement.
European countries such as France have extensive resources and experience in the milk-processing sector and the highest safety and quality standards.
"Gaining access to these areas is the main motivation behind the recent boom of Chinese investment," says Xu Qinghua, head of China business services at accounting firm Ernst & Young in France.
"Unlike the case of Bright Food, Synutra adopted a gradual and less aggressive approach. Its investment is not targeted at owning control of a foreign company. Instead, the partnership focused on building facilities and opening the Chinese market," Xu says.
"Being a private company also gave Synutra an advantage as the French side can be sensitive about Chinese companies with government backgrounds."
For Synutra's French partner Sodiaal, a long-term alliance with a Chinese dairy producer was a good fit with its global strategy to boost the industrial and technological capacities of its production sites, in addition to helping open the Chinese market to its products.
"The Synutra Group will bring its in-depth understanding of Chinese consumer expectations, its dynamic position in this fast-growing market and its ability to invest in innovative and high-performance facilities," says Yves Rambaux, CEO of Eurosrum, the dairy ingredients business unit of Sodiaal Group, which is closely involved in the new project.
Over the past five years, Eurosrum has exported an annual average of 35,000 tons of milk, whey and demineralized whey powder to China, according to Rambaux.
"Our ambition is to respond to the growing demand from the Chinese market and we will be opening an office in China soon to be as close as possible to the market and to our local contacts," he says.
In 2008, a series of contamination scandals involving several major dairy producers in China severely damaged domestic consumer confidence and led to a dramatic reduction in the market share of domestic brands.
It also gave foreign brands a significant boost in the Chinese market, as consumers became willing to pay a premium for foreign brands as they remain concerned about the safety of domestic dairy products.
The market share of imported milk powder in China recently reached 50 percent, up from 30 percent in 2008, and the market share of imported high-end infant powder in the Chinese market is even higher, at 70 percent, according to industry experts.
While the price of foreign dairy brands has been soaring over the past several years, the price of imported raw milk has dropped steadily.
This price inversion has prompted many Chinese dairy producers to seek to control their overseas sources of cheap milk, industry analysts said.
In June, Chinese infant formula producer Biostime signed a 10-year financing and supply agreement with the Denmark-based European dairy giant Arla Foods.
The deal will secure Biostime a dedicated annual capacity of 20,000 metric tons of infant formula powder for the next 10 years, according to a statement issued by the two companies.
Beverage producer Wahaha Group also began to source its infant formula from a Dutch milk powder company several years ago, which helped package the product in the Netherlands and export it to China.
Analysts said there is ample room for Chinese dairy companies to further expand their presence in Europe, as many countries in the region are struggling with financial difficulties and high unemployment rates.
"The timing of Synutra's investment is good because Europe is now struggling with a capital shortage, unemployment issues and low growth prospects," Ernst & Young's Xu says.
Once completed, the project between Synutra and Sodiaal is expected to employ approximately 100 employees locally, according to media reports.
The desire to meet Chinese consumers' increasing demand for good quality dairy products and to restore the market share lost to foreign brands will continue to drive more Chinese capital into dairy industries abroad, industry experts said.
China is the world's largest infant formula market and is expected to overtake the United States as the world's largest dairy market by 2020.
Before looking up to the European markets, Chinese dairy investment has long targeted at the acquisition of dairy farms in New Zealand and Australia, the world's two major exporters of dairy products.
China Investment Corp, the country's sovereign wealth fund, recently sought to invest in Australia's largest dairy farm, which planned to raise $180 million equity to double milk production.
A Shanghai-based company, Peng-xin Group, also rolled out an ambitious plan to invest $210 million to purchase 16 dairy farms of 8,000 hectares in New Zealand. But a local court blocked the attempt due to concerns that Pengxin had exaggerated the benefits it would bring to the local farms.
The backlash against China's massive purchase of dairy estates overseas has raised questions as to whether this is a sustainable investment method.
Industry analysts said that Chinese dairy companies could face similar difficulties in Europe when they make investments and acquisitions as the European companies often prefer job-creating and sustainable partnerships based on mutual benefits and trust rather than one-off opportunities.